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M.  KNOEDLER  &  CO. 


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111 


5?6  FIFTH  AVENUE,  NEW  YORK  CITY 


LONDON 

15  Bond  Street 


PARIS 

17  Place  Vendome 


MACBETH  GALLERY 


ESTABLISHED  1892 


PAINTINGS 

BY 

AMERICAN  ARTISTS 

among  them  the  following — 


Betts 

Fuller 

Miller 

Blakelock 

Groll 

Murphy 

Carlsen 

Hassam 

Olinsky 

Carlson 

Hawthorne 

Ranger 

Daingerfield 

Henri 

Ryder 

Davis 

Homer 

Sartain 

Dewing 

Howe 

Symons 

Dougherty 

Hunt 

Tryon 

Eaton 

Inness 

Twachtman 

Foster 

Martin 

Weir 

Frieseke 

Melchers 

Wiggins 

Fromkes 

Metcalf 

Wyant 

WILLIAM  MACBETH 

INCORPORATED 

450  FIFTH  AVENUE       NEW  YORK  CITY 

AT  FORTIETH  STREET 


N.  E.  MONTROSS 


WORKS  OF  ART 


PAINTINGS 
DRAWINGS         SCULPTURE 


MONTROSS  GALLERY 

550  FIFTH  AVENUE,  NEW  YORK 
ABOVE  FORTY-FIFTH  STREET 


in 


Established   1848 
F.  KLEINBERGER.  Pres't  E.  M.  SPERLING,  Vice  Pres't 


F.  Kleinberger  Galleries,  I 


nc. 


HIGH  CLASS  PRIMITIVES 

nn , OF  THE I , , 

ITALIAN   AND    FLEMISH    SCHOOLS 


Dutch  Paintings 
of  the  1  7  th  Century 

Ancient  Furniture  and  Objects  of  Art 


PARIS  NEW  YORK 

9  rue  de  TEchelle  725  Fifth  Avenue 

Near  Avenue  de  I'Opera  Between  56th  and  57th  Streets 


FRENCH  &  CO. 


Antique    Tapestries 

Furniture  y     Textiles 

Works  of  Art 


6  EAST  56th   STREET,  NEW  YORK 


DEMOTTE 


27,  RUE  DE  BERRI,    PARIS 


lllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllll 


Works  of  Art  of 
the  Middle  Ages 


De  Luxe  Publications  on  Art 

LA  TAPISSERIE  GOTHIQUE 
LE  MUSEE  DU  LOUVRE,   1914-1920 
LES  CHEFS-D'CEUVRE  DU  PORTUGAL 
LES  DESilNS  DE  DEGAS,  Etc.,  Etc. 


Il!llll!lllllllll!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 


8  East  57th  Street  NEW  YORK 


VI 


Sir  Thomas  Lawrence,  P.  R.  A. 


The  Countess  Gower 


^rt  (galleries 


(oQ>7  Jf iftf)  mtmt 


vu 


The  Ehrich  Galleries 

707  Fifth  Avenue 

at  55th  Street  New  York 


(Bib  iWasterS 

AND 

Modern    American    Paintings 

Mrs-   Ehrich 

707  Fifth  Avenue 
New  York 


Antique  Furniture  and  Textiles, 

Cantagalli,  Venetian  Glass, 

Italian  Linens 


vin 


FEARON 


jirty  without  artificial 
values,  and  without 
those  artifices  of  selling 
so  often  used  in  the 
name  of  art!  That  is 
my  aim  and  intention 
in  conducting  the 
Fearon  Galleries. 


{/D^.'if^ 


GALLERIES 

25  West  54th  Street,  New  York 


IX 


H  o  w:ar,d 


GALLER.IES 


Jmportani  (s>:>ca722pies 

AMERICAN 
FOREIGN  MASTERS 


620,  Sififipiv 

EN    49.TH   AND    50" 


venue 

BETWEEN    49~TH   AND    50th    STREETS 


g^£^lM^ 


■li^^ll^lt^ 


WE  BUY 

PAINTINGS 


By 


INNESS 

HOMER 

WYANT 

TWACHTMAN 

MARTIN 

WEIR 

BLAKELOCK 

MURPHY 

and  other 

fine 

paintings 

AINSLIE  GALLERIES 

Dealers  in 

FINE  AMERICAN  PAINTINGS 
615  Fifth  Avenue  NEW  YORK 

Near  50th  Street  Telephone— Plaza  6886 


XI 


JOHN  LEVY  GALLERIES 


HIGH  CLASS 
AMERICAN 

AND 

FOREIGN 
PAINTINGS 


559  FIFTH  AVE.  NEW  YORK 

PARIS:  28  PLACE  VENDOME 


The  American 
Magazine  of  Art 

An  Illustrated  Monthly 

Published  by 

THE  AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS 

Leila  Mechlin,  Editor 


Authoritative  articles  on  the  leading  artists,  Reviews  of 

Exhibitions,  News  Notes,  Editorial  Comment, 

Bulletin  of  Exhibitions 

Painting,  Sculpture,  Architecture 
The  Handicrafts 


Beautiful  Illustrations 

Subscription  price $2.50  a  year 

Publication  office,   1741   New  York  Avenue,   Washington,   D.  C. 

American  Art  Sales 

Published  by  the 

SALES   service   BUREAU 

of  the 

AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS 

American  Art  Sales  is  a  bulletin  issued  4  times  a  year 
during  the  art  season,  giving  detailed  account  of  sales  of 
paintings,  prints,  drawings  in  New  York,  Chicago  and 
Philadelphia.  Advance  Notices  of  forthcoming  sales  are 
also  included.  Publication  dates :  December,  February, 
April  and  June. 

Subscription:  Four  issues  and  the  American  Art  Annual,  $25. 
Four  Issues  American  Art  Sales,  .  .  $20. 
Single  copies  of  the  American  Art  Sales,  $  5. 
American  Art  Annual,  per  Vol.,       .       .       $  7.50 

The  Sales  Service  Bureau  will  execute  carefully  orders  for  purchases  in  New 
York  auction  galleries  at  a  charge  of  1%.  Arrangements  can  also  be  made 
for  purchases  in  other  cities. 

Publication  Address:  Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art,  New  York  City. 


THE  GORHAM  FOUNDRIES 
have  exceptional  facilities 
for  rendering  into  bronze 
heroic  life  size  and  smaller 
sculpture  at  remarkably 
favorable  prices  considering 
the     service     extended. 


THE  GORHAM  GALLERIES 
are  a  continuous  exposition 
of  the  latest  and  best  pro- 
ductions of  our  American 
Sculptors     exclusively. 


GORHAM 

FOUNDRIES:  GALLERIES: 

PROVIDENCE  386  FIFTH  AVENUE 

RHODE  ISLAND  at  36th  St.,  NEW  YORK 


Jdsii'ii    li(>iM,i      I  iioAii.     T)V  TIfrpfrt  AnA^[S.  N.A. 
Union  League  Club,  New  York  City 


AM  E  R I  CAN 

ART   ANNUAL 

Founded   1898  by  Florence   N.  Levy 


VOLUME    XVIII 


THE  AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS 

1741  New  York  Avenue,  Washington,   D.  C. 

1921 


COPYRIGHT,    1922,   BY 

THE  AMERICAN  FEDERATION 
OF  ARTS 


HAROLD  B.  LE^  LIBRARY 
BRIGHAa?  Y  JNiVERSITY 


Contents 

N.  B. — For  full  index  with  cross-references  see  page  652 

PAGE 

Illustrations,  List  of    5 

Editorial  Board  7 

The  Year  in  Art 9 

Museums    13 

Associations  and  Societies  : 

The  American  Federation  of  Arts 11 

National  Societies    91 

State  Groups  99 

European   186 

Schools  of  Art  in  the  United  States 187 

Obituaries  of  American  Artists,  1920-1921 225 

Magazines  of  Art  Published  in  the  United  States 231 

Press  List  of  Daily  and  Weekly  Publications  Having  Art  Notes 233 

Auction  Sales,  1920-1921    234 

Paintings  Sold  at  Auction,   1920-1921 241 

Drawings   Sold  at  Auction,    1920-1921 287 

Prints  Sold  at  Auction,   1920-1921 290 

Sculpture  Sold  at  Auction,  1920-1921 320 

Abbreviations  Used   in  Who's  Who 331 

Who's  Who  in  Art 329 

List  of  Sculptors   621 

List  of  Illustrators    625 

List  of  Portrait  Painters   635 

Who's  Who  Among  Art  Dealers 637 

Classified  Trade  List  of  Advertisers  649 

Index  with  Cross-References   652 


Illustrations 


FACING 
PAGE 

1.  Joseph  Hodges  Choate — A  work  in  sculpture  by  Herbert  Adams 

(Frontispiece) 

2.  Reflection — A  painting  by  Frank  W.  Benson 18 

3.  Marshal  Joffre — A  painting  by  John  C.  Johansen 19 

4.  Torn  Lingerie — A  painting  by  F.  C.  Frieseke 114 

5.  Gallery  of  the  Lyme  Art  Association 115 

6.  Pilgrim  Maiden — A  work  in  sculpture  by  Henry  S.  Kitson 130 

7.  Allegresse — A  work  in  sculpture  by  Bessie  Potter  Vonnoh 131 

8.  Pictorial    Map  of   the    South    Seas — A   mural    painting   by   Barry 

Falkner   146 

9.  Fleet  of  Columbus — A  mural  painting  by  Ezra  Winter 147 

10.  In  the  Hills— A  painting  by  Leon  Kroll 162 

11.  American   Handicraft    163 

12.  Hindu  Temple,  Pennsylvania  Museum   224 

13.  "Abbott  H.  Thayer,  portrait   225 

14.  Edward  VV.  Redfield— A  painting  by  Wayman  Adams 328 

15.  Lorado  Taf t — A  painting  by  Ralph  Clarkson 329 

16.  Robert  Aitken — A  painting  by  Sidney  Dickinson 482 

17.  Walter   McEwen,   portrait    483 


THE  AMERICAN  ART  ANNUAL 

Frances  R.  Howard,  Editor 
1741  New  York  Avenue,  Washington,  D.  C. 

EDITORIAL  BOARD 

STATE   REPRESENTATIVES 

California — Blanche  Marie  d'Harcourt, 

Chismore  Apartments,  999  Bush  St.,  San  Francisco. 
Colorado — Henry  Read, 

1311  Pearl  St.,  Denver. 
Connecticut — James  G.  McManus, 

86  Pratt  St.,  Hartford. 
Illinois — Mrs.  Martha  E.  Jenkins, 

5538  Cornell  Ave.,  Chicago. 
Indiana — Mrs.  H.  B.  Burnet, 

1864  North  Pennsylvania  St.,  Indianapolis. 
Louisiana — William  Woodward, 

Tulane  University,  New  Orleans. 
Maine— Oliver  P.  T.  Wish, 

Sweat  Memorial  Art  Museum,  Portland. 
Maryland — Henry  H.  Wiegand, 

Charcoal  Club,  1230  St.  Paul  St.,  Baltimore. 
Michigan — Lulu  F.  Miller, 

Hackley  Gallery  of  Fine  Arts,  Muskegon. 
Missouri — Mary  Powell, 

St.  Louis  Public  Library,  St.  Louis. 
Nebraska — Paul  H.  Grummann, 

University   of   Nebraska,    Lincoln. 
New  York  City — Florence  N.  Levy, 

215  West  57th  St. 
New  York  State — Royal  B.  Farnum, 

Massachusetts  Normal  Art  School,  Exeter  and  Newbury  Sts.,  Boston. 
Oregon — Margaret  Dillingham, 

Portland  Art  Association,  Portland. 
Pennsylvania— Mrs.  M.  W.  Talbot, 

"Talbot  Hall,"  Norfolk,  Va. 
Philadelphia — Mary  Butler, 

2127  Green  St. 
Rhode  Island — Mrs.  Gustave  Radeke, 

11  Waterman  St.,  Providence. 
Texas— Mrs.  Charles  Scheuber, 

Carnegie  Public  Library,  Fort  Worth. 
Utah — J.  Leo  Fairbanks, 

1228  Bryan  Ave.,  Salt  Lake  City. 
Virginia — M.  May  Baker, 

408  Raleigh  Ave.,  Norfolk. 
Washington — Andrew  C.  P.  Willatzen, 

208  Columbia  Street,  Seattle. 
Wisconsin — Mrs.  William  Mayhew, 

Art  Institute,  Milwaukee. 

Note.— Please  report  desired  changes  to  the  respective  editors. 

7 


The  Year  in  Art 


In  a  general  survey  of  the  field  of  art  for  the  year  1921  certain  events  loom 
as  not  only  memorable  but  indicative  of  real  progress.  Such,  for  example 
as  the  completion  and  dedication  of  the  Harkness  Memorial  Quadrangle  at 
Yale  University.  These  buildings,  designed  by  James  Gamble  Rogers  in  the 
Gothic  style,  are  comparable  in  beauty  to  the  great  buildings  of  the  world  and 
are  destined  to  exert  a  subtle  and  perhaps  unsuspected  influence  upon  the  young 
men  and  boys  who  will  attend  this  great  University. 

Owing  to  post-war  conditions  there  has  not  been  a  great  deal  of  building, 
despite  the  pressing  need  of  houses  and  of  structures  of  business  and  semi- 
public  character.  Most  conspicuous  in  the  division  of  architecture  are  two 
great  competitions  that  were  held  during  the  summer  of  1921,  one  for  a 
State  Capitol  for  Nebraska,  the  other  for  a  great  War  Memorial  for  Kansas 
City.  The  first  was  won  by  Bertram  Goodhue,  of  New  York,  the  second  by 
H.  Van  Buren  Magonigle,  of  the  same  city.  These  competitions  were  ad- 
judged by  juries  comprising  the  foremost  architects  of  the  country,  and  the 
winning  designs  have  been  declared  of  exceptional  merit,  as  well  as  unique 
in  character. 

The  Fifth  Avenue  Association  in  New  York  makes  a  custom  of  awarding 
two  prizes  annually  for  the  best  buildings  architectually  erected  during  the 
year.  These  prizes  in  1921  went  to  the  Textile  Building,  299  Fifth  Avenue, 
Sommerfield  and  Steckler,  architects,  and  the  New  York  Bible  Society,  5 
East  48th  Street,  W.  E.  Anthony,  architect. 

An  exceedingly  notable  business  building  was  added  to  New  York's  already 
large  quota  of  such  this  year — the  Cunard  Building,  at  25  Broadway,  opened 
May  1st.  The  architect  of  the  building  was  Benjamin  Wister  Morris.  A 
special  feature  of  the  interior  is  the  decoration  of  the  Great  Hall,  planned 
by  Ezra  Winter  and  executed  under  his  direction  by  a  group  of  co-operating 
artists.  The  series  of  pendentive  paintings  and  rondels  are  by  Winter.  The 
pendentives,  representing  the  ships  of  the  great  explorers  :  Ericson,  Columbus, 
Cabot,  and  Drake,  are  executed  in  "fresco  secco",  which  process  eliminates 
the  possibility  of  unpleasant  reflections  of  light.  Striking  features  of  the 
walls  are  maps  painted  in  rich  decorative  colors  by  Barry  Faulkner.  A  bronze 
ring  in  low  relief  and  two  inserts  in  the  niches  were  miodelled  by  John 
Gregory.  Mr.  Winter,  Mr.  Faulkner,  and  Mr.  Gregory  are  all  Fellowship 
men  of  the  American  Academy  in  Rome. 

In  the  State  Capitol  of  Missouri  a  series  of  mural  paintings  illustrative 
of  American  history  and  the  history  of  Missouri,  by  the  following  artists 
have  been  completed:  Oscar  E.  Berninghaus,  Nathan  C.  Wyeth,  Adolph  Blond- 
heim,  Richard  E.  Miller,  Frank  Brangwyn,  Henry  Reuterdahl,  Charles  Hof- 
bauer,  and  Frederic  Carpenter. 

A  series  of  mural  decorations,  paintings  and  sculptural  work  in  low  relief 
by  John  S.  Sargent  in  the  rotunda  of  the  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Boston,  com- 
missioned in  1916,  was  completed  and  unveiled,  with  appropriate  ceremonies 
in  November. 

A  painting  by  William  Woodward  for  the  ceiling  of  the  United  Fruit  Com- 
pany's building  in  New  Orleans,  deserves  special  mention  in  this  category. 

During  the  summer  of  1921  a  National  Gallery  Commission  was  formed  to 
promote  the  development  and  assist  in  the  administration  of  the  National 
Gallery  of  Art,  at  Washington.  This  commission,  appointed  by  the  Regents 
of  the  Smithsonian  Institution,  consists  of  five  public  men  interested  in  art) 
five  experts,  five  artists  and  the  secretary  of  the  Smithsonian  Institution,  Mr. 

9 


10  THE  YEAR  IN  ART 


Charles  D.  Walcott,  ex-officio.  The  five  public  men  are  W.  K.  Bixby,  president 
of  the  St.  Louis  Art  Museum ;  Joseph  H.  Gest,  director  of  the  Cincinnati  Art 
Museum;  Charles  Moore,  chairman  of  the  Commission  of  Fine  Arts;  James 
Parmalee,  of  Cleveland  and  Washington,  and  Herbert  L.  Pratt,  of  New  York, 
secretary  of  the  National  Art  Committee.  The  five  experts  are  John  E. 
Lodge,  of  Boston,  director  of  the  Freer  Gallery;  Frank  Jewett  Mather,  Jr., 
Marquand  Professor  of  Art  at  Princeton  University;  Charles  A,  Piatt,  of 
New  York,  architect ;  Edward  W.  Redfield,  well-known  landscape  painter  of 
Center  Bridge,  Pa.,  and  Denman  W.  Ross,  of  the  Boston  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts  and  Harvard  University,  The  artists  are  Herbert  Adams,  sculptor;  E. 
H.  Blashfield,  painter;  Daniel  Chester  French,  sculptor;  William  H.  Holmes, 
painter  and  director  of  the  National  Gallery  of  Art,  and  Gari  Melchers, 
painter. 

A  notable  series  of  portraits  of  Leaders  of  the  Allied  Countries,  in  the 
Great  War,  commissioned  by  a  National  Art  Committee  (Hon.  Henry  White, 
Chairman,  and  Herbert  D.  Pratt,  Secretary),  and  proposed  as  a  nucleus  for 
a  great  National  Portrait  Gallery  in  Washington,  had  first  showing  in  the 
Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art  in  January,  1921.  The  collection,  which  com- 
prises twenty  portraits,  later  went  on  tour  of  the  leading  museums  under  the 
auspices  of  the  American  Federation  of  Arts. 

The  Phillips  Memorial  Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C,  founded  in  1920  by  Mrs. 
Duncan  C.  Phillips  and  her  son,  Duncan  Phillips,  and  organized  by  the  latter 
'-  m  memorial  to  his  father.  Major  Duncan  C.  Phillips,  and  his  brother,  Mr. 
umes  Laughlin  Phillips,  has  been  established,  and  the  collection,  comprising 
chiefly  paintings  by  American  artists,  temporarily  set  forth  in  a  small  gallery 
erected  for  the  purpose  at  1606  21st  Street,  adjacent  to  the  Phillips'  residence. 

In  the  Library  of  Congress  at  Washington,  in  May,  the  collection  of 
Whistleriana  assembled,  during  Whistler's  lifetime  and  since  his  death,  with 
utmost  care  and  untiring  devotion,  by  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Joseph  Pennell,  and  by 
them  presented  to  the  Nation,  was  formally  placed  on  exhibition.  A  vote  in 
appreciation  of  the  collection  and  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Pennell's  generosity  was 
unanimously  given  by  the  Convention  of  the  American  Federation  of  Arts  at 
its  annual  meeting.  May  18-21,  1921. 

At  Lyme,  Connecticut,  was  erected  and  formally  opened  during  the  summer 
of  1921  a  small  gallery,  specially  intended  for  summer  exhibitors,  designed 
by  Charles  A.  Piatt  and  admirably  adapted  for  its  purpose. 

In  Provincetown,  Massachusetts,  an  old  residence  was  secured  and  remodeled 
as  an  exhibition  gallery.     The  first  exhibition  was  held  therein  in  August. 

An  association  was  formed  of  southern  art  organizations,  in  the  early  part 
of  1921,  and  under  its  auspices  an  All-Southern  Exhibition  of  high  standard 
of  paintings  and  sculpture  by  southern  artists  was  held  in  the  Gibbes  Memorial 
Building,  at  Charleston,   S.  C,  in  March. 

The  Boston  Museum  of  Fine  Arts  this  year  abolished  all  entrance  fees, 
making  admission  to  the  Museum  free  to  the  public  at  all  times.  A  number  of 
the  Western  museums,  while  continuing  the  custom  of  charging  visitors  a 
small  fee  upon  certain  days,  agreed  to  exchange  courtesies  in  the  way  of 
admitting  each  other's  members  without  charge,  upon  the  presentation  of 
membership  cards. 

A  notable  exhibition  of  British  Arts  and  Crafts  was  brought  to  the  United 
States  and  circulated  during  1921  under  the  auspices  of  the  Detroit  Society 
of  Arts  and  Crafts. 

Likewise  in  the  spirit  of  international  friendliness  an  exhibition  of  Swiss 
art,  assembled  under  the  patronage  of  the  Swiss  Government,  was  brought 
to  this  country  and  circulated  by  the  Brooklyn  Museum. 

The   University   of    Pennsylvania    formally   established   this   year  a    School 
of  Fine  Arts,  with  Professor  Warren  P.  Laird  at  its  head. 
•  The  American  Academy  in  Rome  added  to  its  school  of  .classical  studies  and 
Its  fellowships  in  painting,  sculpture,  architecture,  and  landscape  architecture, 


THE  YEAR  IN  ART  11 


a  department  of  music,  thus  opening  its  doors  to  musicians.    Mr.  Felix  Lamond 
was  appointed  first  head  of  this  department. 

Among  the  notable  works  in  sculpture  completed  and  permanently  placed 
during  the  year  1921,  mention  should  be  made  of  the  following : 

Equestrian  statue  of  Stonewall  Jackson,  by  Charles  Keck.  Unveiled  at 
Charlottesville,  Virginia,  Octooer  19th,  1921.  Gift  of  Paul  Goodloe  Mc- 
Intire. 

Monument  of  George  Rogers  Clark,  by  Robert  Aitken.  Unveiled  at  Charlottes- 
ville, Virginia,  November  3,  1921.    Also  the  gift  of  Paul  Goodloe  Mclntire. 

Bronze  Equestrian  Statue  of  General  Simon  Bolivar,  the  South  American 
liberator,  by  Sallie  James  Farnham,  unveiled  in  Central  Park,  New  York. 
April  19,  1921.     Gift  of  the  Government  and  people  of  Venezuela. 

War  Memorial,  Exedra  and  group  of  two  figures  by  Augustus  Lukeman,  Grand 
Concourse,  Brooklyn.     Unveiled  in  June. 

War  Memorial,  Exedra  and  Figure  of  a  victorious  soldier  waving  an  over- 
seas cap,  by  Augustus  Lukeman,  Red  Hook  Park,  Brooklyn. 

Statue  of  Benjamin  Franklin,  by  Paul  Bartlett,  erected  at  Waterbury,  Conn., 
after  being  conveyed  by  dray  from  Baltimore  where  it  was  cast,  and 
stopping  in  several  cities  en  route. 

Statue  of  Lafayette,  by  Daniel  Chester  French,  erected  at  Lafayette  College, 
Easton,  Pa. 

Statue  of  Edgar  Allan  Poe.  by  Moses  Ezekiel.  Erected  and  unveiled  at 
Baltimore,  Md.,  October  20,  1921. 

Statue  of  General  Russell  A.  Alger,  by  Daniel  Chester  French,  Grand  Central 
Park,  Detroit,  Mich. 

Statue  by  Henry  M.  Shrady,  in  honor  of  General  Alpheus  Williams,  placed 
on  Belle  Isle,  Detroit. 

Statue  of  Massasoit,  by  Cyrus  E.  Dallin,  erected  on  Cole's  Hill,  Plymouth, 
Mass. 

Pilgrim  Maiden,  statue,  by  Henry  W.  Kitson.  Erected  at  Plymouth,  Mass., 
at  the  time  of  the  Tercentenary  Celebration. 

St.  Luke's  Battle  Cloister,  with  statue  of  a  doughboy,  by  Emil  Zettler,  Evans- 
ton,  111. 

Indian  fountain  figure  by  A.  Phimister  Proctor,  presented  to  the  State  Res- 
ervation at  Saratoga  Springs  by  Conservation  Commissioner  Pratt. 

Portrait  of  Joseph  Hodges  Choate,  by  Herbert  Adams,  Union  League  Club, 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Bas-relief  of  Dante,  by  F.  E.  Triebel,  commemorating  the  Sexcentenary  of 
Dante's  death. 

Medal  by  John  Flanagan  commemorating  the  presentation  of  the  Statue  of 
Lafayette  to  the  city  of  Metz,  by  the  Knights  of  Columbus. 

Medal  by  John  Flanagan  given  by  the  United  States  to  the  city  of  Verdun 
in  appreciation  of  the  valor  of  its  defenders. 

Medal  by  Robert  Aitken,  commemorating  visit  of  Marshal  Foch  to  the  United 
States. 
Replicas  of  the  statue  of  Joan   of  Arc  by  Anna  Vaughan  Hyatt,   erected 

some    years    ago    on    Riverside    Drive,    New    York,    have    been    erected    in 

Gloucester,  Mass.,  as  a  War  Memorial,  and  in  Blois,  France. 

There  is  evidence  of  a  steady  increase  in  the  interest  in  music  in  the  museums, 

and  an  inclination  to  relate  music  to  the  arts  of  painting,  sculpture  and  design. 

In  the  Boston  Museum  of  Fine  Arts  during  the  early  part  of  1921  three  free 

symphony  orchestral   concerts   were   given.     At  the  Metropolitan   Museum  in 

New  York  during  the  same  season  the  orchestral  concerts  under  the  leadership 

of  David  Mannes,  through  the  munificence  of  music  lovers  and  Museum  mem- 
bers were  given  and  were  even  more  largely  attended  than  before. 

The  Cleveland  Museum  of  Art,  under  the  auspices  of  its  Music  Department 

which   is   particularly   active,   has   installed   a   large   pipe  organ   with   chimes, 


12  THE  YEAR  IN  ART 


above  the  garden  court,  which  will  be  used  in  connection  with  its  extended 
music  program. 

A  new  wing  of  the  Metropolitan  Museum  was  completed  in  the  Spring  of 
1921  and  its  opening  was  inaugurated  by  an  exhibition  of  Architecture  and  the 
Allied  Arts,  held  under  the  auspices  of  the  Architectural  League  of  New  York. 

There  was  an  evident  increase  in  interest  in  the  art  of  pageantry.  Notable 
pageants  were  held  in  several  parts  of  the  country,  but  most  notable  of  all 
was  that  given  at  Plymouth  in  July  and  August  for  the  celebration  of  the 
Tercentenary  of  the  Landing  of  the  Pilgrims.  This  pageant  was  written 
by  George  Pierce  Baker  of  Harvard,  who  called  to  his  assistance  a  number 
of  poets,  among  whom  may  be  mentioned  Edwin  Arlington  Robinson,  Josephine 
Preston  Peabody,  and  Robert  Frost ;  and  musicians  such  as  Edward  Burlin- 
game  Hill,  Edgar  Stillman  Kelley,  Frederick  S.  Converse,  George  W.  Chad- 
wick,  Arthur  Foote,  Henry  F.  Gilbert,  Chalmers  Clifton,  Leo  Sowerby,  and 
John  Powell.  The  costumes  were  designed  by  RoUo  Peters,  the  well-known 
California  painter.  It  was  an  interesting  piece  of  cooperation  on  the  part  of 
the  several  representatives  of  the  arts. 

At  auction  sales  some  notable  prices  were  attained  in  1921.  Most  sensa- 
tional of  all  was  the  purchase  abroad  by  Messrs.  Duveen,  of  Gainsborough's 
"Blue  Boy"  and  Sir  Joshua  Reynolds'  portrait  of  "Mrs.  Siddons  as  the  Tragic 
Muse",  from  the  Duke  of  Westminster's  collection,  at  a  price  said  to  approxi- 
mate one  million  dollars,  one  hundred  and  seventy  thousand  pounds  being 
paid  for  the  former  which  has  since  been  acquired  by  Mr.  Henry  E.  Hunting- 
ton of  California  and  New  York. 

Philadelphia  has  received  through  the  bequest  of  an  art-loving,  public- 
spirited  citizen  another  collection  of  paintings  of  extraordinary  value  and 
interest.  According  to  the  will  of  John  H.  McFadden,  who  died  in  February, 
1921,  his  magnificent  collection  of  eighteenth  century  English  art  has  been 
left  in  trust  to  the  city  of  Philadelphia.  The  will  provides  that  $7,500  annually 
shall  be  set  aside  for  the  maintenance  of  the  collection;  the  only  stipulation 
being  that  the  Municipal  Art  Museum  to  house  the  paintings  be  completed 
within  seven  years  after  Mr.  McFadden's  death.  Should  the  city  fail  to 
meet  this  requirement,  the  pictures  go  to  the  Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art  in 
New  York. 

The  State  University  of  New  York  has  established  in  its  Gould  Memorial 
Library  an  Artists'  Memorial.  Therein  have  already  been  placed  busts  of 
George  Lmess,  Clinton  Ogilvie,  and  Carroll  Beckwith.  As  a  memorial  to 
Stanford  White  who  designed  the  building,  a  pair  of  bronze  doors,  the  work 
of  his  son,  will  be  placed  at  the  main  entrance  to  the  Library. 

L.  M. 


M 


useums 


The  Greek  cross   (A)   preceding  the  name   of  a  museum  indicates   that   it  is  a  chapter 
of  The  American  Federation  of  Arts. 

LOS  ANGELES,   CALIF. 

LOS  ANGELES  MUSEUM  OF  HISTORY,  SCIENCE  AND  ART 
Exposition  Park,  Los  Angeles,  Cal. 

William  M.  Bowen President      Howard  Robertson Secretary 

William  Alanson  Bryan,  Director 

Mary  E,  Marsh,  Assistant  Curator,  Department  of  Fine  and  Applied  Art 

Art  department  founded  November  6,  1913.  Board  meetings  last  Thurs- 
day of  each  month.  A  free  institution,  maintained  by  the  county  of  Los 
Angeles.  Educational  work  done  through  the  public  schools,  clubs  and  societies 
of  the  Southwest.  Collection  of  paintings  by  well-known  American  artists 
presented  by  Mr.  and  Mrs.  William  Preston  Harrison;  collection  of  etchings 
presented  by  Wallace  L.  DeWolf. 

One-man  exhibits  held  every  two  weeks ;  main  gallery  occupied  by  important 
exhibits  changed  every  month ;  California  Art  Club  holds  annual  exhibits  in 
October;  six  prizes  awarded.  International  Print  Exhibition  held  annually. 
Annual  attendance  averages  500,000. 

The  Otis  Art  Institute  (see  school  section)  which  is  under  the  direction  of 
the  Museum,  was  established  by  General  Harrison  Gray  Otis  shortly  before 
his  death  in  1917,  through  the  gift  to  the  County  of  Los  Angeles  of  his  resi- 
dence, "The  Bivouac." 

SOUTHWEST  MUSEUM 
4699  Marmion  Way,  Los  Angeles 

Milbank  Johnson President      Joseph  Scott 2nd  Vice-Pres. 

Mrs.  Clara  B.  Burdette,  Eda  S.  Dessau Sec.-Treas. 

First  Vice-President  647  South  Chicago  St.,  Los  Angeles 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  48. 

Open  free,  daily,  1  to  5  p.m.  Exhibition  of  European  paintings;  permanent 
exhibit  of  ivories,  sculpture  and  Western  art. 

Incorporated  1907;  building  opened  1914.  Annual  meeting  in  Januar}^ 
Student  members,  $2.50;  annual  dues,  $10;  membership,  418.  Contains  a  large 
collection  of  Southern  California  archaeology.  The  rotunda  has  an  art  gal- 
lery; also  Torrance  Hall  of  Arts.  There  are  also  scientific  collections  and 
libraries.  Meetings  of  natural  history  clubs;  lectures  covering  exhibits  weekly 
for  school  pupils  and  for  teachers. 

OAKLAND,   CALIF. 

OAKLAND  ART  ASSOCIATION 

^MUNICIPAL  ART   GALLERY   AND   PUBLIC   MUSEUM 
Municipal  Auditorium,   12th  and  Fallom  Streets,  Oakland 

William  S.  Porter President      Charles  S.  Green Treasurer 

Worth  Ryder Secretary       Mrs.  D.  W.  DeVeer,  Acting  Curator 

W.  H.  Clapp,  Director 
Open  daily  10  a.m.  to  12  m.;  1  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays  and  holidays,  1  to  5  p.m. 
Admission  free. 

13 


14  CALIFORNIA  MUSEUMS 

Oakland  Art  Association — Continued 
OAKLAND,   CALIF. 

Founded  1915.  Annual  meeting  in  March.  Annual  dues,  students,  $1 ; 
annual  $5;  sustaining,  $10;  life,  $100;  membership,  250.  Holds  exhibition  on 
average  of  every  two  weeks. 

SACRAMENTO,   CALIF. 

CALIFORNIA  MUSEUM  ASSOCIATION 

CROCKER  ART  GALLERY 
Second  and  O  Streets,  Sacramento 

Grove  L.  Johnson President       W.  F.  Jackson,  Secretary-Treasurer 

Robert  T.  Devlin Vice-Pres.  and  Curator 

Open  free,  daily  except  Saturday  and  Sunday,  October  1  to  April  1,  10 
A.M.  to  4  p.m;  April  1  to  October  1,  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m;  Saturday,  10  a.m.  to 
12  M.;  Sundays,  1  to  4  p.m. 

Founded  1884.  Annual  meeting  in  March ;  life  membership  fee,  $25.  Mem- 
bership, 57.  Mrs.  E.  B.  Crocker  gave  to  the  city  her  art  collection  of  about 
700  paintings  and  the  Crocker  Gallery,  which,  although  municipal  property, 
is  managed  by  the  Museum  Association. 

SAN    DIEGO,    CALIF. 

SAN  DIEGO  MUSEUM 
Balboa  Park,  San  Diego 

Wheeier  J.  Bailey President       Anna  A.  M.  Connell Secretary 

Mrs.  W.  p.  B.  Prentice.  .  .Treasurer       Edgar  L.  Hewett Director 

Organized  1916.  Annual  meeting  in  January.  Annual  dues  from  $5  to  $500. 
Membership,  450.     Circuit  exhibitions  every  month. 

SAN    FRANCISCO,   CALIF. 

M.  H.  DE  YOUNG  MEMORIAL  MUSEUM 
Golden  Gate  Park,  San  Francisco 
Charles  E.  Penez,  Curator. 
Herbert  Fleishhacker,  President  John  A.  McGregor 

M.  Earl  Cummings  William  F.  Humphrey 

A.  B.  Spreckles  Commissioners 

Open  free,  daily,  from  10  a.m  to  4  p.m  ;  Sundays  and  holidays,   10  a.m.  to 

5   P.M. 

The  Memorial  Museum  was  organized  in  1895,  and  is  under  the  management 
of  the  Park  Commission  and  the  direct  supervision  of  the  Curator.  Meetings 
bi-monthly. 

Out  of  a  legacy  of  $10,000  given  by  Alice  Skae  for  paintings,  32  paintings  by 
California  artists  have  been  purchased  by  the  Park  Commission  and  they  are 
exhibited  as  the  "Alice  Skae  Collection."  Also  owns  Haven's  collection  of  oil 
paintings,  donated  to  the  Museum  by  M.  H.  de  Young  as  a  permanent  exhibit. 

On  February  22,  1919,  the  ceremonies  attending  the  opening  and  dedication 
of  the  first  wing  of  the  new  Memorial  Museum  Building  were  held.  The 
building  was  a  gift  to  the  City  of  San  Francisco  from  M.  H.  de  Young.  The 
fully  installed  rooms  of  the  new  Museum  are  as  follows :  Statuary  Hall,  Ori- 
ental Room,  Continental  and  Oriental  Ceramic  Rooms  and  six  Art  Galleries. 

The  remainder  of  the  building,  Center  Tower  and  Second  Wing,  have  been 
completed.  The  dedication  and  opening  was  held  January  2,  1921.  In  this  new 
Wing  there  are  three  galleries  devoted  to  oil  paintings;  one  to  water  colors; 
one  to  etchings  and  engravings;  large  gallery  installed  with  ancient,  modern 
and  recent  war  relics ;  two  rooms  devoted  to  textiles ;  one  to  minerals ;  another 
to  musical  instruments,  and  one  each  to  coins  and  jewels. 

The  attendance  during  1920  was  728,256;  received  1,944  donations. 


CALIFORNIA  MUSEUMS  15 

SAN    FRANCISCO,  CALIF. 

.^SAN  FRANCISCO  MUSEUM  OF  ART 

(Formerly  Comparative  Museum  of  Art) 

Palace  of  Fine  Arts,  Exposition  Grounds,  San  Francisco 

George  A.  Pope President       Walter  S.  Martin Treasurer 

Charles  T.  Crocker.  .  .1st  Vice-Pres.       E.  Raymond  Armsby Secretary 

Sidney  M.  EHRMAN..2nd  Vice-Pres.       A.  W.  Widenham Asst.  Sec. 

J.  Nilsen  Laurvik,  Director 

Open  daily,  including  Sunday,  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m. 

Organized  1916  and  permanently  established  1920.  Conducted  by  the  San 
Francisco  Art  Association.  Yearly  maintenance  fund  raised  by  public-spirited 
citizens.  Permanent  Museum  Board  of  Trustees  organized  1920  to  administer 
the  affairs  of  the  Museum  apart  from  the  Art  Association's  other  activities, 
at  which  time  it  was  decided  that  henceforth  the  Museum  was  to  be  known 
as  the  San  Francisco  Museum  of  Art. 

The  Museum  contains  a  retrospective  Loan  Exhibition  of  the  work  of  Axel 
Gallen-Kallela ;  large  murals  of  the  Four  Elements  by  Frank  Brangwyn; 
murals  by  Childe  Hassam  and  Arthur  Matthews ;  a  permanent  loan  collection 
of  American  and  foreign  art ;  the  Emanuel  Walter  collection  of  paintings  and 
drawings  by  modern  masters ;  the  Oriental  department  comprising  the  Car- 
lotta  Mabury,  Ney  Wolgskill  and  Maude  Rex  Allen  Chinese  and  Japanese  col- 
lections of  ivories,  potteries,  porcelains,  etc.,  filling  ten  galleries  of  the  fifty 
now  open  to  the  public;  the  University  of  California  Loan  Collection  of  paint- 
ings and  tapestries  from  the  late  Mrs.  P.  A.  Hearst's  Collection ;  the  Com- 
parative Room  of  ancient  and  modern  paintings.  Exhibitions  are  held  through- 
out the  year. 

STANFORD    UNIVERSITY,   CALIF. 

THOMAS  WELTON  STANFORD  ART  GALLERY 

Stanford  University,  Calif. 

Pedro  J.  Lemos,  Director 

The    building    completed    1917;    cost,    $100,000;    houses    paintings    given    to 

University   by   Thomas    Welton    Stanford.      Galleries   are    reserved    for   local 

and  travelling  exhibitions  which  are  given  monthly. 

►J^LELAND    STANFORD,    JR.,    MEMORIAL    MUSEUM 
Has  Stanford  family  collection  of  paintings;  the  Timothy  Hopkins  collec- 
tion  of   paintings;    the   David    Hewes   collection   of   paintings   and   sculpture; 
the  Icheda  collection  of  Oriental  art;  the  Cesnola  collection  of  Greek  pottery; 
Egyptian  collection ;  textile  collection. 

DENVER,   COLO. 

COLORADO  MUSEUM  OF  NATURAL  HISTORY 

City  Park,  Denver 

Frank  M.  Taylor,  President 

Henry  M.   Porter Vice-Pres.       Harry  C.  James Treasurer 

Persifor  M.  Cooke,  Secretary,  Denver  National  Bank,  Denver 
Walter  C.  Mead,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Incorporated   1900.     Meetings   second  Tuesdays   in   February,   May,  August 
and   November;   annual   in   February.     Total   Museum   income   for    1920   was 
$38,712.50.    The  attendance  for  1920  was  219,873. 

A  natural  history  and  mineral  museum  which  contains  a  well-lighted  art 
gallery.  Own  collection  of  Japanese  and  Chinese  ceramics  and  bronzes  and 
a  few  pictures.  A  loan  collection  of  pictures  is  maintained  and  is  changed  at 
intervals.  In  addition,  several  loan  collections  of  Japanese  and  Chinese  cera- 
mics  and    bronzes   are    shown.     During    1920   Mrs.    Ellen    M.    Standley   gave 


16  COLORADO— CONNECTICUT  MUSEUMS 

Colorado  Museum  of  Natural  History — Continued 
DENVER,   COLO. 

$10,000  toward  the  endowment  fund  for  the  upkeep  of  the  Joseph  Standley 
Wing. 

The  Museum  has  an  expedition  on  the  far  northern  coasts  of  Alaska ;  besides 
natural  history  specimens  they  are  to  take  numerous  photographs,  and  the  use 
of  latest  color  charts  will  enable  the  reproduction  of  accurate  colorings. 

GREENWICH,  CONN. 

BRUCE  ART  MUSEUM 
Bruce  Park,  Greenwich 
Edward  F.  Bigelow,  Curator 
Paul  G.  Howes,  Assistant  Curator 
Leonard  Ochtman,  Art  Advisor 
Selectmen  Trustees 

Newton  S.  Johnson  Frederick  K.  Hubbard 

Oscar  D.  Tuthill  Walter  M.  Anderson 

John  Broderick  Wilbur  S.  Wright 

Augustus  I.  Mead 
Established  by  the  late  Robert  M.  Bruce,  August  4,  1908,  "as  a  natural  his- 
tory, historical  and  art  museum  for  the  use  and  benefit  of  the  public,  in  such 
manner  and  under  such  rules  as  may  be  prescribed  by  the  selectmen  of  the 
town  and  trustees."  Owns  small  collection  of  paintings.  The  annual  exhibi- 
tions of  the  Greenwich  Society  of  Artists  are  held  in  the  Museum. 

HARTFORD,   CONN. 

WADSWORTH  ATHENEUM  AND  MORGAN   MEMORIAL 
.    Hartford 

Charles  E.  Gross President      William  R.  Corson Secretary 

Charles  H.  Clark Treasurer      George  H.  Story Hon.  Curator 

Frank  B.  Gay,  Director 
Mrs.  Florence  Paull  Berger,  General  Curator 

For  Foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  65,  and  earlier  issues. 

Open,  free,  daily  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  (4  p.m.  October  to  March);  Sundays 
and  holidays,  2  to  5  p.m.  Galleries  of  old  and  modern  paintings,  statuary, 
furniture,  art  objects.  Annual  meeting  second  Saturday  after  first  Monday 
in  January.    Annual  dues,  $10.     Membership,  227. 

Original  building  dates  from  1842;  additions  1866,  1892  and  1910.  The 
collections  include  modern  statuary,  old  tapestries,  a  series  of  historical  battle 
scenes  painted  by  John  Trumbull,  paintings  of  the  old  Dutch,  early  English, 
modern  French,  and  American  schools;  on  the  main  floor  there  are  collec- 
tions of  antique  furniture,  porcelain,  silver,  and  glass;  Colt  collection  of 
paintings  and  objects  of  art,  and  of  models  of  arms;  Cypriote  antiquities  and 
Babylonian  tablets  given  by  Samuel  P.  Avery,  casts  of  Cypriote  statues  given 
by  Henry  Walters  of  Baltimore;  the  Albert  C.  Bates  collection  of  American 
Archaeology,  the  Pitkin  collection  of  American  pottery,  the  Cone  collection 
of  fire-arms,  and  the  J.  Coolidge  Hills  collection  of  war  medals  and  decora- 
tions. In  February,  1917,  J.  P.  Morgan  presented  a  selection  of  1,700  art 
objects  from  his  late  father's  collection  (with  a  fund  of  $50,000),  which 
includes  the  French  porcelains,  Meissen  figurines,  Italian  majolica,  English 
salt-glaze  pottery;  early  Roman  and  later  Venetian  glass;  Egyptian,  Grecian 
and  Roman  bronzes,  pottery,  sculptures,  gems ;  Delia  Robbia  placques ;  carved 
ivories;  German  plate  and  wood  carvings.  The  collection  of  ancient  bronzes 
IS  of  special_ significance,  while  the  permanent  exhibition  of  the  Morgan  potteries 
and  porcelains  makes  the  family  memorial  one  of  the  most  important  ceramic 
museums  in  America.     Exhibitions  are  held,  and  lectures  given. 


CONNECTICUT— DISTRICT  OF  COLUMBIA  MUSEUMS      17 

NEW    HAVEN,  CONN. 

MUSEUM  OF  THE  SCHOOL  OF  FINE  ARTS 

Yale  University,  New  Haven 

James  Rowland  Angell,  President 

William  Sargeant  Kendall,.  .  .Dir.      George  H.  Langzettel Secret'ary 

The  Art  Museum  includes  the  Jarves  collection  of  119  Italian  paintings, 
dating  from  the  thirteenth  to  the  seventeenth  centuries ;  the  Trumbull  collec- 
tion of  historical  portraits  and  other  paintings  illustrative  of  the  American 
Revolution ;  a  general  collection  of  paintings ;  original  sketches  by  the  old 
masters ;  casts  from  Greek,  Roman  and  Renaissance  sculptures ;  Chinese  por- 
celains (lent)  ;  autotypes  and  fictile  reproductions.  A  catalogue  of  the  Italian 
paintings  in  the  Jarves  collection  written  by  Oswald  Siren,  was  published  in 
1917. 

March  28  to  April  17,  1921 — 'Twenty-first  annual  exhibition  of  New  Haven 
Paint  and  Clay  Club. 

NORWICH,   CONN. 

NORWICH  FREE  ACADEMY 
Peck  Library,  Norwich,  Conn. 

Francis  J.  Leavens President      Guy  B.  Dolbear Sec.  Treas. 

Helen  Marshall,  Librarian-Curator 
Incorporated  1854.     It  includes  the  Peck  Library,  Slater  Memorial  Museum 
and  Converse  Art  Building. 

SLATER   MEMORIAL   MUSEUM 
Open,  free,  8.30  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  ;  Saturdays  and  holidays  from  9  a.m.  to  12  m., 
and  from  2  to  5  p.m.  ;  Sundays  from  October  to  June,  2  p.m  to  4  p.m. 

The  Museum  contains  casts  of  Greek  and  Italian  sculpture,  French  archi- 
tectural ornament,  medals  and  metal  work  of  the  Renaissance;  and  over  2,000 
photographs.  There  are  occasional  loan  collections  of  paintings  and  of  handi- 
crafts. Docent  work  with  children  of  the  public  schools  of  Norwich. 
CONVERSE  ART  BUILDING 
Open,  free,  from  8.30  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  ;  Saturdays  9  a.m.  to  12  m.  and  2  to  5 
p.m.  It  houses  the  Edmond  Indian  collection  and  the  art  school.  (See  school 
section.)     Exhibitions  of  the  Norwich  Free  Art  School  are  held. 

WASHINGTON,    D.   C. 

HhCORCORAN  GALLERY  OF  ART 
Seventeenth  Street  and  New  York  Avenue,  N.W.,  Washington 
Charles  C.  Glover,  President  and  Treasurer 
C.  Powell  Minnigerode,  Secretary  and  Director 
For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  I,  p.  405  and  Vol.  XI,  p.  71. 
Open  throughout  the  year :  Mondays,  12  m.  to  4.30  p.m.  ;  other  week  days  9 
a.m.  to  4.30  P.M. ;  holidays   (except  Christmas  day  and  July  4,  when  the  gal- 
lery is  closed),  10  a.m.  to  2  p.m.;  Sundays,  1.30  to  4.30  p.m.     Admission  fee 
25  cents  on   Mondays,  Wednesdays  and   Fridays ;   other  days   free,   including 
Sundays  and  holidays.     Free  admission   is  granted  at  all  times  to  pupils  of 
public  and  private  schools,  accompanied  by  a  teacher. 

Founded  1869.  Meetings  of  the  trustees  are  held  on  the  third  Mondays  of 
March,  June  and  October ;  annual  meeting  in  January. 

The  collections  consist  chiefly  of  works  by  the  modern  painters  and  sculp- 
tors, including  important  examples  by  the  masters  of  the  Barbizon  School, 
and  an  unusually  fine  collection  of  sculptures  by  A.  L.  Barye.  Within  recent 
years   special   attention    has   been   given  to   the  acquisition   of   works   by   the 


18  DISTRICT  OF  COLUMBIA  MUSEUMS 

WASHINGTON,    D.   C. 

Corcoran  Gallery  of  Art — Continued 
American   painters   and   sculptors,   with   a   view  to   making   the   collection   as 
representative   as   possible.     There   is   also   a    large   collection   of    casts    from 
antique  and  Renaissance  sculptures. 

A  free  art  school  is  conducted  in  connection  with  the  Gallery  with  both  day 
and  night  classes.     (See  school  section.) 

Recent  acquisitions,  by  gift  and  purchase :  "Head  of  a  Girl,"  by  Frank 
Duveneck ;  "Portrait  of  Fanny  Yates  Levy,"  by  Thomas  Sully ;  "Head  of  a 
Woman,"  granite,  by  Wilham  Rimmer ;  "Lion  Striking  at  a  Serpent,"  by  A.  L. 
Barye. 

Exhibitions  of  Contemporary  American  Oil  Paintings  are  held  biennially, 
the  eighth  of  which  opened  December  18,  1921.  Through  the  generosity  of 
Hon.  William  A.  Clark,  an  endowment  of  $100,000  has  been  established  for 
the  perpetuation  of  prizes  aggregating  the  sum  of  $5,000  for  each  exhibition 
of  this  character. 

Exhibitions 

Oct.  30  to  Nov.  15,  1920 — Etchings  by  members  of  the  English  Print  Society, 

under  auspices  of  The  American  Federation  of  Arts. 
Nov.  6  to   Nov.  21 — Joint  memorial   exhibition  of    paintings   by   Edmund   C. 

Messer  and  Richard  N.  Brooke. 
Nov.  15  to  Dec.  1 — Etchings  by  Louis  Orr. 
Nov.  22  to  Nov.  29 — Summer  sketches  by  students  of  the  Corcoran  School  of 

Art. 
Nov.  24 — Pastel  drawings  by  John  McLure  Hamilton,  the  gift  of  Mrs.  E,  H. 

Harriman  to  the  Corcoran  School  of  Art. 
Nov.  27  to  Dec.  14 — Etchings  by  Arthur  William  Heintzelmian. 
Dec.  1  to  Dec.  12 — Water  colors  and  drawings  by  workers  in  the  Department 

of  Agriculture. 
Dec.  4  to  Dec.  14 — Miniatures  by  Franklin  Barber  Clark. 
Dec.  15  to  Jan.  2,  1921— Drawings  by  Alexander  R.  James. 
Jan.  5  to  Jan.  28— Etchings  by  Charles  A.  Piatt. 
Jan.  15  to  Jan.  28 — Thirtieth  annual  exhibition  of  the  Society  of  Washington 

Artists. 
Jan.  22  to  May  31 — Bronzes  and  etchings  lent  by  Ralph  King. 
Jan.  29  to  Feb.   18 — Etchings  by  Ernst  Norhnd;  etchings  by  Joseph  Pennell, 

lent  by  James  Parmalee. 
Feb.  4  to  Feb.  23 — Twenty-fifth  annual  exhibition  of  the  Washington  Water 

Color  Club. 
Feb.  19  to  Mar.  6— Etchings  by  Donald  Shaw  MacLaughlin. 
Feb.  26  to  Mar.  20— Paintings  by  P.  A.  de  Laszlo. 
Mar.  7  to  Mar.  21 — Etchings  by  William  Meyerowitz. 
Mar.  23  to  Mar.  30— Paintings  by  Albert  de  Kossak 
Mar.  24  to  Apr.  13— Oil  paintings,  etchings  and  wash  drawings  by  Frank  W. 

Benson. 
Apr.  14  to  May  6— Photographs  of  cathedrals,  under  auspices  of  the  National 

Cathedral  Association. 
Apr.  14  to  Apr.  27— Drawings  by  Anna  Milo  Upjohn,  under  auspices  of  the 

Junior  National  Red  Cross. 
Apr.  14  to  May  2— Water  colors  by  Bertha  E.  Perrie. 
Apr.  29— Paintings  lent  by  Hon.  Breckinridge  Long. 
May  3  to  May  22— Water  colors  by  Felicie  Waldo  Howell. 
May  1  to  May  31— British  Arts  and  Crafts,  under  auspices  of  the  Washington 

Society  of  the  Fine  Arts. 
May  2  to  May  16— Water  colors  by  Germaine  Tailleur. 
May  7  to  May  22 — Modern  Swiss  paintings  and  sculpture. 
May  23  to  June  15— Water  colors  by  M.  W.  Zimmerman! 


Reflection.    By  Frank  W.  Benson.  N.A. 
Phillips  Memorial  Gallery,  Washington 


Marshal  Joffre.     By  John  C.  Johansen,  N.A. 
Owned  by  the  National  Portrait  Gallery  of  Washington 


DISTRICT  OF  COLUMBIA  MUSEUMS  19 

Corcoran  Gallery  of  Art — Continued 

WASHINGTON,   D.  C. 

May  24  to  June  5 — Annual  exhibition  of  work  by  students  of  The  Corcoran 

School  of  Art. 
June  6 — Busts  of  famous  personages  of  the  World  War,  by  Jo  Davidson. 
June  7  to   Oct.  3 — Rotary  exhibition  of  the  American  Water  Color   Society, 

circulated  by  the  American  Federation  of  Arts. 

NATIONAL  GALLERY  OF  ART 

■SMITHSONIAN   INSTITUTION 

Washington 

Officers  of  the  Institution 

Warren  G.  Harding,  President  of  the  United  States,  Presiding  Officer  ex- 

officio. 
Calvin  Coolidge,  Vice-Pres.  of  the  United  States,  Chancellor. 
Charles  D.  Walcott,  Secretary  and  Keeper,  ex-officio. 
William  H.  Holmes,  Director,  National  Gallery  of  Art. 

For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  76. 

Open  free  to  the  public  every  week  day  from  9  a.m.  to  4.30  p.m.;  Sundays 
from  1.30  to  4.30  p.m. 

The  Institution  was  founded  in  1846,  art  being  one  of  the  four  grand  divi- 
sions included  in  the  scope  of  its  contemplated  activities.  The  separate  title 
"National  Gallery  of  Art"  for  the  art  collections  was  first  applied  in  1906  as 
the  result  of  a  decision  handed  down  by  the  Supreme  Court  of  the  District 
of  Columbia. 

The  collections,  cared  for  previously  in  connection  with  the  collections  of  the 
department  of  anthropology,  increased  to  such  an  extent  in  recent  years  that 
it  became  necessary  to  separate  the  Gallery  from  the  scientific  department,  and 
on  July  1,  1920.  it  was  made  a  separate  unit  under  the  Institution,  with  W.  H. 
Holmes  as  director.  The  problems  of  the  Gallery  made  it  necessary  to  organize 
a  commission  to  consider  plans  for  their  solution,  and  especially  to  take  up 
the  task  of  providing  a  gallery  building.  The  membership  of  the  Commission 
is  as  follows : 

Public  men  interested  in  the  Fine  Arts  : 

W.  K.  BiXBY,  St.  Louis,  Mo.  James  Parmelee,  Cleveland,  O. 

Joseph  H.  Gest,  Cincinnati,  O.  Herbert  L.  Pratt,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Charles  Moore,  Detroit,  Mich. 
Experts  : 

John  E.  Lodge,  Boston,  Mass.  Charles  A.  Platt,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Frank  Jewett  Mather,  Jr.,  Edward  Willis  Redfield, 

Princeton,  N.  J.  Center  Bridge,  Pa. 

Artists : 
Herbert  Adams,  New  York,  N.  Y.  William  H.  Holmes, 

Edwin  H.  Blashfield,  Washington,  D.  C. 

New  York,  N.  Y.  Gari  Melchers,  Falmouth,  Va. 

Daniel  C.  French,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

At  the  first  meeting  of  the  Commission  the  following  committees  were 
appointed : 

Executive  Committee 
Herbert  Adams  Charles  Moore 

Daniel  C.  French  James  Parmelee 

W.  H.  Holmes  C.  D.  Walcott 


20  DISTRICT    OF    COLUMBIA— GEORGIA    MUSEUMS 

National  Gallery  of  Art — Continued 
WASHINGTON,    D.   C. 

Advisory  Committee 
Herbert  Adams  Gari  Melchers 

E.  H.  Blashfield  Charles  A.  Platt 

W.  H.  Holmes  E.  W.  Redfield 

Special  Committees 

American  Paintings,  E.  W.  Redfield,  Chairman. 

Modern  European  Paintings,  Gari  Melchers,  Chairman. 

Ancient  European  Paintings,  Frank  J.  Mather,  Chairman. 

Oriental  Art,  John  E.  Lodge,  Chairman. 

Sculpture,  Herbert  Adams,  Chairman. 

Architecture,  Charles  A.  Platt,  Chairman. 

Mural  Paintings,  E.  H.  Blashfield,  Chairman, 

Ceramics,  Joseph  H.  Gest,  Chairman. 

Textiles,  Denman  W.  Ross,  Chairman. 

Prints,  James  Parmalee,  Chairman. 

National  Portrait  Gallery,  Herbert  L.  Pratt,  Chairman. 

National  Gallery  Building,  Charles  Moore,  Chairman. 

In  May,  1921,  twenty  portraits  of  personages  prominent  in  the  war  with 
Germany,  executed  for  the  National  Portrait  Committee  by  American  portrait 
painters  of  established  reputation,  was  exhibited  in  the  central  room  of  the 
Gallery. 

The  Freer  Gallery  of  Art  is  regarded  as  a  separate  unit  of  the  National 
Gallery,  to  remain  always  as  such,  the^staff  being  provided  for  by  the  Freer 
Foundation.  The  collections  at  the  beginning  of  the  fiscal  year  are  in  process 
of  installation,  with  John  E.  Lodge  as  curator,  and  Katharine  N.  Rhoades  and 
Grace  D.  Guest,  assistants. 

The  National  Gallery  proper  occupies  the  main  central  sky-light  hall  of  the 
Natural  History  Museum,  and  will  so  continue  until  an  art  building  is  pro- 
vided. Its  collections  consist  of  gifts  and  bequests  by  generous  patrons  and 
of  transfers  from  other  Government  departments.  The  more  important  col- 
lections are :  The  Harriet  Lane  Johnston  Bequest,  comprising  21  works,  among 
which  are  paintings  by  Luini,  Romney,  Reynolds,  Lawrence,  Hoppner,  Con- 
stable, Beechey,  Gordon,  Jansen,  Pourbus  and  Rossiter ;  the  William  T.  Evans 
collection  of  151  paintings  by  106  contemporary  American  artists,  besides 
numerous  engravings ;  82  paintings  and  drawings  by  contemporary  French 
artists,  presented  by  the  French  Government  in  recognition  of  the  aid  given 
to  France  in  the  war  with  Germany ;  24  important  works  by  19  European 
masters,  Cox,  Flinck,  Francia,  Gainsborough,  Guardi,  Hogarth,  Lotto,  Law- 
rence, Maes,  Mainardi,  Raeburn,  Rembrandt,  Reynolds,  Romney,  Rubens, 
Turner,  Titian,  Van  Orley,  Wilson ;  a  large  collection  of  miscellaneous  art 
objects  chiefly  French,  the  gift  of  Reverend  Alfred  Duane  Pell.  Five  hundred 
and  ninety  paintings  and  drawings  illustrating  the  war  with  Germany  are  on 
exhibition  in  available  spaces  on  the  ground  floor  of  the  Museum  building, 
ninety-three  being  from  the  great  series  of  paintings  and  sketches  made  for  the 
Liberty  Loan  celebration  in  New  York,  and  four  hundred  and  ninety-seven  the 
work  of  the  corps  of  artists  sent  to  France  for  the  purpose  by  the  War  Depart- 
ment. The  additions  for  the  year  1920-1921  include  as  gifts  nine  works  of 
painting  and  sculpture,  one  bequest,  and  twenty-six  loans. 

SAVANNAH,    GA. 

►^TELFAIR  ACADEMY  OF  ARTS  AND  SCIENCES 

Alexander  R.  Lawton President      Charles  F.  Groves Sec.-Treas. 

Charles  Ellis Vice-Pres.  P.  O.  Box  727,  Savannah 

For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  I,  p.  398. 


GEORGIA— ILLINOIS   MUSEUMS  21 

Telfair  Academy  of  Arts  and  Sciences — Continued 

SAVANNAH,    GA. 

Open  daily,  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays,  3  to  5  p.m.;  admission  free.  Perma- 
nent collection  of  about  73  modern  paintings ;  a  few  pieces  of  sculpture,  and  60 
casts  from  the  classic  antique  sculpture,  including  the  "Farnese  Bull"  group. 

Founded  1875  ;  organized  1883 ;  incorporated  1920.  Annual  meeting  in  Jan- 
uary..    Annual  dues,  $2.50;   contributing,  $10;   sustaining,  $25. 

During  1919,  1920  and  1921  acquired  "La  Madrilenita,"  by  Robert  Henri; 
"A  Boy's  Head,"  by  C.  W.  Hawthorne ;  "Intimate,"  by  Julius  L.  Stewart ; 
"Ribot's  Family,"  by  T.  Ribot. 

Exhibitions,  1920-21 — Prints  and  photographs,  circulated  by  the  American 
Federation  of  Arts;  etchings  by  Lester  G.  Hornby;  exhibition  of  work  by  the 
Savannah  Art  Club ;  paintings  by  American  artists,  circulated  by  the  American 
Federation  of  Arts. 

CHICAGO,    ILL. 

►^ART  INSTITUTE  OF  CHICAGO 
Michigan  Avenue,  opposite  Adams  Street,  Chicago,  111. 

Charles  L.  Hutchinson.  .  .President      Frank  G.  Logan Vice-Pres. 

Martin  A.  Ryerson Vice-Pres.       Ernest  A.  Hamill Treasurer 

Executive   Staff 

Robert  B.  Harshe,  Director. 

Charles  H.  Burkholder,  Secretary. 

Clarence  A.  Hough,  Comptroller. 

Mrs.  Emma  B.  Hodge,  Honorary  Curator  of  Ceramics. 

Berthold  Laufer,  Honorary  Curator  of  Chinese  Antiquities. 

James  H.  Breasted,  Honorory  Curator  of  Egyptian  Antiquities. 

Charles  L.  Ricketts,  Honorary  Curator  of  Manuscripts. 

Bessie  Bennett,  Curator  of  Decorative  Arts. 

Charlotte  Voge,  Assistant  Curator  of  Decorative  Arts. 

Frederick  W.  Gookin,  Curator  Buckingham  Collection  of  Prints. 

Kathryn  W.  McGovern,  Assistant  in  Charge  of   Prints. 

Sarah  L.  Mitchell,  Librarian. 

WiEBE  White,  Assistant  Librarian,  Ryerson  Library. 

Marion  Cummings,  Assistant  Librarian,  Burnham  Library  of  Architecture. 

Gracia  Alling,  Exhibition  Sales  Agent. 

Mrs.  Herman  A.  Hall,  Museum  Instructor. 

Helen  Parker,  Assistant  Museum  Instructor. 

Ross  Crane,  Head  Extension  Department. 

Guy  U.  Young,  Manager  Membership  Department. 

Fanny  J.  Kendall,  Registrar  of  the  School. 

Grace  Williams,  in  charge  of  Social  Relations. 

G.  E.  Kaltenbach,  Keeper  of  Archives  and  Historical  Documents. 

For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  I,  p.  138  and  Vol.  XI,  pp.  87,  88. 

The  Museum  building  is  open  to  the  public  every  week  day  from  9  a.m. 
to  5.30  P.M.;  Sundays,  12.15  to  9  p.m.;  the  Ryerson  and  Burnham  libraries  are 
open  every  week  day  from  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  Mondays,  Wednesdays  and  Fridays 
until  9  p.m.  ;  Sundays,  2  to  8  p.m.  Admission  to  the  museum  is  free  to  members 
and  their  families  and  to  public  school  teachers  and  pupils  at  all  times,  and 
free  to  all  on  Wednesdays,  Saturdays,  Sundays  and  legal  holidays;  on  other 
days  the  entrance  is  25  cents. 

Incorporated  1879.  The  annual  meeting  the  second  Tuesday  in  January; 
Board  meets  the  first  Thursday  after  the  Second  Tuesday  in  January,  and 
second  Thursday  of  April,  July  and  October.  Fees:  annual  members  $10; 
sustaining  members  $25  or  more  annually;  life  members  $100;  governing 
members  $100  first  year,  and  $25  annually;  they  are  exempt  from  dues  after 


22  ILLINOIS  MUSEUMS 

Art  Institute  of  Chicago — Continued 
CHICAGO,    ILL. 

payment  of  $400,  when  they  become  governing  life  members ;   total  member- 
ship, 13,600. 

The  Museum  has  collections  of  Egyptian  and  classical  antiquities ;  casts 
of  architecture  and  sculpture,  and  original  works  in  marble  and  bronze; 
medals  and  metalwork ;  paintings,  prints  and  drawings.  Oriental  art ;  decora- 
tive arts,  including  furniture,  tapestries,  textiles,  and  ceramics.  Special 
collections'  of  note  are  the  Dutch  and  Flemish  paintings,  the  Field  collec- 
tion of  paintings  mostly  by  the  Barbizon  School ;  the  Butler  collection  of 
paintings  by  Inness ;  Friends  of  American  Art  collection  of  paintings  and 
sculpture,  Nickerson  collection  of  Oriental  art  objects,  Blackstone  collection 
of  casts  of  historic  French  sculpture,  Amelia  Blanxius  collection  of  English 
ceramics,  F.  W.  Gunsaulus  collection  of  Old  Wedgewood,  Mary  Jane  Gun- 
saulus  collection  of  pottery  of  the  Near  East,  Howard  Mansfield  collection 
of  etchings  by  Meryon,  Wallace  DeWolf  collection  of  etchings  by  Zorn ; 
Bryan  Lathrop  collection  of  Whistler  etchings  and  lithographs. 

A  Bulletin  is  issued  monthly,  September  to  May.  The  Scammon  lectures 
are  held  annually  and  frequently  issued  in  book  form.  Regular  Tuesday 
lecture  course  on  art  and  allied  subjects  is  held  for  members  and  students 
in  Fullerton  Memorial  Hall.  Annual  lecture  courses  on  architecture,  sculpture 
and  paintings  given.  Regular  weekly  classes  are  held  for  adults  and  lectures 
on  the  collections  given  to  clubs  by  the  Museum  instructor.  Classes  for  pupils 
are  a  part  of  the  educational  work  for  children,  together  with  the  children's 
hour  Saturday  mornings  and  afternoons.  A  Children's  Corner  is  maintained. 
Sunday  afternoon  concerts  are  given  in  Fullerton  Memorial  Hall.  Art 
study  outlines  are  issued  for  the  use  of  students,  and  a  classroom  is  pro- 
vided for  stereopticon  talks.  The  Ryerson  and  Burnham  libraries,  in  the 
Museum  building,  are  open  daily  to  the  public  for  reference  and  to  students 
of  the  school  for  circulation.  They  contain  besides  17,000  books,  photo- 
graphs, lantern  slides,  color  prints  and  post  cards.  Forty-three  subjects  of 
color  prints  of  paintings  in  the  Museum,  and  post  cards  of  40  subjects  in 
color  and  250  in  monotone  are  on  sale. 

The  Extension  Department  conducts  Better  Homes  Institutes  in  cities  and 
towns  in  the  mid-west.  Their  program  includes  exhibits  of  paintings  by 
contemporary  American  artists ;  exhibits  of  architecture,  covering  home- 
building,  city  planning,  community  centers,  etc.;  exhibits  of  landscape  art; 
demonstrations  in  interior  decoration  in  which  a  room  and  furnishings  are 
used;  lectures  on  How  to  Build  a  Home;  How  to  Plant  the  Home  Grounds; 
Costume  Designing;  Industrial  Art;  Community  Betterment;  Gallery  Talks, 
etc.    An  art  school  is  maintained  in  the  Museum  building  (see  school  section). 

Important  bequests,  gifts  and  purchases,  1920-1921  :  The  George  L.  McKin- 
lock  Memorial  building  fund  of  $150,000  and  $50,000  for  statuary;  Joseph 
Winterbotham  endowment  fund  of  $50,000,  the  income  for  foreign  subjects 
by  European  painters;  $25,000  endowment  from  Henry  L.  Frank  (un- 
restricted) ;  the  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Mark  Kimball  funds  of  $10,000  each,  instituted 
by  their  daughter,  Mrs.  Galloway,  the  income  to  go.  for  the  purchase  of  books 
for  the  Ryerson  Library;  Chicago  Tribune  $5,000  prize  for  Mural  Decora- 
tions (school)  ;  Chicago  Daily  News  $1,000  prize  for  Sculpture  (school)  ;  an 
additional  gift  of  $5'000  from  Mrs.  Kate  Adams  Wells  to  the  John  Quincy 
Adams  scholarship  fund  (now  $15,000)  to  increase  the  scholarship  from  $425 
a  year  to  $750;  the  Ettinger  fund  is  approximately  $4,500;  F.  Oplatka  scholar- 
ship of  approximately  $4,500;  two  new  annual  purchase  prizes  instituted  by 
Charles  S.  Peterson,  namely  $500  for  a  painting  exhibited  in  the  exhibition 
of  American  Paintings  and  Sculpture  to  be  added  to  the  permanent  collection 
of  the  Art  Institute,  and  two  $250  purchase  prizes  for  pictures  to  be  given 
to  the  Public  School  collection;  the  Evaline  M.  Kimball  collection  of  23 
paintings    containing    examples    by    Constable,    Corot,    Diaz,    Dupre,    Gains- 


ILLINOIS   MUSEUMS  23 

CHICAGO,    ILL. 

Art  Institute  of  Chicago — Continued 
borough,  Hobbema,  Lawrence,  Millet,  Monet,  Rembrandt,  Reynolds,  Romney, 
Ruisdael,   Turner,   Wilson,  and   others  valued  at  about  $1,500,000;   the  Mrs. 
Potter    Palmer   bequest    of    $100,000   worth   of    paintings    to   which   her   sons 
added  paintings  over  $400,000  in  value. 

Noteworthy  additions  in  the  Decorative  Arts  division  include :  the  Jacobean 
Room  "in  memory  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  E.  Buckingham  by  their  children,  1920" ; 
Dutch  peasant  room,  gift  of  the  heirs  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  William  G.  Hibbard; 
and  English  room  of  the  18th  century,  purchased.  In  the  Oriental  division 
important  loans  have  been  received  through  Samuel  A.  Marx,  Robert  Aller- 
ton,  Mrs.  George  T.  Smith,  Mrs.  Fred  W.  Smith,  Miss  Kate  Buckingham, 
and  others,  and  Gothic  pieces  and  other  subjects  of  art  are  also  loaned  by 
Miss  Buckingham.  Four  Korean  paintings  of  the  thirteenth  century  have 
been  acquired  by  purchase,  and  one  Korean  panel,  "Jizo  and  attendants" 
as  a  gift  of  The  Arts  Club;  a  carved  wood  statue  of  the  T'ang  period  and 
two  stone  heads  from  the  Lung  Men  cave  are  a  gift  of  Robert  Allerton ;  ten 
Coptic  textile  fragments,  gift  of  Martin  A.  Ryerson ;  group  of  sculptured 
relief  fragments,  Egyptian,  purchased;  through  the  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Frank 
G.  Logan  fund  three  panels  of  stained  glass  by  Charles  J.  Connick  which 
received  a  medal  in  the  Exhibition  of  Applied  Arts. 

The  print  collection  was  increased  among  other  acquisitions  by  600  prints 
representing  engravers  and  etchers  of  all  schools  from  15th  to  19th  centuries, 
and  a  complete  set  of  Odilon  Redon's  etchings  and  lithographs  (1920). 

"Portraits  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  F.  Mackie",  by  Samuel  Waldo;  "Chrysanthe- 
mums" by  Grace  Ravlin;  11  pastels  by  William  Penhallow  Henderson;  bronze 
bust  of  Charles  Lawrence  Hutchinson,  by  Albin  Polasek  from  the  artist;  17 
paintings,  water  colors  and  pastels  from  the  estate  of  Mrs.  J.  C.  Black,  some 
for  the  permanent  collection  with  examples  of  L'hermitte,  Boughton,  Jacque, 
Verhaert,  the  rest  for  the  Public  Schools  Lending  collection  which  now 
numbers  over  50  oil  paintings.  The  J.  A.  Edwards  collection  of  original 
drawings  and  autographs  by  modern  Dutch  Masters,  including  an  original 
sketch  book  by  J.  H.  Weissenbruch,  drawings  by  Israels,  Mauve,  Mesdag, 
■  Mathijs   Maris,  A.   Neuhuys   and  others. 

The  most  important  accessories  to  the  Ryerson  Library  were  Fenaille  Etat 
General  des  tapisseries  de  la  manufacture  des  Gobelins,  Diirer  Society  Pub- 
lications, 12  Vol.;  Krom  &  Erp,  Beschrijving  van  Barabudure,  3  vol.;  J.  P. 
Morgan,  C.  Fairfax  Murray's  drawings  by  old  masters,  4  vols.;  Jasper  &  Pirn- 
gadie,  De  Inlandsche  Kunstnijverheid  in  Nederlandsch  Indie,  3  vol.;  Hefner- 
Alteneck,  Costumes,  oeuvres  d'art  et  ustensiles,  10  vols. 

The  Burnham  Library's  more  important  accessions  were  23  v.  Architectural 
Association  Sketchbook.  1867-1892 ;  Nouveau  theatre  de  la  Grande  Bretagne, 
1708-15,  5  v.;  Ferdinando  Ruggieri's  Studio  d'architectura  civile.     1722-28,  3v. 

Two  important  murals  were  painted,  presented  and  placed  in  Burnham 
Library  by  Frederick  Clay  Bartlett. 

The  new  department  of  Drawings  and  Water  Colors  (about  150  examples) 
includes  sketches  by  Puvis  de  Chavannes,  Sargent,  Thevanaz,  Davies,  Koehler 
and  a  group  by  English  artists,  the  gift  of  Robert  Allerton ;  sketches  by  modern 
Americans  and  11  pastels  by  Henderson,  the  gift  of  the  Friends  of  American 
Art;  gifts  by  Martin  Roche,  Robert  Macbeth,  David  Adler,  Mrs.  J.  A. 
Edwards.  Drawings  and  sketches  by  Bakst,  Zandomeneghi,  Giles,  Welsh, 
Forsberg   (purchase). 

Statistics  show  the  invested  funds  on  Oct.  1,  1921  at  $2,894,366.19;  Museum 
and  membership  receipts  for  1920  $431,100.81  (membership  alone  $170,803.17)  ; 
school  receipts  (1920)  $149,052.38;  expenditure  for  maintenance:  museum 
$366,779.94;  membership  $48,107.65;  school  $137,962.57;  building  extension 
$137,390.07;  number  of  members  13,600;  number  of  books  in  the  Libraries 
(Ryerson  and  Burnham)   17,000;  (circulation  9,982,  attendance  5,647);  photo- 


24  ILLINOIS  MUSEUMS 

CHICAGO,    ILL. 

Art  Institute  of  Chicago — Continued 
graphs  (circulation  10,572)  45,000;  lantern  slides  (circulation  29,783)  20,000; 
2,933  books  in  the  Burnham  Architectural  Library;  school  collection  of 
reproductions,  6,601.  Number  of  students  in  the  school,  4,200;  teachers  35 
and  17  in  the  Juvenile  Department ;  number  in  the  Museum  Instruction  classes, 
11,418  (Oct.,  1920-Sept.,  1921)  visitors  to  the  Museum  (1920)   1,136,174. 

EXHIBITIONS  AND  AWARDS 
July  to  December,  1920 — Loan  Exhibition  from  private  collections ;  paintings 
from  International  Exhibition  of  the  Carnegie  Institute,  Pittsburgh ;  ex- 
hibition by  the  members  of  the  American  Institute  of  Graphic  Arts ; 
advertising  art  assembled  by  the  Society  of  Art  Directors  in  Chicago ; 
paintings  by  Carl  R.  Krafft ;  the  Mrs.  Emma  B.  Hodge  Collection  of 
samplers;  water  colors  by  Winslovv  Homer  lent  by  Martin  A.  Ryerson ; 
medals  and  coins  lent  by  the  American  Numismatic  Society;  33rd  annual 
exhibition  of  American  Oil  Paintings  and  Sculpture,  240  works — Awards  : 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Frank  G.  Logan  medal  and  $1,500  to  George  B,  Luks 
for  painting  "Otis  Skinner  in  'The  Honor  of  the  Family'  ",  Potter  Palmer 
gold  medal  and  $1,000  to  Frederick  C.  Frieseke  for  painting  "Torn 
Lingerie",  Norman  Wait  Harris  silver  medal  and  $500  to  Louis  Betts  for 
portrait  of  James  B.  Forgan,  Norman  Wait  Harris  bronze  medal  and 
$300  to  Robert  O.  Chadeayne  for  painting,  "Mid-Summer  Afternoon", 
Martin  B.  Cahn  prize  of  $100  to  Edgar  A.  Payne  for  painting  "Rugged 
Slopes  and  Tamarack",  honorable  mentions  to  W.  J.  Potter,  Rockwell 
Kent,  Cornelius  Botke,  Leo  Friedlander,  Albert  Laessle :  Sculpture  by 
Jo  Davidson;  paintings  by  Guy  Wiggins,  paintings  by  Charles  H.  Wood- 
bury, paintings  by  Alfred  Juergens,  paintings  by  John  H.  Stacey  and 
Anna  Lee  Stacey,  paintings  by  Gifford  Beal,  paintings  by  W.  Elmer  Scho- 
field,  paintings  and  pastels  by  William  Pehallow  Henderson ;  second  annual 
exhibition  by  the  Chicago  Chapter  of  the  Wild  Flower  Preservation 
Society  of  America ;  costumes  from  the  studio  of  Signora  Maria  Gal- 
lenga  lent  by  Miss  Mary  S.  Nixon;  Twenty-eighth  annual  exhibition  by 
the  Atlan  Ceramic  Art  Club;  memorial  exhibition  of  prints  by  Anders' 
L.  Zorn ;  prints  by  Adolphe  Beaufrere  from  the  Alfred  D.  Eddy  Memorial 
collection  of  etchings;  paintings  by  American  painters  of  Swedish  descent 
(as  shown  in  Stockholm  in  summer,  1919)  ;  exhibition  of  table  service 
by  local  art  lovers ;  exhibition  of  applied  arts  by  Herman  Sachs. 
January  to  March,  1921 — Silverware  by  George  Jensen ;  Caxton  Club  ex- 
hibition of  publications  of  the  Bibliophile  Society,  lent  by  Park  Edmund 
Simmons;  twenty-fifth  annual  exhibition  of  works  by  artists  of  Chicago 
and  vicinity ;  390  works — Awards :  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Frank  G.  Logan  medal 
and  $500  to  Frank  Virgil  Dudley  for  painting  "Duneland"  (which  has 
since  become  the  gift  of  Miss  Gracis  Barnhart  to  the  permanent  collection)  ; 
the  medal  and  $200  going  to  Anna  Lee  Stacey  for  painting  "The  Dansant", 
Fine  Arts  Building  purchase  prize  of  $500  to  Leon  Roecker  for  paint- 
ings "Springtime"  and  "Tangling  Branches",  Edward  B.  Butler  purchase 
fund  of  $200  to  William  Owen,  Jr.,  for  painting  "From  the  Elevated", 
Mrs.  Julius  Rosenwald  purchase  fund  of  $200  to  A.  Lou  Matthews  for 
painting  "The  Circus" ;  Joseph  N.  Eisendrath  prize  of  $200  to  Ramon 
Shiva  for  painting  "Nocturne",  Harry  A.  Frank  prize  of  $150  to  Emile 
Zettler  for  sculpture  "Panel  for  a  Mausoleum,"  Clyde  M.  Carr  Muni- 
cipal Art  League  prize  of  $100  for  portraiture  to  Albin  Polasek  for  sculp- 
ture "Portrait  bust  of  Charles  L.  Hutchinson",  Mrs.  John  C.  Shaffer 
prize  of  $100  to  Hester  Bremer  for  sculpture  "Ethiopian",  Mrs.  William 
O.  Thompson  prize  of  $100  for  color  effect  to  Gerald  A.  Frank  for 
group  of  paintings,  Business  Men's  Art  Club  prize  of  $100  to  Irma  Kohn 
for  group  of  Paintings,  William  H.  Tuthill  prize  of  $100  for  a  pure  water 
color  to  Edmund  S.  Campbell  for  painting  "Brook  in  the  Dunes",  Engle- 


ILLINOIS  MUSEUMS  25 

CHICAGO,    ILL. 

Art  Institute  of  Chicago — Continued 
wood  Woman's  Club  prize  of  $50  to  Samuel  Klasstorner  for  sculpture 
"Orpheus  and  Eurydice",  Chicago  Woman's  Aid  Prize  of  $50  to  Ruth 
Sherwood  for  sculpture  "Relief,  Mrs.  Stanley  G.  Harris",  Austin  Woman's 
Club  prize  of  $50  to  Flora  I,  Schoenfeld  for  painting  "The  Mountains", 
Chicago  Society  of  Artists'  silver  medal  to  Carl  R.  Krafft  for  group 
of  paintings,  honorable  mentions  to  Laura  Van  Pappelendam,  Torey 
Ross  and  Carl  Hoeckner;  Eleventh  annual  exhibition  of  Chicago  Society 
of  Etchers;  exhibition  of  paintings  for  the  "Spirit  of  Transportation" 
competition,  the  Eugene  B.  Clark  $1,000  prize  being  divided  equally 
among  Maxfield  Parrish,  Jonas  Lie  and  James  Cady  Ewell ;  bead  bags 
lent  by  Jacob  Loeb ;  color  representations  lent  by  Charles  Beck. 

March  to  May — Nineteenth  annual  Applied  Arts  exhibition  including  British 
Arts  and  Crafts;  landscape  and  garden  design  under  management  of  the 
Woman's  Farm  and  Garden  Association;  Twenty-fourth  annual  Chicago 
architectural  exhibition ;  etchings  by  Lester  G.  Hornby ;  Cyrus  H.  Mc- 
Cormick  etchings  by  Millet ;  Sixth  annual  exhibition  of  the  American 
Bookplate  Society  under  management  of  the  Caxton  Club ;  First  annual 
International  exhibition  of  water  colors;  paintings  by  Nikolai  Roerich ; 
paintings  by  Maurice  Fromkes ;  Eighteenth  annual  exhibition  of  the 
Chicago  Camera  Club;  decorative  portraits  by  Abram  Poole. 

May  to  July — Southern  fish  by  Chicago  Aquarium  Society;  Contemporary 
Polish  art ;  paintings  by  Frederick  Clay  Bartlett  in  China ;  paintings  and 
drawings  by  Harry  I.  Stickroth ;  Art  Institute  collection  of  posters  from 
all  nations. 

July  to  October — Loan  exhibitions  from  private  collections ;  Winslow  Homer 
water  colors  from  M.  A.  Ryerson  collection ;  Potter  Palmer  collection 
of  German  and  Italian  engravings  of  XV  to  XVI  centuries ;  Rembrandt 
etchings ;  Bryan  Lathrop  collection  of  Whistler  etchings ;  paintings  and 
sculpture  by  artists  of  Switzerland ;  Twentieth  annual  exhibition  of 
applied  arts — Awards :  Mrs.  Julius  Rosenwald  prize  for  best  exhibit  of 
textiles  to  Mountain  Industries  of  Tryon,  N.  C. ;  Thomas  F.  Googerty 
prize  for  wood  block  prints  to  Winold  Reiss  of  New  York  City,  Arthur 
Heun  prize  for  collection  of  pewter  to  Lester  H.  Vaughan  of  Taunton, 
Mass. ;  Mrs.  J.  Ogden  Armour  prize  for  pottery  to  Moravian  Pottery  and 
Tile  Works  of  Doylestown,  Pa.,  Mrs.  Avery  Coonley  prize  for  woven  fab- 
rics to  Flambeau  Shops  of  New  York  City,  Mrs.  Avery  Coonley  prize 
for  woven  fabrics  to  The  Davenports  of  New  Hope,  Pa.,  the  Thomas  J. 
Dee  prize  for  gold  brooch  to  Gertrude  Peet  of  Salem,  Mass.,  the  Thomas 
J.  Dee  prize  for  collection  of  jewelry  to  Mrs.  Peruzzi  of  Boston,  Mass.,  the 
Albert  H.  Lamb  prize  for  collection  of  table  silver  to  Old  Newbury 
Crafters  of  Newburyport,  Mass.,  the  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Frank  G.  Logan  prizes, 
medal  and  $100  each  to  Edgewater  Tapestry  Looms  of  New  York  City, 
Pewabic  Pottery  of  Detroit,  Mich.,  medal  and  fifty  dollars  to  Greenwich 
House  Pottery  of  New  York  City,  Logan  fund  purchase  of  stained  glass 
panels  by  Charles  J.  Connick  of  Boston,  Mass.,  paintings  by  William 
Wendt  and  sculpture  by  Julia  Bracken  Wendt. 

UNIVERSITY  OF  CHICAGO  MUSEUMS 
Harry  Pratt  Judson,  President  of  the  University 
Organized  1891.  Museums  open,  free,  8.30  a.  m.  to  5  p.  m.  daily,  except 
Saturday  afternoons  and  Sundays.  Haskell  Museum  contains  Egyptian. 
Babylonian  and  Japanese  art  and  archaeology;  Classics  Building,  Greek  and 
Italian  antiquities;  Harper  Memorial  Library,  illuminated  manuscripts,  Phelps 
collection  of  Napoleonana,  etc. ;  Ida  Noyes  Hall,  collection  of  furniture, 
mural  paintings  by  Jessie  Arms  Botke ;  Bartlett  Gymnasium,  mural  paintings 
by  F.  C.  Bartlett ;  portraits  in  Hutchinson,  Rosenwald,  Foster  and  Ida  Noyes 
Halls.    Exhibitions  are  held. 


26  ILLINOIS— INDIANA  MUSEUMS 

DECATUR,    ILL. 

►I-DECATUR  ART  INSTITUTE 
North  Pine  and  West  Main  Streets,  Decatur 

A.  R,  Taylor President      S.  E.  Walker Treasurer 

Warren  F.  Hardy Vice-President       C.  A.  Wait Secretary 

Maria   Buckingham,   Cor. -Sec. 
Founded  1917.    Annual  meeting  in  April ;  Board  meetings  monthly.    Annual 
dues  from  $1  to  $100.    Membership,  360. 

Exhibitions,  1920-21 :  October — Copies  of  old  masters  circulated  by  The 
American  Federation  of  Arts ;  November — Portraits  by  Orlando  Rouland ; 
December — Work  by  Illinois  artists ;  March — Etchings  by  Gruppe  and  Heintzel- 
man;  April — Oil  paintings,  circulated  by  The  American  Federation  of  Arts. 

ELKHART,   IND. 

ECKELMAN  ART  GALLERY  AND  MUSEUM 
Presented  to  the  city  of  Elkhart  by  Dr.  Frederick  C.  Eckelman  in  1917. 

INDIANAPOLIS,    IND. 

^ART  ASSOCIATION  OF  INDIANAPOLIS 

JOHN    HERRON   ART   INSTITUTE 
Pennsylvania  and  Sixteenth  Streets,  Indianapolis 

Evans  Woollen President      Howard  M.  Stanton Treasurer 

Mrs.  Addison  C.  Harris.  .Vice-Pres.       Mrs.  James  W.  Fesler Secretary 

Executive  Staff 
Anna  E.  Terrill,  Librarian. 
Grace  A.  Speer,  Secretary  to  the  Board. 
Anna  Hasselman,  Museum  Instructor. 
Alfred  M.  Brooks,  Curator  of  Prints. 
Eliza  M.  Niblack,  Curator  of  Textiles. 

'For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  110. 

Open  week  days  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays  1  to  9.30  p.m.  Admission  free 
on  Saturdays  and  Sundays  and  to  public  school  teachers  and  pupils  at  all 
times ;  other  days,  25  cents. 

Association  organized  in  1883 ;  incorporated  1883 ;  John  Herron  Art  In- 
stitute established  1902 ;  present  building  dedicated  1906 ;  school  building 
erected  1907.  Annual  meeting  first  Tuesday  in  April ;  Board  of  Directors' 
meetings  third  Tuesdays  in  each  month  except  July,  August  and  September. 
Annual  dues  $10 ;  Associate  $5 ;  Sustaining  $25 ;  total  membership  478. 

Collections :  Archaeology ;  arms  and  armor ;  bronzes,  casts ;  coins  and 
medals ;  drawings ;  furniture ;  ceramics ;  metalwork ;  sculpture  ;  textiles ; 
woodwork;  Oriental  objects;  modern  paintings,  library;  photographs;  prints. 
A  gallery  in  the  museum  has  been  set  aside  for  the  Children's  Room  and  here 
the  lectures  and  special  exhibitions  for  the  children  are  held.  Work  for  the 
public  includes  lectures  at  the  Museum ;  meetings  of  many  groups ;  an  art 
school  (see  school  section)  ;  talks  on  a  wide  variety  of  art  subjects  at  schools, 
club  rooms,  or  at  the  Museum;  social  gatherings  with  tea  in  the  galleries; 
Sunday  musical  programmes;  quarterly  bulletins;  free  catalogues  and  an 
illustrated  annual  report. 

Principal  accessions,  1920-1921 :  Oil  paintings— "Portrait  of  Mrs.  William 
H.  C.  Bartlett"  by  J.  Carroll  Beckwith,  gift  of  Mrs.  Neva  B.  Carling;  "Land- 
scape" by  George  Winters,  gift  of  Harvey  J.  Flam;  "Portrait  of  Alexander 
Ernestinoff"  by  Waymaii  Adams;  "The  Jade  Bowl"  by  Dines  Carlsen;  "The 
Old  Market  Woman"  by  William  Forsyth,  gifts  from  the  Friends  of  Amer- 
ican Art;  "Still  Life"  by  J.  Cox,  gift  of  Mrs.  George  Hume;  a  "Landscape" 


INDIANA   MUSEUMS  27 

INDIANAPOLIS,    IND. 

Art  Association  of  India.nsi[)o\\s— Continued 
and  "Head  of  a  Woman"  by  T.  C.  Steele,  gifts  of  Mrs.  Alpheus  H.  Snow. 
Morris  collection,  gift  of  Miss  Charity  Dye;  Egyptian  Vase,  gift  of  Winant 
P.  Johnson ;  prayer  rug,  gift  of  Miss  Mary  Judson ;  textiles,  laces,  ceramics, 
pottery,  gifts  from  Mrs.  V.  A.  Longaker,  Miss  Mary  A.  Massey,  Mrs. 
Meredith  Nicholson,  Mrs.  Mary  A.  Rhodes,  Miss  Mary  Sparrell  and  Mrs. 
Alpheus  H.  Snow;  stained  glass,  gift  of  Miss  Lucy  M.  Taggart;  textiles, 
gift  of  Miss  Eliza  M.  Niblack;  Purchased  "The  Little  Gormand"  by  Beatrice 
How,  and  "Brother  and  Sister"  by  Rodin,  from  the  Harry  J.  Milligan  Be- 
quest; "Portrait  of  T.  C.  Steele"  by  Simon  P.  Bans  and  "Riverview  Row" 
by  Randolph  LaSalle  Coats  from  the  John  Herron  Funds. 

For  the  year  ending  March  31,  1921,  the  total  income  was:  $31,343.99  avail- 
able for  maintenance;  $1,285.64  available  for  purchase  of  works  of  art;  life 
memberships  $500;  $100  for  a  Holcomb  Prize.  Expenditures  for  maintenance 
$29,444.49;  for  additions  to  collections  $2,497.20.    Attendance  51,830. 

Exhibitions 

Apr.  11  to  May  4,  1920 — Paintings  by  Henry  G.  Keller. 

Apr.  11  to  May  29 — Exhibition  of  ceramics  by  Keramic  Club  of  Indianapolis. 

Apr.  30  to  June  21. — Japanese  Prints,  lent  by  George  C.  Calvert. 

May  9  to  June  9 — Woodblock  Prints  by  American  Artists. 

June  6  to  June  27 — Indianapolis  Centennial  Exhibition. 

July  4  to  Sept.  1 — Paintings,  lent  by  George  C.  Calvert. 

July  11  to  Sept.  1 — Old  and  Modern  Paintings,  lent  by  William  Dudley  Foulke. 

July  14  to  Sept.  1 — Chinese  and  Japanese  Paintings,  lent  by  Mrs.  Chauncey 
Blair. 

Sept.  5  to  Sept.  19. — Paintings  and  Drawings  by  Stephen  Haweis. 

Sept.  22  to  Oct.  8 — Greek  Government  Exhibit. 

Oct.  7  to  Oct.  17 — Exhibit  of  Sketches  made  during  the  war  by  John  Haapenan. 

Oct.  11  to  Oct.  25— Arts  and  Crafts  Exhibit,  by  Herman  Sachs. 

Oct.  20  to  Nov.  2 — Lace  Exhibition,  by  the  Needle  and  Bobbin  Club  of 
New  York. 

Oct.  27  to  Nov.  21— Etchings. 

Nov.  7  to  Nov.  28. — Retrospective  Exhibition  of  Paintings  by  William  Forsyth. 

Nov.  27  to  Dec.  26. — British  Commercial  Posters. 

Dec.  5  to  Dec.  26 — Paintings  by  T.  C.  Steele. 

Dec.  30  to  Feb.  7,  1921 — (Contemporary  Graphic  Art  in  Holland. 

Jan.  1  to  Jan.  30 — Thirty-sixth  Annual  Exhibition  of  Paintings  and  Sculpture. 

Jan.  22  to  Feb.  16 — Paintings  by  Henry  Golden  Dearth. 

Feb.  6  to  Feb.  27 — Exhibit  of  Water  Colors  from  Philadelphia  Water  Color 
Club. 

Feb.  18  to  Apr.  18— Exhibit  of  War  Photographs. 

Mar.  6  to  Apr.  3 — Fourteenth  Annual  Exhibition  of  Works  by  Indiana 
Artists;  Holcomb  Prize  of  $100  awarded  to  Clifton  A.  Wheeler  for 
"Pussy  Willow  Time" ;  Art  Association  Purchase  Prize  Awarded  to 
Simon  P.  Baus  for  "Portrait  of  T.  C.  Steele"  and  Randolph  LaSalle 
Coats  for  "Riverview  Row" ;  honorable  mention  to  Clement  Trucksess 
for  "Woman  and  Cows". 

Mar.  13  to  May  1 — Etchings  and  wood  engravings  by  modern  artists. 

NEW    HARMONY,    IND. 

ART  GALLERY  AND  MUSEUM  OF 

THE  WORKINGMEN'S  INSTITUTE 

Library   Building,   New  Harmony 

Nora  C.  Fretageot Librarian       Arthur  E.  Fretageot Secretary 

Museum    organized    1838;    gallery    1887.      Permanent   collection    of   60   pic- 
tures.    Open  free  to  public.    During  1920-21  received  two  paintings  as  gift. 


28  IOWA— LOUISIANA  MUSEUMS 


IOWA    CITY,    lA. 

RANNEY  LIBRARY  AND  MUSEUM 
Hall  of  Liberal  Arts,  University  of  Iowa,  Iowa  City 

Walter  A.  Jessup Pres.  of  Univ.       Jane  E.  Roberts Librarian 

Founded  1911.  Open  daily  2  to  4  p.m.  Collection  contains  casts,  copies 
of  old  paintings,  and  modern  originals.  The  Mark  Ranney  Memorial  Library 
contains  3,300  art  books  and  editions  de  luxe. 

UNIVERSITY  OF  IOWA  MUSEUM  OF  ART  AND  ARCHEOLOGY 
C.   H.  Weller,  Director 
Founded  1906. 

NEW   ORLEANS,    LA. 

►I-ISAAC   DELGADO    MUSEUM   OF   ART 
City  Park,  New  Orleans 

C.  F.  Claiborne President      Hunt  Henderson Vice-Pres. 

E.  W.  Smith,  Secretary-Treasurer 

Executive  Staff 
C.  W.  Boyle,  Curator. 
S.  H.  LivAUDAis,  Assistant  Secretary  and  Treasurer 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  122. 

Open  10  A.M.  to  5  P.M.  week  days,  closed  Mondays;  11  a.m  to  6  p.m. 
Sundays.  Admission  Friday  25  certs,  other  days  free.  Permanent  collec- 
tion includes  the  Chapman  H.  Hyams  collection  of  paintings  and  statuary; 
the  Morgan  Whitney  collection  of  jade  and  other  hard  stones;  the  Alvin 
Howard  collection  of  Etruscan  glass  ware  and  Greek  pottery;  the  B.  M. 
Harrod  collection  of  paintings  and  old  silver  ware,  and  the  John  G.  Agar 
collection  of  paintings,  bronzes  and  ceramics. 

Organized  1910;  building  dedicated  1911.  Annual  meeting  in  January; 
administrators  meet  first  Friday  of  each  month.  Annual  dues':  Patrons  $10; 
Life  membership  $100  or  a  work  of  art  equivalent  thereto.  Membership  80 
patrons.  The  city  allows  an  appropriation  for  maintenance  and  the  Art 
Association  contributes  toward  cost  of  exhibitions. 

Exhibitions 
Dec.  22,  1920  to  Jan.  24,  1921— Paintings  by  Victor  Charreton. 
Feb.  5  to  Mar.  4 — Paintings  and  etchings  by  Anne  Goldthwaite. 
Mar.  12  to  Apr.  10 — Paintings  by  Helen  M.  Turner. 
June  to  August — Loan  collection  of  etchings  by  Anders  Zorn. 

LINTON-SURGET  ART  HALL 
Tulane  University,  New  Orleans 
William  Woodward,  Director 
Open  to  the  public  daily. 

The  Linton-Surget  collection  of  works  of  art  was  donated  to  the  City  of 
New  Orleans  by  the  late  Mrs.  Eustace  Surget  of  Bordeaux,  France;  valuable 
historical  portraits  and  marble  statuary  donated  by  Mrs.  C.  B.  Surget  of 
Bordeaux,  France;  statues  and  other  objects  of  art  donated  by  Mrs.  F.  W. 
Tilton;  loan  collection  from  Mrs.  J.  L  Harris  and  Mrs.  Samuel  H.  Kennedy 
of  New  Orleans,  and  various  bronzes,  marbles,  paintings,  engravings  and 
other  works  of  art  donated  or  lent  to  the  University.  There  are  about  2,000 
books  in  the  collection. 


LOUISIANA— MAINE  MUSEUMS  29 

NEW   ORLEANS,    LA. 

LOUISIANA  STATE  MUSEUM 
The   Cabildo,   Jackson   Square,   New   Orleans 

T.  P.  Thompson President       J.  B.  Levert Treasurer 

Robert  Glenk,  Sec.  and  Curator. 
For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  123. 
Open  free,  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m. 

Organized  1906.  The  Cabildo,  built  in  1794,  was  formally  opened  as  a 
museum  1911.  Annual  meeting  in  January;  monthly  board  meetings.  An- 
nual State  appropriation  $12,500. 

Art  Department  includes  sculpture,  paintings,  engravings,  pottery  and 
miscellaneous  art  objects.  Special  collection  of  portraits  of  Louisiana  pio- 
neers.   Exhibit  of  portraits,  relics  and  works  of  art  by  local  artists. 

BRUNSWICK,    ME. 

^BOWDOIN  MUSEUM  OF  FINE  ARTS 

Walker  Art  Building,  Bowdoin  College,  Brunswick 

Henry  E.  Andrews,  Director 

Anna  E.  Smith,  Curator. 

Open  free,  week  days  10  a.m.  to  12  m.  ;  2  to  4  p.m  ;  Sundays  and  holidays 

2  to  4  P.M. 

Erected  1894 :  C.  F.  McKim,  architect.  Mural  decorations  by  John  La 
Farge,  Elihu  Vedder,  Abbott  Thayer  and  Kenyon  Cox.  The  galleries 
contain  the  James  Bowdoin  collection  of  paintings  and  drawings  bequeathed 
in  1811;  the  Walker  collection;  Boyd  gallery  of  paintings;  Japanese  and 
Chinese  works  of  art ;  Levi  C.  Wade  and  George  Warren  Hammond  collec- 
tions ;  Virginia  Dox  collection  of  native  American  art ;  Dana  Estes  collection 
of  Cypriote  antiquities;  and  the  Edward  Perry  Warren  collection  of  Greek 
and  Roman  art.  Photographs  of  the  principal  works  of  art  owned  by  the 
college  are  for  sale. 

PORTLAND,    ME. 

PORTLAND  SOCIETY  OF  ART 

L.    D.    M.    SWEAT    MEMORIAL  ART    MUSEUM 
Spring  and  High  Streets,  Portland 

George  F.  Morse President      John  Howard  Stevens Librarian 

John  Calvin  Stevens..  1st  Vice-Pres.       Oliver  P.  T.  Wish Sec.-Treas. 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  125. 

Open  every  day  except  Monday ;  Wednesdays  and  Saturdays  free,  9  a.m. 
to  4.30  p.m.;  Sundays  free,  1  to  5  p.m.  An  admission  of  twenty-five  cents  is 
charged  on  Tuesdays,  Thursdays,  and  Fridays :  9  a.  m.  to  4.30  p.m. 

Organized  1882;  building  dedicated  1911.  Annual  meeting  last  Wednesday 
in  January.    Annual  dues  $5.    Membership  328. 

The  most  notable  collection,  the  gift  of  Curtis  Perry,  consists  of  tapes- 
tries and  chairs  dating  back  to  the  twelfth  century,  also  collection  of  Mexican 
pottery  from  the  same  donor  and  paintings  and  sculpture  by  American 
artists.  Also  contains  the  Franklin  Simmons  collection  of  sculpture.  There 
is  a  special  Maine  Room. 

Exhibitions 
January,  1921 — Paintings  by  George  F.  Morse. 
March — Annual  photographic  exhibition. 

April — Paintings  by  Gifford  Beal,  George  Bellows  and  Eugene  Speicher. 
May — Annual  exhibition  of  oils,  water  colors  and  pastels. 
June — Water  colors  and  miniatures  by  W.  H.  Shaylor  and  Mrs.  H.  T.  Hannon, 
July  and  August — Exhibition  of  the  Simmons  collection  of  statuary. 


30  MARYLAND  MUSEUMS 

BALTIMORE,    MD. 

BALTIMORE  MUSEUM  OF  ART 

Blanchard  Randall President      B.  Howell  Griswold,  Jr..  .Treasurer 

Henry  H.  Wiegand,  Secretary,  Charcoal  Club,  Baltimore 
Organized  1914 ;  incorporated  Nov.  16,  1914.  Annual  meeting  second 
Monday  in  February.  Annual  dues  $5 ;  sustaining  $25.  Johns  Hopkins 
University  offered  five  acres  at  south  end  of  its  park,  opposite  31st  Street, 
for  new  building.  Preliminary  plans  have  been  made  and  endowment  fund 
has  been  started.  Some  gifts  of  paintings  have  been  received  and  placed 
temporarily  with  the  Peabody  Gallery. 

JOHNS      HOPKINS      UNIVERSITY      MUSEUM      OF      AMERICAN, 

ORIENTAL  AND  CLASSICAL  ARCHEOLOGY 

"Homewood,"   Charles  and  32nd   Streets,   Baltimore 

David  M.  Robinson,  Director 

Open  daily  (except  Sunday)   from  9  a.m.  until  5  p.m. 

Organized  and  sustained  by  contributions  from  private  individuals ;  is  part 
of  University's  Archaeological  Department  with  large  collection  of  Greek, 
Roman,  Egyptian,  American  and  Jewish  antiquities ;  also  photographs  and 
lantern  slides.  A  valuable  collection  of  portraits  of  professors  and  medical 
men ;  loan  collection  of  original  etchings  by  Rembrandt,  Durer,  Haden,  Zorn, 
Meryon,  Whistler  and  others.     Lectures  given. 

►^MARYLAND  INSTITUTE  FOR  THE  PROMOTION  OF  THE 

MECHANIC  ARTS 

Mount  Royal  Avenue  and  Lanvale  Street,  Baltimore 

Henry  Adams President       Lemuel  T.  Appold Treasurer 

Augustine  J.  Ryan Vice-Pres.       Thomas  G.  Young Secretary 

and  Asst.  Treas. 

Officers  of  Administration 
Alon   Bement,  Director. 
Thomas  B.  Everist,  Actuary  and  Registrar. 
Gertrude  Pentland,  Assistant  Librarian. 
Irene  Cook,  Custodian  of  Galleries. 
Louise  R.  Hopper,  Secretary  to  Director. 
Helen  Jaeger,  Superintendent  of  Building. 
For  foundation  and  history  sec  Vol.  XI,  p.  130. 

Galleries  open,  free,  10  a.m.  to  4  p.m.  Permanent  collection  of  paintings, 
bronzes  and  porcelains. 

Organized  1825.     Annual  meeting,  third  Wednesday  in  April ;  Board  meet- 
ings, second  Monday  in  each  month.     Annual  dues,  $3;  life  membership,  $25. 
Schools  of  Art  and  Design  are  maintained  with  both  day  and  evening  ses- 
sions  and   a   department   of   applied  and   mechanic  arts    (see  school   section). 
Exhibitions  are  held. 

►J-PEABODY  INSTITUTE  OF  THE  CITY  OF  BALTIMORE 

Lawrason    Riggs President       John  J.  Nelligan Treasurer 

H.  Oliver  Thompson,  Secretary 
Staff 
Elizabeth  W.  Smith,  Custodian  of  Art  Gallery 
Carroll  T.  Bond,  Chairman  Art  Gallery 
Louis  H.  Dielman,  Executive  Secretary. 
For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  132. 

Open,  free,  daily,  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays  2  to  5  p.m.  For  special  exhibi- 
tions admission  fee  of  25  cents,  10  a.m.  to  10:30  p.m.;  Sundays  free. 


MARYLAND— MASSACHUSETTS  MUSEUMS  31 


BALTIMORE,    MD. 

Peabody  Institute — Continued 

Founded  1857.  Annual  meeting  in  February.  Institute  consists  of  large 
library,  school  of  music,  and  art  gallery  in  which  permanent  and  temporary 
exhibitions  are  held. 

Maintains  Rinehart  School  of  Sculpture  at  Maryland  Institute  (see  School 
Section)  and  also  a  Rinehart  Fellowship  in  The  American  Academy  in 
Rome.  Stores  gifts  to  Baltimore  Museum  of  Art  pending  the  erection  of 
building. 

Exhibitions,  1920-1921 :  Paintings  by  Clark  S.  Marshall ;  exhibition  of  per- 
mananent  collection ;  print  collection  from  Library ;  Homelands  exhibition 
of  arts  and  industries  of  Central  Europe;  print  collection;  paintings  and 
sculpture  by  Grace  Turnbull ;  portraits  by  Frank  B.  A.  Linton;  paintings  by 
"The  Six  of  Baltimore";  paintings  by  Everett  L.  Bryant  and  Louise  West; 
annual  exhibition  of  contemporary  American  Art  by  members  of  the  Charcoal 
Club;  annual  exhibition  of  The  Baltimore  Water  Color  Club;  exhibition  by 
the  Photographic  Guild  of  Baltimore;  collection  of  Stuart  and  Sully  portraits. 

WALTERS  GALLERY 
North  Charles  and  Centre  Streets,  Baltimore 

Private  gallery  of  Henry  Walters.  Public  admitted  Wednesdays,  Saturdays 
and  holidays  in  January,  February,  March  and  April,  11  a.m.  to  4  p.m.  Fee, 
50  cents ;  proceeds  given  to  the  Poor  Association,  101  West  Saratoga  Street, 
where  tickets  must  be  secured.  Arrangements  for  private  view  may  be  made 
for  a  party  of  100  or  more. 

Present  building  opened  February  3.  1909.  The  collection  contains  master- 
pieces of  every  school  of  painting;  Italian  majolica,  Limoges  enamels,  antique 
and  modern  sculpture,  and  Chinese  porcelains. 

ANDOVER,    MASS. 

JOHN-ESTHER  ART  GALLERY 
Abbot  Academy,  Andover 

Burton  S.  Flagg Treasurer      Jane  B.  Carpenter Custodian 

Building  dedicated  1907.     Open  free,  Saturdays,  2  to  5  p.m. 
Collection  of  modern  paintings  and  small  Roman  bronzes.     During  summer 
of  1921  held  exhibition  of  paintings  by   Marion  L.   Pooke  and  Mrs.  Beatrice 
Whitney  Van  Ness. 

BOSTON,    MASS. 

THE  CHILDREN'S  ART  CENTRE 

OF  THE 

SETTLEMENTS  MUSEUM  ASSOCIATION 

36  Rutland  Street,  Boston 

Mrs.  Joseph  L.  Smith President       Harold  Peabody Treasurer 

Mrs.  Charles  B.  Perkins  . .  1st  V.-P.       Adelaide  Pearson Secretary 

FiTZ  Roy  Carrington,  Director 
Open  daily,  2  to  5.30  p.m.;  Saturdays,  10  a.m.  to  5.30  p.m.     Admission  free. 
Incorporated  1915.     Building  opened  May  1,  1918.     Located  in  the  crowded 
section  of  Boston,  it  has  exhibitions  and  lectures  of  special  interest  and  value 
to  children.     Classes  in  drawing. 

ISABELLA  STEWART  GARDNER  COLLECTION 
Fenway  Court,  The  Fenway  District,  Boston 
Mrs.  John  L,  Gardner  has  built  her  residence  in  the  Italian  style  around  an 
inner  court.  Here  she  has  installed  an  important  collection  of  paintings  and 
art  objects.  The  collection  may  be  seen  on  certain  days  between  12  and  3  p.m.; 
tickets  at  $1  and  information  regarding  dates  can  be  had  only  at  Herrick's 
ticket  agency,  Copley  Square,  Boston. 


32  MASSACHUSETTS  MUSEUMS 

BOSTON,    MASS. 

►J<MUSEUM  OF  FINE  ARTS 

Huntington  Avenue,  Boston 

Morris  Gray President      William  C.  Endicott Treasurer 

Executive  Staff 

Arthur  Fairbanks,  Director. 

Charles  Henry  Hawes,  Assistant  Director  and  Bursar. 

Benjamin  Ives  Oilman,  Secretary,  and  Registrar  of  Local  Art. 

John  Eliot  Thayer,  Jr.,  Assistant  Treasurer. 

Hanford  L.  Story,  Registrar. 

Curator  of  Prints. 

Henry  Preston  Rossiter,  Assistant  Curator  of  Prints. 

Lacey  D.  Caskey,  Curator  of  Classical  Art. 

John  E.  Lodge,  Curator  of  Chinese  and  Japanese  Art. 

KojiRO  ToMiTA,  Assistant  Curator  Chinese  and  Japanese  Art. 

Edward  S.  Morse,  Keeper  of  Japanese  Pottery. 

Francis  Stewart  Kershaw,  Keeper  in  the  Dept.  of  Chinese  and 
Japanese  Art. 

Ananda  K.  Coomaraswamy,  Keeper  of  Indian  Art. 

George  A.  Reisner,  Curator  of  Egyptian  Art. 

Dows  Dunham,  Associate  Curator  of  Egyptian  Art. 

John  B.  Potter,  Keeper  of  Paintings. 

Edwin  James  Hipkiss,  Keeper  in  the  Dept.  of  Western  Art. 

RoscoE  L.  Dunn,  Acting  Librarian. 

Martha  Fenderson,  Assistant  Librarian. 

Mrs.  Charles  W.  Townsend,  Advisor  in  the  Dept.  of  Western  Art 
and  Textiles. 

Gertrude  Townsend,  Assistant  in  charge  of  Textiles. 

Frances  E.  Turner,  Assistant  in  charge  of  Photographs. 

Michael  J.  Moore,  Supt.  of  Building  and  Grounds. 
For  foundation,  history  and  activities,  see  Vol.  XI,  pp.  142-4. 
Open   daily,   excepting  the  Fourth   of  July,   Thanksgiving  Day  and  Christ- 
mas,  10  A.M.  to  5  P.M.    (November  1st  to  March  1st,  to  4  p.m.).     Saturdays 
to  5  p.m..     Sundays,  1  to  5  p.m.     Admission  free. 

Chartered  1870;  present  building  opened  1909.  Annual  meeting  third  Thurs- 
day in  January ;  Board  meetings  third  Thursdays  in  April,  July  and  October. 
Annual  dues  of  subscribers,  $10;  membership,  2,476.  During  1920  attendance 
was  288,312;  Print  Study  Room  visited  by  1,509  persons;  2,672  students  worked 
in  the  Textile  Study  Room,  6,265  in  the  Library  and  5,244  in  the  Photograph 
Room. 

The  collections  of  the  Museum  cover  the  painting,  sculpture  and  derivative 
arts  of  all  times  and  countries.  The  collection  of  oriental  art  is  the  most 
important  in  the  world  under  one  roof;  and  with  the  library  of  books  in 
Chinese  and  Japanese,  and  other  facilities,  offers  an  unexampled  opportunity 
for  the  study  of  oriental  culture.  The  collection  of  classical  art  is  the  fore- 
most in  America.  The  Egyptian  Department  has  a  unique  collection  of  Old 
Empire  sculpture.  The  Print  Department  offers  the  best  opportunity  in 
America  to  study  the  history  of  the  engraver's  art. 

The  Library  contains  21,688  volumes,  and  the  Photograph  Collection  54,893 
prints.  The  Photograph  Department  lends  prints  to  schools,  clubs  and  classes 
in  the  immediate  vicinity  of  Boston. 

The  Museum  issues  a  bi-monthly  Bulletin  and  Annual  Report  and  Handbook 
of  the  Museum,  and  a  special  catalogue.  A  Leaflet  Guide  is  issued  in  vest- 
pocket  size  giving  directions  for  reaching  all  the  departments  and  containing 
a  manifolded  Insert  with  a  plan  of  the  galleries,  bringing  the  information  of  the 
Guide  to  the  day  of  sale. 


MASSACHUSETTS   MUSEUMS  33 

BOSTON,    MASS. 

Museum  of  Fine  Arts — Continued 

The  Registry  of  Public  Art  co-operates  with  the  Municipal  Art  Commission. 

The  School  of  the  Museum  contained  252  pupils  in  1920.  (See  School 
Section.) 

The  educational  activities  of  the  Museum  during  1920  included  Docent  Ser- 
vice (gallery  guidance)  to  5,989  persons,  Sunday  afternoon  talks  (54  to  2,572 
persons),  conferences  (11),  lecture  courses  in  the  Museum  (2)  and  in  the 
public  schools  (37  lectures  to  2,305  children).  The  Egyptian  Traveling  Exhibi- 
tion was  circulated  in  the  public  schools. 

Publications  by  officers  of  the  Museum  on  topics  relating  to  the  fine  arts 
included  fifteen  articles  in  current,  scientific  and  other  periodicals  by  eight 
authors. 

Acquisitions,  1920:  Okakura  collection  of  Chinese  paintings,  sculpture, 
bronze,  etc.,  given  in  part  by  Dr.  W.  Sturgis  Bigelow ;  a  Chinese  early  Sung 
wooden  seated  figure  of  Kuan-yin ;  an  Egyptian  painted  cedar  coffin  of  the 
Middle  Empire,  and  gold  ornaments  of  the  XXV  dynasty  (Ethiopian)  ;  Ma- 
donna and  Child  with  St.  Jerome,  by  Fiorenzo  di  Lorenzo,  gift  of  Mrs.  W. 
Scott  Fitz ;  an  interior  of  a  colonial  house,  the  Jafifrey  House,  Portsmouth. 

Exhibitions,  1920 :  French  modern  art ;  paintings  and  sculpture  by  Boston 
artists;  paintings  by  "The  Group  of  Seven"  of  Canada. 

BROOKLINE,    MASS. 

FITZGERALD  ART  GALLERY 
416  Washington  Street,  Brookline 
Open  week  days,  9  a.m.  to  12  m.  and  1  to  5  p.m. 

The  art  museum  of  Desmond  FitzGerald,  built  and  maintained  by  him  on  his 
estate,  is  open  free  to  the  public.  It  contains  paintings  by  the  early  French 
impressionists  Monet,  Sisley,  Pizarro,  etc.,  and  by  contemporary  Americans, 
including  a  large  group  of  water  colors  by  Dodge  MacKnight. 

CAMBRIDGE,    MASS. 

HARVARD  UNIVERSITY 

Cambridge 

.^WILLIAM    HAYES    FOGG   ART    MUSEUM 

College  Yard,  facing  Broadway 

A,  Lawrence  Lowell President       Edward  W.  Forbes Director 

Margaret  E.  Gilman Secretary       Paul  J.  Sachs Asst.  Director 

For  notes  on  permanent  collection  see  Vol.  XIV ,  pp.  134,  135. 

Open  free,  week  days  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  ;  Sundays,  during  the  term,  1  to  5  p.m. 
During  the  summer  vacation  the  museum  is  open  on  week  days  9  a.m.  to 
5  P.M. ;  Saturdays,  9  a.m.  to  1  p.m. 

Erected  1895  ;  founded  by  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Fogg.  The  Museum  is  practically 
the  laboratory  of  the  Department  of  Fine  Arts  at  Harvard ;  the  regular 
lectures  in  the  courses  are  held  here  and  also  free  public  lectures  and 
exhibitions. 

Exhibitions:  Mar.  16  to  Apr.  14,  1921,  Morgan  exhibition  of  illuminated 
manuscripts ;  May  5  to  June  9,  Prints  by  Degas,  Forain  and  Pissarro. 

The  "Sachs  Research  Fellowship  in  Fine  Arts"  was  established  in  1916 
by  Samuel  Sachs.  It  gives  $2,000  annually  to  any  American  man  or  woman 
of  proved  ability,  whether  student  or  instructor,  to  enable  that  person  to 
pursue  in  any  part  of  the  world  advanced  studies  in  the  history,  principles, 
or  methods  of  the  fine  arts.     Awarded,  1921,  to  Richard  Ofifner. 

The  Society  of  Friends  of  the  Fogg  Art  Museum  is  an  informal  organi- 
zation of  170  members  who  annually  contribute  varying  amounts  for  the  pur- 
chase of  works  of  art   for  the  Museum. 


34  MASSACHUSETTS   MUSEUMS 

CAMBRIDGE,    MASS. 

Harvard  University— ConfiuMf?^ 
Acquisitions,    1920-21,   included  a  thirteenth   century   painting   by   Guido   da 
Siena ;  paintings  by  Giovanni  di  Paolo ;   paintings  by   Giacomo   Pacchiarotto ; 
Gothic  head  of  a  king;    copy  of  a  Benozzo  Grozzoli  fresco  by  Lokhoff. 

GERMANIC   MUSEUM 

Adolphus  Busch  Hall 
KuNO  Francke,  Honorary  Curator 
Open,   free,  Mondays,  Fridays  and  Saturdays,   from  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.,  and 
Thursdays  and  Sundays  during  the  term  from  1  till  5  p.m. 
Established  1902. 

NELSON   ROBINSON,   JR.,    HALL 

Charles  W.  Killam,  Acting  Dean  Faculty  of  Architecture 
Erected  1901,  by  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Nelson  Robinson.  It  is  the  home  of  the 
School  of  Architecture  and  of  the  School  of  Landscape  Architecture.  It 
contains  full-sized  casts  of  important  pieces  of  architecture,  original  drawings, 
pottery  and  bronzes  and  a  collection  of  oriental  textiles  lent  by  the  Fogg 
Museum. 

The  libraries  of  the  two  schools  are  open  daily,  during  term,  9  a.m.  to  5 
P.M. ;  Saturdays,  9  a.m.  to  1  p.m.  About  5,300  volumes  and  24,500  photo- 
graphs. 

SEMITIC   MUSEUM 

David  Gordon  Lyon,  Curator 
Open,  free,  week  days,  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays,  2  to  5  p.m.     Collections 
illustrate    the    art,    religion,    literature    and    manners    of    Assyria,    Babylonia, 
Phoenicia,  Syria  and  Palestine. 

COLLECTION   OF   CLASSICAL    ANTIQUITIES 

Sever  Hall 
George  Henry  Chase,  Curator 
Open  to  the  public  Mondays,  2  to  5  p.m.     The  objects  may  be  taken  out 
for  study.     There  are  several  hundred  objects  of  minor  art,  such  as  bronzes, 
vases   and  coins ;   also  casts,  photographs,   squeezes  and  rubbings   of   inscrip- 
tions, and  models  of  ancient  utensils  of  archaeological  interest. 

NORTHAMPTON,    MASS. 

HhHILLYER  ART  GALLERY 
Smith  College,  Northampton 
Alfred  Vance  Churchill,  Director  of  Gallery 
Founded  1881.    Open,  free,  daily,  9  a.m.  to  1  p.m.,  and  2  to  4  p.m.;  Sundays, 
2.30  to  4.30. 

Collections :  Greek  and  Roman,  Italian,  Renaissance  and  modern  French 
works ;  Chinese  and  Japanese  paintings,  prints  and  pottery ;  American  paint- 
ings and  bronzes ;  drawings,  engravings,  etchings,  lithographs ;  photographs, 
lantern  slides,  casts.  Studios  for  classes  in  drawing,  painting  and  design. 
Lecture  hall.     Nine  special  exhibitions  held  during  1920-21.  _ 

PITTSFIELD,    MASS.  .*-.-.*«.  i 

BERKSHIRE  ATHEN^UM  AND  MUSEUM 

Henry  Colt President       George    H.    Tucker,    Treasurer    and 

William  H.  Swift.  .  .Vice-President  Chairman  Art  Committee 

Harlan  H.  Ballard,  Librarian  and  Curator 
Annie  F.  Grossman,  Assistant  in  charge  of  Museum 
_  The  Museum  is  open  from  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  ;  Sundays,  2  to  5  p.m.    Admis- 
sion free  at  all  times.    The  annual  meeting  is  held  in  June.    It  is  also  a  public 
library  and  reading-room. 


MASSACHUSETTS  MUSEUMS  35 

PITTSFIELD,    MASS. 

Berkshire  Athenaeum  and  Museum — Continued 
Museum  opened  1903.  The  exhibits  include  natural  history,  Indian  relics, 
archaeology,  Greek  and  Roman  curios,  original  sculpture,  casts  of  Renaissance 
sculpture ;  138  paintings,  a  few  being  sixteenth  century  Italian  works,  some 
eighteenth  century  English,  and  the  majority  French  and  American  of  the 
nineteenth  century. 

SALEM,    MASS. 

ESSEX  INSTITUTE 

132  Essex  Street,  Salem 

William  C.  Endicott,  President 

Alden  p.  White 1st  Vice-Pres.      Henry  W.  Belknap Secretary 

Henry  M.  BATCHELDER.2nd  Vice-Pres,      Philip  Little Curator  of  Art 

William  O.  Chapman.  ..  .Treasurer      Louise  M,  Taylor Librarian 

For  foundation  and  development  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  156. 

Museum  and  picture  gallery  open,  free,  daily,  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  ;  Sundays, 
2  to  5  P.M.. 

Founded  1848.  Monthly  Board  meetings,  first  Monday ;  annual  in  May. 
Annual  dues,  active,  $3 ;  contributing,  $5 ;  sustaining,  $10 ;  membership,  725. 

Museum  contains  antiquarian  and  historical  objects  illustrating  the  life  of 
the  English  settler,  including  three  type  rooms — a  New  England  kitchen  of 
1750,  a  bedroom,  and  a  parlor  of  1800 — and  large  collections  of  old  furniture, 
china,  war  relics,  tools,  medals  and  coins,  etc.  On  exhibition  in  the  picture 
gallery  are  over  two  hundred  paintings,  including  portraits  of  prominent  per- 
sons by  Stuart,  Copley,  Smibert,  Trumbull,  and  others;  about  50  miniatures; 
also  engravings  and  art  objects.  In  the  rear  of  the  Museum  building  is  an 
annex  to  the  Museum  (built  in  1918)  containing  collections  of  utensils,  bas- 
ketry, farm  and  craft  implements  and  wagons ;  and  a  house  built  in  Salem  in 
1684,  furnished  in  the  manner  of  that  time.  In  the  lean-to  are  shown  an 
apothecary's  shop  (1825),  a  Salem  cent  shop  (1840),  and  a  weaving  room. 
Beside  it  is  an  old-fashioned  shoemaker's  shop  (about  1830),  and  near  are 
Salem  porches  and  architectural  objects.  Held  free  lecture  course  from  Jan- 
uary to  March,  1920. 

SOUTH    HADLEY,    MASS. 

DWIGHT  ART  MEMORIAL 

Mt.  Holyoke  College,  South  Hadley 

Gertrude  S.  Hyde,  Chairman  Department  of  Art  and  Archaeology 

Erected  in  1901  to  house  the  equipment  and  collections  of  the  department  of 

art  and  archaeology.     It  contains  lecture  rooms,  studios,   3  galleries,   and  the 

art  library  of  2,500  books,   10,000  photographs,  1,500  lantern  slides,  356  casts, 

and  a  large  collection  of  old  and  modern  works  of  art.     Lectures  on  history 

of  art  have  been  given  at  Mt.  Holyoke  since  1874.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

SPRINGFIELD,    MASS. 

►^SPRINGFIELD  ART  MUSEUM 
State  Street,  Springfield 
George  Walter  Vincent  Smith  Collection 
George  Walter  Vincent  Smith,  Donor  and  Director. 
Eleanor  A.  Wade,  Curator. 
Cordelia  C.  Sargent,  Assistant  Curator. 
For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  157. 

Open,  free,  week  days,  1  to  5  p.m.;  closed  Thanksgiving,  Christmas,  New 
Year's  Day,  and  Fourth  of  July.     The  collection  of  casts,  which  occupies  part 


36  MASSACHUSETTS   MUSEUMS 

SPRINGFIELD,    MASS. 

Springfield  Art  Museum — Continued 
of  the  first  floor  of  the  building,  is  open  on  Sundays,  but  not  the  other  de- 
partments. 

Opened  1895.  Collection  given  by  George  Walter  Vincent  Smith.  Twelve 
galleries  of  objects  including:  paintings,  statuary  and  drawings;  arms  and 
armor;  Oriental  potteries  and  porcelains;  bronzes,  jade,  enamels,  lacquers  and 
ivories ;  textiles  and  wood  carvings ;  work  with  children,  groups  being  taken 
through  the  Museum  by  an  attendant  on  Saturday  mornings ;  illustrated  story 
hours;  drawing  classes;  open  evenings  upon  request  for  clubs,  etc.  Pictures 
are  lent,  and  exhibitions  of  photographs  held  monthly. 

WELLESLEY,    MASS. 

►^FARNSWORTH  MUSEUM 

Wellesley  College,  Wellesley 

Alice  Van  Vechten  Brown,  Director.        Gladys  Turnback,  Asst.  in  Charge 

Founded  1875.    Open,  free,  8  a.m.  to  5.30  p.m.  daily,  except  Sundays. 

Collection  consists  of  antique  sculpture ;  Jarves  collection  of  laces  and  vest- 
ments ;  Frost  collection  of  Indian  baskets ;  and  the  Stetson  collection  of  modern 
paintings.  About  14,000  photographs.  Courses  are  given  at  the  College  in 
history  of  art  and  studio  practice. 

Exhibitions,  1920-21 :  Studies  on  the  Maine  coast  by  Edith  R.  Abbot ;  paint- 
ings by  Gladys  Thayer ;  paintings  by  F.  W.  Benson ;  architectural  water  colors, 
lent  by  Dept.  of  Agriculture,  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology;  examples 
of  industrial  housing;  paintings  by  Charles  H.  Woodbury. 

WORCESTER,    MASS. 

^WORCESTER  ART  MUSEUM 
Salisbury  and  Tuckerman  Streets,  Worcester 

Francis  H.  Dewey President      Lincoln  N.  Kinnicutt Treasurer 

Frederick  S.  Pratt.  .  .Vice-President      Thomas  H.  Gage Clerk 

Executive  Staff 
Raymond  Wyer,  Director. 
Benjamin  H.  Stone,  Assistant  to  Director. 
Edward  E.  Pease,  Assistant  Treasurer. 
Lucy  D.  Tuckerman,  Librarian. 
Ella  I.  Simons,  Educational  Department. 
Anna  D.  Hackett,  Secretary  to  the  Director. 
For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  pp.  159,  160. 
Open  10  A.M.  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays,  2  to  5  p.m.    Admission  free. 
Founded  1896.     Annual  meeting  third  Tuesday  in  April ;  Trustees'  meeting 
fourth  Mondays.    Annual  dues,  $5;  membership,  171.    Attendance  1920-21  was 
43,949.     Collections  include  archaeology,  architecture,  casts,  coins  and  medals, 
furniture,   ceramics,  rnetalwork.   Oriental   objects,   old   and   modern  paintings, 
colonial  silver,  sculpture,  textiles,  woodwork,  prints,  photographs,  and  a  library. 
Of   special  note   are   the   collection   of   paintings,    the   Bancroft   collection   of 
Japanese   prints,   and    the    Goodspeed   collection    of    engravings    by    American 
masters. 

Lectures  are  offered  to  the  public,  to  special  groups  of  persons  and  organi- 
zations. Lantern  slides  and  photographs  are  lent  through  Worcester  County 
to  clubs,  schools,  etc.,  and  lectures  are  given  by  members  of  the  staff  in  the 
Museum  and  in  the  towns  of  the  county.  Free  concerts  given  every  other 
Sunday  during  winter  of  1920-21. 

The  most  important  incident,  1920-21,  was  the  opening  of  the  addition  to  the 
buildmg. 


MASSACHUSETTS— MICHIGAN  MUSEUMS  37 

WORCESTER,    MASS. 

Worcester  Art  Museum — Continued 
Accessions,  1920-21 :  "Madonna  and  Child  with  Saint  and  Donor,"  Spanish 
primitive ;  "Madonna  and  Child,"  late  Gothic ;  "Holy  Family,"  by  Dosso  Dossi, 
School  of  Ferrara ;  "Charles,  Cardinal  de  Bourbon."  French,  by  Pierre  Du- 
monstier ;  "Eleanor  of  Portugal,"  XVI  Century,  Flemish ;  "Christ  Bearing 
the  Cross,"  Spanish,  by  Alonzo  Cano ;  "Portrait  of  a  Man,"  Dutch,  by  Antonio 
Palamedes;  "Portrait  of  an  Artist,"  French,  by  Antoine  Pesne ;  "Still  Life," 
French,  by  Jean  Baptiste  Simeon  Chardin ;  "Captain  John  Larrabee,"  by  Joseph 
Badger;  "Historical  Subject,"  by  Benjamin  West;  "Christ  Healing  the  Sick," 
by  Washington  Allston;  "Head  of  Woman,"  pastel,  by  Paul  Gauguin;  "Break- 
ing Wave  on  Shore  Line,"  water  color,  by  Winslow  Homer ;  "Gardiner  Greene 
Hammond,"  miniature,  by  Richard  M.  Staigg;  "Richard  Cosway,"  self-minia- 
ture ;  "St.  John  the  Divine,"  polychrome  wood  carving  by  Giacomo  Cozzarelli ; 
two  choir  stalls  ;  several  pieces  of  ornamental  wood  carving,  Gothic ;  glass  panel 
from  the  set  of  Seven  Sleepers,  French,  XIH  Century;  glass  panel  from  Can- 
terbury Cathedral,  English,  XHI  Century;  educational  panel,  made  up  of 
fragments  of  glass,  dating  from  XHI  to  XVIH  Century ;  glass  panel  picturing 
a  kneeling  saint,  Flemish,  late  XV  or  early  XVI  Century ;  glass  panel,  Eng- 
lish, XVI  Century;  full  suit  of  armor,  Italian,  about  1540;  iron  grille,  Span- 
ish, XII  or  XIII  Century;  ornamental  iron  work,  Spanish,  XVI  or  XVII 
Century;  wrought  iron  jewel  box,  French  X  Century;  two  Queen  Anne  walnut 
side  chairs  covered  with  very  fine  contemporary  gros  point  needlework ;  lac- 
quered beech  wood  chair,  English;  silver  can  by  William  Swan. 

Exhibitions 
Apr.  4  to  Apr.  21,  1920 — Textiles  owned  by  the  Museum. 
Apr.  25  to  May  16 — Paintings,  modern  art,  by  contemporary  artists. 
May  23  to  June  13 — Twenty-second  annual  exhibition  of  work  of  pupils  of  the 

School  of  the  Worcester  Art  Museum. 
June  20  to  July  4 — Paintings  owned  by  the  Museum. 

July  11  to  Aug.  23 — Memorial  exhibition  of  paintings  by  Henry  Golden  Dearth. 
Aug.  29  to  Sept.  27 — Paintings  owned  by  the  Museum. 

Oct.  3  to  Oct.  31 — Seventeenth  annual  exhibition  of  work  by  local  artists. 
Nov.  7  to  Nov.  28 — Paintings  by  the  "Group  of  Seven"  of  Canada. 
Dec.  5  to  Jan.  2,  1921 — Paintings  owned  by  the  Museum. 
Jan.  9  to  Jan.  30 — ^Exhibition  of  early  American  paintings  assembled  by  the 

Association  of  Museum   Directors,  augmented  by  those  belonging  to  the 

Museum. 
Feb.   18  to  Apr.    1 — Paintings  rehung  in  all  galleries   for  the  opening  of  the 

addition. 

DETROIT,    MICH. 

HhDETROIT  INSTITUTE  OF  ARTS 

(Formerly  Detroit  Museum  of  Art) 

704  Jefferson  Avenue,  Detroit 

Arts  Commission 

Ralph  H.  Booth President      Albert  Kahn,  Henry  G.  Stevens, 

William  J.   Gray.        Vice-President  Commissioners 

Clyde  H.  Burroughs,  Secretary  and  Curator 
Reginald  Poland,  Educational  Secretary 
For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  165. 

Open,  free,  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays,  2  to  6  p.m.  ;  holidays,  2  to  5  p.m. 

Incorporated    1885.     Under  the  charter  of  the   City  of   Detroit,  adopted   in 

June,  1918,  provision  was  made  for  a  Municipal  Arts  Commission,  consisting 

of   four  members,  with  powers  and   duties   summarized  as   follows :    It  shall 

hold  in  the  name  of  the  city  such   real  estate  as  may  be  necessary   for  the 


38  MICHIGAN  MUSEUMS 

DETROIT,    MICH. 

Detroit  Institute  of  Arts — Continued 
accomplishments  of  its  objects;  shall  build,  operate,  and  maintain  suitable 
buildings  for  works  of  art  and  auditorium  purposes,  to  be  known  as  the 
Detroit  Institute  of  Arts;  shall  acquire,  collect,  own  and  exhibit  objects  of 
art,  such  as  are  usually  acquired  by  museums  of  art,  and  shall  have  such 
other  powers  and  duties  as  may  be  necessary  for  the  proper  discharge  of  its 
duties. 

Under  the  provisions  of  this  charter,  the  corporation  of  the  Detroit  Mu- 
seum of  Art  conveyed  to  the  Arts  Commission  all  its  property  and  collec- 
tions, to  be  administered  by  the  Municipal  Arts  Commission,  and  hereafter 
to  be  designated  as  the  Detroit  Institute  of  Arts.  Meetings  of  the  Arts  Com- 
mission are  held  every  Monday  afternoon.  Annual  meeting  in  June,  Income 
for  maintenance  is  $59,000;  for  purchase  of  collections,  $50,000;  toward  erec- 
tion of  a  new  building.  $260,000.  Additional  funds  for  purchase  are  held  in 
trust  by  the  Detroit  Museum  of  Art, 

The  collections  include :  an  Egyptian  Department,  a  Classical  Department, 
Print  Department,  Department  of  Oriental  Art,  a  Colonial  Department,  col- 
lection of  paintings  of  the  fifteenth,  sixteenth,  seventeenth  and  eighteenth 
centuries,  as  well  as  modern  paintings,  and  a  Children's  Museum,  consisting 
of  material  suitable  for  circulation  in  the  public  schools,  and  of  particular 
interest  to  children. 

The  educational  work  of  the  Museum  is  wide  in  its  scope.  There  are  Sunday 
afternoon  talks  in  the  auditorium,  together  with  musical  programs;  the 
Society  of  Arts  and  Crafts,  the  Archaeological  Society,  the  Michigan  Chapter 
of  the  American  Institute  of  Architects,  and  other  societies,  hold  their  lecture 
courses  jointly  with  the  Museum.  Lantern  slides,  photographs,  and  objects 
from  the  collections  are  available  for  the  use  of  schools  and  study  clubs,  A 
branch  of  the  Detroit  Public  Library,  in  charge  of  Miss  Isabel  Weadock,  ful- 
fills an  important  sphere  of  usefulness.  A  bulletin  is  published  monthly  from 
October  to  May,  Free  sketch  classes  under  the  direction  of  an  instructor 
from  the  Recreation  Commission  are  held  Friday  evenings  and  Saturday 
mornings.  During  1920-21,  through  the  co-operation  of  the  Chamber  Music 
Society,  free  concerts  were  given  in  the  Institute  Auditorium  each  Sunday 
afternoon  during  the  season. 

In  connection  with  the  Detroit  Institute  of  Arts  is  the  Museum  of  Art 
Founders  Society,  which  donates  purchases  of  art  objects  to  the  Detroit 
Institute  of  Arts.  Annual  dues  are  from  $10  to  $10,000;  when  the  contri- 
butions of  a  member  reach  a  sum  total  of  $1,000  in  money  or  property  he  or 
she  becomes  a  governing  member  of  the  Corporation.  The  1920-21  gifts  to 
the  Institute  by  the  Founders  Society  were:  "Child  with  an  Orange,"  by 
Gari  Melchers;  "Woman  Sewing,"  by  William  Paxton ;  "A  Corner  of  My 
Studio,"  by  William  Auerbach  Levy ;  "Desert  Series"  of  35  etchings,  by  George 
Elbert  Burr, 

Acquisitions,  1920-21:  "Fish,"  by  William  M.  Chase;  "Home  Fields,"  by 
John  S,  Sargent;  "The  Blue  Symphony,"  by  J.  J,  Enneking;  "Woman  Sew- 
mg,"  by  William  M.  Paxton;  "Child  with  an  Orange,"  by  Gari  Melchers; 
"Corner  of  my  Studio,"  by  William  Auerbach  Levy;  "The  Green  Jar,"  by 
Roman  Kryzanowsky;  "The  Flower  Girl,"  by  Helen  M.  Turner;  "Path  of 
Gold,"  by  Gifford  Beal ;  "The  Artist's  Model,"  by  J,  L.  Gerome ;  "Deer  in 
Repose,"  by  Rosa  Bonheur;  "Turkish  Women,"  by  Diaz;  "The  Rainbow,"  by 
Van  Marcke;  "Grandfather's  Armor,"  by  Isabey;  "Cupid  Captured,"  bv 
Perrault;  "Love  Wins,"  by  E.  J,  Aubert ;  "Dancers  in  the  Greenroom,"  "Deux 
Femmes  Assises,"  and  "Portrait  de  Femme,"  by  E,  Degas;  "Antibes  at  Sun- 
set"   by    Boudin;    "Vieux    Remparts,"    by    Pissarro ;    "Les    Gladioles"    and 

Nymphae,"  by  Claude  Monet;  "Church  at  Moret,"  by  Sisley;  "Graziella,"  by 
Renoir ;  "At  Cledin,"  by  Moret ;  "The  Tea  Table,"  by  Le  Sidaner ;  "Le  Port  de 
Douarnenez,"  by  Cottet;   "Mer  d'Opale,"  by  Menard;   "Cabaret   Breton,"  by 


MICHIGAN   MUSEUMS  39 

m^mab^^-^ ■.-  "  DETROIT,    MICH. 

Detroit  Institute  of  Arts — Continued 
L.  Simon;  "On  the  Balcony,"  by  Henri  Lebasque;  "Le  Village,  Vignes,"  by 
H.  Martin ;  "Reception,"  water  color,  by  L.  Simon ;  "Landscape,"  pastel,  by  E. 
Degas;  "The  Exedra  Seat,"  by  Alma  Tadema ;  "Wood  Nymphs,"  by  J.  L. 
Stewart;  "Living  in  the  Past,"  by  J.  Israels;  "Hon.  Henry  David  Erskine,"  by 
Raeburn;  "The  Old  Hungarian  Mail,"  by  A.  Schreyer;  "Female  Head,"  sculp- 
ture, by  J.  Epstein;  "Allegresse,"  sculpture,  by  Bessie  Potter  Vonnoh;  "Run- 
ning Boys"  and  "Cats,"  sculpture,  by  Hunt  Diederich ;  "Democratus,"  sculp- 
ture, by  Chiaruzzi ;  seven  marbles,  classical  and  reminiscent  of  classical  in 
general;  six  etchings  by  Whistler;  two  etchings  by  B.  J.  Nordfeldt;  eleven 
prints,  six  blocks,  and  the  original  of  one  subject  by  Gustave  Baumann;  port- 
folio of  war  sketches  by  C.  Huard;  "Desert  Series'  of  thirty-live  etchings  by 
George  Elbert  Burr;  etchings  by  Roche,  Corot,  Jacquemart,  Roussel,  Raj  on 
and  Detaille;  three  etchings  by  Daubigny ;  two  etchings  by  Lalanne;.two  etch- 
ings by  Jacque ;  two  etchings  by  Appian ;  three  etchings  by  Bracquemond ;  two 
etchings  by  Nanteiul ;  "Woman  Carding  Wool,"  etching,  by  Millet ;  three 
etchings  by  Haden;  etchings  by  Brangwyn,  Cameron,  Hankey,  Fitton ;  two 
etchings  by  Fortuny;  etching  by  Gravesande;  etching  by  Mannfeld;  a  collec- 
tion of  Egyptian  antiquities;  six  pieces  of  Italian  jewelry;  Japanese  vase  and 
ornament;  seven  English  gold  watches;  three  Danish  tankards  of  the  XVII 
Century;  three  XVIII  Century  Danish  silver  sugar  shakers;  English  sugar 
shaker,  XIX  Century ;  Danish  corkscrew ;  two  German  beakers  and  a  German 
silver  tray;  one  box  and  hand  mirror;  enamel,  jewels  and  silved  by  Eda  Lord 
Dixon ;  four  terra  cotta  vases,  Graeco-Roman ;  English  plate  and  cup ;  The 
Nuremberg  Chronicle,  1493,  "History  of  the  World,"  illustrations  in  part  by 
the  master  of  Durer;  Raemakers  war  cartoons;  seventy-four  photographs  of 
the  work  of  Kenyon  Cox;  forty-five  photographs  of  Italy;  one  English  sam- 
pler; Herter  tapestry,  "The  Great  Crusade";  four  India  shawls;  two  collars 
and  a  flounce  of  lace;  one  piece  of  Maltese  lace;  one  Mexican  suit;  an  ivory 
cigarette  box ;  a  figuerine  in  polychrome  plaster,  American ;  three  Gothic  XV 
Century  carved  wood  French  panels ;  illuminated  manuscript,  "The  Lord's 
Prayer,"  by  a  Sister  of  the  Convent  at  Ralston,  N.  J. 

Exhibitions 

October,   1920 — Marine  paintings  by  William  Ritschel,  "The  Magic  Print," 

by  Denman  Fink. 
November — Paintings  of  children  by  Martha  Walter;  paintings,  tapestries  and 

porcelains  lent  by  New  York  dealers. 
December — Annual    exhibition    by    Michigan    artists;    etchings    by    Lester    G. 

Hornby;  wrought  iron  by  Thomas  Googerty;  carved  wood  "Spirits,"  by 

Charles  Haag. 
January,  1921 — Paintings  by  Maurice  Fromkes ;  batik  scarfs;  loan  exhibition  of 

Oriental  rings ;  etchings  by  Herbert  Pullinger ;  lithographs  by  Thornton 

Oakley. 
January  to  September — Paintings  lent  by  David  Gray. 
February — Pilgrim  Tercentenary  Exhibition. 
March-— Period   silks   lent   by   Cheney   Bros.;   Dutch   graphic  arts   exhibition; 

paintings  by  F.  C.  Frieseke. 
April — American    water    color    paintings ;    group    exhibition    of    paintings    by 

Eugene  Speicher,  Gififord  Beal  and  W.  E.  Schofield. 
April    15    to    May    1 — Seventh   annual    exhibition    of    paintings   by    American 

artists ;  Chinese  exhibition  in  connection  with  Famine  Fund  campaign. 
June— Canadian  paintings  by  "Group  of  Seven";  paintings  by  French  impres- 
sionists; recent  acquisitions. 
July — Costume  designs  by  Edwards  for  Sam  Hume  productions;  illustrations 

for  Quo  Vadis  by  Stachiewicz,  Polish  artist. 


40  MICHIGAN— MINNESOTA   MUSEUMS 

MUSKEGON,    MICH. 

4<HACKLEY  GALLERY  OF  ART 
Muskegon 

John   Vanderlaan President      Charles  M.  Marsh Treasurer 

Paul   S.   Moon Secretary      Lulu  F.  Miller Director 

Laura  B.  Hall,  Assistant  to  the  Director 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  170. 

Open  week  days,  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays  and  holidays,  2  to  5  p.m.  Ad- 
mission free. 

Founded  1912.  The  permanent  collection  includes  80  paintings  by  old  and 
modern  artists,  etchings,  drawings,  bronzes,  casts  and  a  complete  set  of 
Arundel  prints.  The  Hackley  Library  of  56,000  volumes  contains  5,000  books 
on  art. 

During  the  winter  a  Saturday  morning  story  hour  is  maintained  for  children. 
Talks  given  regularly  to  classes  in  the  Gallery  and  in  the  schools  of  the  city. 
A  course  of  lectures  by  well-known  speakers  on  art  subjects  is  offered  free 
to  the  public.  Paintings  from  the  permanent  collection  are  placed  in  the  schools 
and  exchanged  every  second  month.  The  auditorium  is  much  used  by  educa- 
tional organizations  for  special  meetings. 

Exhibitions 

July  10  to  Aug.  15,  1920 — Paintings  and  drawings  by  Stephen  Haweis. 

Sept.  27  to  Oct.  30— Paintings  by  Mabel  Key. 

Oct.  4  to  Nov.  2 — Paintings  by  C.  Bertram  Hartman ;  batik  scarfs  and  deco- 
rative panels.  ,,     .    i 

Nov.  4  to  Nov.  29 — Paintings  and  etchings  by  Eugene  Higgins. 

Dec.  3  to  Dec.  10 — Japanese  prints. 

Dec.  8  to  Dec.  31 — "Four  Art  Schools"  circulated  by  the  American  Federation 
of  Arts. 

Jan.  7  to  Feb.  4,  1921 — Paintings  by  the  Business  Men's  Art  Club  of  Chicago; 
small  bronzes,  medals  and  portrait  plaques,  circulated  by  the  American 
Federation  of  Arts ;  Latin  posters. 

Feb.  7  to  Mar.  1 — Printed  fabrics  for  home  decoration,  circulated  by  the  Ameri- 
can Federation  of  Arts. 

Mar.  1  to  Apr.  3 — Early  American  portraits,  lent  by  the  Ehrich  Galleries,  New 
York;  American  antiques,  lent  by  residents  of  Muskegon;  paintings  by 
local  amateurs. 

Mar.  2  to  Apr,  18 — Paintings  by  Victor  Casenelli;  war  sketches  in  pencil  and 
water  color  by  Wilbur  C.  Kensler, 

Apr.  6  to  May  17 — Dutch  graphic  art. 

May  9  to  June  20 — Water  colors  and  drawings  by  Winslow  Homer,  lent  by 
M.  A.  Ryerson. 

May  12  to  June  28 — Paintings  by  Joseph  Trevitts. 

MINNEAPOLIS,    MINN. 

MINNEAPOLIS  INSTITUTE  OF  ARTS 

►J^MINNEAPOLIS    SOCIETY    OF    FINE    ARTS 
201  East  24th  Street,   Minneapolis 

John  R.  Van  Derltp President      Alfred  F.   Pillsbury Treasurer 

Eugene  J.   Carpenter Vice-Pres.      G.  Sidney  Houston,  Jr Secretary 

Edward   C.   Gale 2d   Vice-Pres.  and  Business  Manager 

Russell  M.  Bennett.. 3d  Vice-Pres. 

Russell  A.  Plimpton,  Director. 
Marie  C.  Lehr,  Curator  of  Prints. 
For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  176. 


MINNESOTA  MUSEUMS  41 

MINNEAPOLIS,  MINN. 
Minneapolis   Institute  of  Arts — Continued 

Open  daily  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.,  except  Sunday  and  Monday,  when  the  hours 
are  1  to  5  p.m.  Admission  free  Wednesday,  Saturday  and  Sunday,  other  days 
admission  25  cents.  Free  docent  service  by  appointment.  The  permanent  col- 
lections embrace  sculpture,  paintings,  drawings,  tapestries,  furniture,  prints, 
laces,  casts,  collections  of  the  arts  of  the  Orient  and  Egyptian  antiquities. 

The  Minneapolis  Society  of  Fine  Arts,  incorporated  1883,  owns  the  collec- 
tions and  controls  the  museum,  the  building  being  known  as  the  Minneapolis 
Institute  of  Arts.  Building  opened  January  7,  1915 ;  cost,  $537,000.  Annual 
meeting,  third  Wednesday  in  January.  Annual  dues,  $10;  associate,  $2; 
membership,  3,365. 

Public  lectures  and  lectures  for  members  are  given  frequently.  An  Art 
Reference  Library,  in  co-operation  with  the  Minneapolis  Athenaeum.  Bulletin 
published  monthly,  October  to  June.  Co-operation  with  the  public  schools. 
The  Minneapolis  School  of  Art,  founded  in  1886  by  the  Minneapolis  Society 
of  Fine  Arts,  is  located  in  the  same  park  as  the  Institute,  and  occupies  the 
Julia  Morrison  Memorial  Building  (see  school  section). 

Principal  gifts  and  other  accessions,  1920-21 :  Painting,  "Upper  Ipswich 
River,"  by  Philip  Little,  gift  of  the  artist;  paintings,  "Portrait  of  Governor 
Palmer  of  Vermont,"  by  Samuel  F.  B.  Morse;  "Group  of  Three  Women,"  by 
H.  Bebie;  "Moonlight,"  by  Muller;  "Landscape,"  by  A.  B.  Durand,  and 
"Autumn  Evening,"  by  Homer  D.  Martin,  gifts  of  Joseph  Satinover,  New 
York;  paintings,  "Bay  of  Neaples,"  by  Volpe,  and  "Market  Scene,"  by  Gabrini, 
bequests  of  Howard  W.  Baker;  painting,  "Italian  Girl,"  by  Grace  McKinstry, 
gift  of  Charles  Grant;  mezzotints  in  color,  "Mrs.  Lloyd,"  after  Reynolds,  and 
"Young  Princess,"  after  Netscher,  by  S.  Arlent  Edwards,  gifts  of  the  artist ; 
drawings,  "La  Nouvelle  Caserne  a  Pan,"  by  Lalanne,  and  "Sleeping  Work- 
man," by  A.  E.  Sterne,  gifts  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  E.  D.  Brooks ;  Ms.  book,  anti- 
phonal  with  Gregorian  music,  German,  1439,  gift  of  H.  V.  Jones ;  bronze  head 
of  Oedipus,  by  F.  Fleming  Baxter,  gift  of  the  sculptor;  28  examples  of  English 
and  American  pewter  of  the  XVII  and  XVIII  centuries;  pewter  plate,  wine 
glass  and  sampler,  American,  XVIII  century,  gifts  of  Miss  Sarah  Bailey; 
bakuba  cloth,  African.  XIX  century ;  approximately  525  examples  of  laces  and 
embroideries,  largely  Italian  of  the  XVI  and  XVII  centuries,  gift  of  Countess 
Phelps-Resse,  Rome. 

Purchases  from  the  Dunwoody  Fund  :  Painting,  "St.  Anthony  and  the  Her- 
mit," by  Ribera ;  Egyptian  mousharibi  panel,  XVIII  century ;  4  French  Gothic 
colurnns;  XIII  to  XVI  century  French  Gothic  portal;  XV  century  French 
Gothic  monumental  portal ;  XV  century  French  Gothic  house  front ;  12 
XVIII  century  textiles  from  the  Greek  Islands ;  10  Near-Eastern  textiles, 
XVII  and  XVIII  centuries ;  velvet  portiere  from  XVI  century  Italian  chausuble. 

Exhibitions 
September,  1920 — Chinese  paintings,  lent  by  Lai-Yuan  &  Company,  New  York. 
October — Sixth  annual  exhibition  of  the  work  of  Minneapolis  artists ;  memorial 

exhibition  of  Zorn  etchings. 
November — Exhibition    of    colonial    arts    in    commemoration    of    the    Pilgrim 

Tercentenary ;  exhibition  of  photographs,  textiles  and  reproductions  under 

the  auspices  of  the  Greek  Government. 
December — Paintings   by  William   Ritschel ;    modern    Swedish    textiles ;    Bible 

illustrations  from  the  print  collection. 
January,    1921 — Paintings   by   Carl   Bohnen ;   paintings   lent   by   the   Anderson 

Galleries,  Chicago;  mezzotints  by  S.  Arlent  Edwards. 
February— "Vers  I'ldeal,"  tapestry  by  Mile.  Fernande  Dublis;  laces  lent  by  the 

Needle  and  Bobbin  Club,  New  York. 
March — The   Emma  B.   Hodge   collection   of   samplers ;    paintings   by   Gifford 

Beal,  W.  Elmer  Schofield  and  Eugene  E.  Speicher. 


42  MINNESOTA— MISSOURI  MUSEUMS 


MINNEAPOLIS,    MINN. 

Minneapolis   Institute  of  Arts — Continued 
April— Early  American  paintings;  exhibition  by  the  Advertising  Club  of  Min- 
nesota. 
May— Paintings  by  the  Guild  of  American  Painters. 

June— Collection  of  laces  and  embroideries  presented  by  the  Countess  Phelps- 
Resse. 

MINNESOTA  ACADEMY  OF  SCIENCE  MUSEUM 
Public  Library  Building,  Minneapolis 

T.  B.  Walker President       Harlow  Gale Rec.-Sec. 

Edward  C.  Gale Treasurer       O.   W.    Oestlund Cor.-Sec. 

University  of  Minn.,  Minneapolis 
Open,  free,  daily,  except  Sunday,  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.     Includes  Greek  terra- 
cottas,  pottery   and   glass;    Persian   pottery;    coins,   carved   ivory,    Babylonian 
tablets,  Chinese  and  other  idols,  Japanese  and  Philippine  guns  and  swords,  etc. 
Most  of  the  objects  are  lent' by  T.  B.  Walker. 

WALKER  ART  GALLERY 

Eighth  Street  and  Hennepin  Avenue,  Minneapolis 

R.  H.  Adams^  Curator 

Collection  presented  in  1918  to  the  City  of  Minneapolis  by  T.  B.  Walker. 

Open  free  to  the  public  daily,  including  Sunday,  with  free  use  of  all  gallery 

catalogues.     Average  annual  attendance,  20,000.     Collection  begun  about  1875. 

It  contains  nearly  500  paintings  by  leading  artists  of  all  schools;   about  350 

original  miniatures,  110  portraits  of  notable  Indians,  24  portraits  of  celebrated 

Indian  fighters,  etc.     There  are  also  large  collections  of  jade,  amber,   ivory, 

precious  stones,  porcelains,  Greek  pottery,  Persian  wares.     Occasionally  lends 

pictures. 

KANSAS    CITY,    MO. 

NELSON  GALLERY  OF  ART 
Public  Library  Building,  Kansas  City 

D.  M.  Pinkerton President      E.  F.  S winney Treasurer 

J.  B.  Jackson,  Jr.,  Secretary,  Board  of  Education,  Kansas  City 

Staff 

Purd   B.   Wright Librarian      G.  Van  Millet Artist  Caretaker 

Calina  E.  M.  Somerville,  Curator 

Open,  free,  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  week  days;  2  to  5  p.m.  Sundays. 

Founded  1897  by  William  R.  Nelson,  who  died  in  1915;  Mr.  Nelson's  will 
provided  a  fund  for  the  purchase  of  pictures  and  objects  of  art  by  artists 
who  have  been  dead  at  least  30  years.  New  galleries  completed  1918.  The 
collection  consists  of  63  faithful  copies  of  masterpieces  of  painting  of  all 
schools  from  the  fourteenth  to  the  seventeenth  centuries.  These  copies  are  the 
exact  size  of  the  originals  and  as  far  as  possible  the  original  framing  has 
been  reproduced.  There  are  also  500  carbon  photographs  of  Old  Masters  and 
100  reproductions  in  bronze,  marble,  terra  cotta  and  plaster  of  antique  and 
Renaissance  sculpture. 

ST.    LOUIS,    MO. 

^CITY  ART  MUSEUM 

Forest  Park,  St.  Louis 

William  K.  Bixby,  President 

Edward    Mallinckrodt..  . . Vice-Pres.      Charles  Parsons  Pettus,  Treasurer 


MISSOURI  MUSEUMS  43 

ST.    LOUIS,    MO. 

City  Art   Museum — Continued 
Executive  Officers 
Samuel  L,  Sheker,  Administrator. 
Robert  Allen  Holland,  Director. 
Madeleine  Borggraefe,  Secretary. 
Charles  Percy  Davis,  Curator. 

For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  183. 

Open,  free,  daily,  including  Sundays,  from  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  (closed  Christ- 
mas and  New  Year's  Day). 

Founded  in  1879  as  the  St.  Louis  Museum  of  Fine  Arts;  reorganized  1908. 
Board  meetings  first  Friday  after  the  first  Tuesday  of  each  month ;  annual  in 
May.  Supported  by  city  tax  of  one-fifth  of  a  mill  per  dollar  on  the  assessed 
valuation  of  the  property  in  the  city.  Income  for  1920-21  was  $188,107.91. 
Attendance  for  the  year  ending  April  1,  1921,  was  258,943. 

The  permanent  collections  include  paintings,  sculpture,  prints  and  extensive 
groups  of  objects  illustrative  of  the  decorative  arts.  American  paintings  have 
received  special  attention,  but  foreign  schools,  particularly  the  modern  French 
impressionists  are  represented,  and  there  is  a  small  group  of  paintings  by  artists 
who  lived  prior  to  the  XIX  Century.  The  print  collection  contains  examples 
representative  of  almost  every  period  in  the  development  of  the  graphic  arts. 
The  sculpture  collection  embraces  numerous  examples  in  bronze,  marble  and 
plaster  by  American  and  European  artists.  A  collection  of  French  furniture 
and  woodwork  has  been  assembled  which  illustrates  the  development  of  the 
craft  in  France  from  the  early  XVI  Century  until  the  period  of  Louis  XVI. 
English  furniture  is  represented  by  examples  of  all  the  important  types  of  the 
XVIII  Century.  There  is  an  extensive  collection  of  textiles  embracing  Gothic 
and  Renaissance  tapestries,  Gothic  velvets,  embroidered  vestments  and  laces. 
The  Chinese  department  contains  ceramics,  bronzes  and  jades  of  most  of  the 
historic  periods,  as  well  as  paintings,  textiles,  Buddhist  sculpture,  carved 
stones,  glass,  enamel  and  lacquer.  Japanese  art  is  represented  by  color  prints, 
lacquer,  armor,  arms  and  other  metal  work,  textiles,  sculptures  and  carvings. 
There  are  also  collections  of  Corean  ceramics ;  Egyptian  antiquities ;  Greek 
marble  sculpture,  vases  and  other  objects;  Graeco-Roman  glass;  Persian  tex- 
tiles, metal  work  and  ceramics ;  and  casts  of  Greek,  Roman  and  Renaissance 
sculpture. 

The  educational  work  of  the  Museum  includes ;  a  course  of  lectures  on 
paintings ;  a  course  of  lectures  on  household  and  decorative  arts ;  a  classroom 
with  lantern  for  teachers  and  pupils,  where  the  work  is  conducted  with  the 
co-operation  of  art  schools,  colleges,  high  schools,  elementary  public  schools, 
private  schools,  civic  societies,  women's  clubs  and  the  general  public.  The 
Museum  lends  exhibits  to  the  Public  Library,  the  high  school.  Teachers'  College 
and  grade  schools.  Facilities  are  offered  students  and  copyists.  A  quarterly 
bulletin  dealing  with  the  activities  of  the  Museum  and  special  exhibition  cata- 
logues are  published.  Photographs  and  photogravures  of  paintings  and  sculp- 
ture in  the  collections  are  on  sale. 

Acquisitions,  1920-1921 — "Study  Head"  and  "Bridge  at  Florence"  by  Duv- 
eneck;  "The  Black  Cape"  by  Sidney  E.  Dickinson.  "Luna"  by  John  Douglas 
Patrick.  Prints  by  Meryon,  Haden,  Durer,  Bellows,  Pennell,  Horter  and 
others ;  Chinese  paintings  of  the  T'ang  and  Sung  dynasties ;  Japanese  color 
prints  by  Toyonobu,  Koriusai,  Shunko,  Kiyonaga,  Yeishi,  Sharaku,  Toyokuni, 
Hokusai,  Hiroshige,  and  Hokkei ;  two  Greek  marble  statues,  c.  300  B.C.; 
Roman  portrait  head;  silver  tea  caddy  by  Samuel  Godbehere,  London,  1789; 
pair  of  silver  gilt  coasters,  London,  1806;  one  hundred  and  three  Chinese 
bronzes  of  the  Han  dynasty,  from  the  Bushnell  collection ;  five  examples 
early  Chinese  bronzes  from  other  sources ;  nine  examples  of  early  Chinese 
jades;  two  panels  of  polychrome  glass  with  coats  of  arms,  Nuremberg,  early 


44  MISSOURI— NEW  HAMPSHIRE   MUSEUMS 

ST.    LOUIS,    MO. 

City  Art  Museum — Continued 
XVI  century;  panel  of  polychrome  glass  with  St.  Maurice,  Nuremberg,  late 
XV  century ;  French  Armoire,  Lyonese  school,  c.  1580,  and  French  ebony 
cabinet,  Lyonese  school,  c.  1630,  both  from  the  Chabriere-Arles  collection; 
two  six-fold  screens  by  Sotatsu,  Japanese,  XVII  century ;  Japanese  lacquer 
writing  box,  XVII-XVIII  century. 

Exhibitions 

April  and  May,  1920 — Paintings  and  sculpture  by  a  group  of  American  artists. 

July  and  August — Rotary  Exhibition  of  American  Water  Color  Society. 

September  and  November — Fifteenth  Annual  Exhibition  of  Paintings  by 
American  artists. 

November  and  December — Paintings  in  oil  and  tempera  by  Henry  G.  Keller. 

December  and  January,  1921 — Decorative  screens  by  Robert  W.  Chanler. 

January — Wrought  Iron  by  Thomas  F.  Googerty,  and  wood  carvings  by 
Charles  Haag. 

February — Recent  accessions  of  the  City  Art  Museum. 

March — St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts  Exhibition;  collection  of  batik  dec- 
orations. 

April — 'Photographs  of  scenes  in  Greece  by  Fred.  Boissonnas,  and  Persian  art 
lent  by  the  Persian   Antique  Gallery,   New  York. 

OMAHA,    NEB. 

LININGER  ART  GALLERY 

224  North  18th  Street,  Omaha 

Established  1888  by  George  W.  Lininger.  A  private  collection  of  300  pic- 
tures and  statuary  and  bric-a-brac.  Open  to  the  public  free  of  charge  on  ap- 
pointment. An  Egyptian  collection  belonging  to  the  Lininger  collection  has 
been  lent  to  the  Omaha  Public  Library. 

OMAHA  PUBLIC  LIBRARY  AND  MUSEUM 

19th  and  Harney  Streets,  Omaha,  Neb. 

C.  N.  DiETZ President      Bruce    McCulloch Secretary 

U.    C.   Eraser Vice-President      Edith  Tobitt Librarian 

Museum  open  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  week  days;  2  to  5  p.m.  Sundays  and  holi- 
days. Founded  1877.  The  Museum  occupies  five  rooms  and  consists  of  a 
small  collection  of  paintings  and  of  Indian  objects;  also  the  Byron  Reed 
collection  of  coins  and  manuscripts. 

CORNISH,    N.    H. 

AUGUSTUS  SAINT-GAUDENS  MEMORIAL 

Cornish,   N.   H.    (P.   O.    Windsor,   Vt.) 

Charles  A.  Platt,  President 

Daniel  C.  French 1st  Vice-Pres.      Charles  D.  Norton Treasurer 

R.  W.  DE  Forest 2d  Vice-Pres.      George   B.    Upham Secretary 

Open  free,  throughout  the  year.  Founded  1919.  Annual  meeting  in 
August.  A  memorial  to  Augustus  Saint-Gaudens  in  the  township  where 
he  had  his  studios  during  the  latter  years  of  his  life.  It  contains  original 
models  of  virtually  all  the  famous  works  by  Augustus  Saint-Gaudens  and  partly 
finished  subjects.    The  studios  are  the  property  of  the  artist's  widow. 


NEW  HAMPSHIRE— NEW  JERSEY  MUSEUMS  45 

MANCHESTER,    N.    H. 

CURRIER   GALLERY   OF   ART 
Arthur  M.  Heard,  Trustee 
Amoskeag  National  Bank,  Manchester 
The  will,  made  public  July  2,  1915,  of  Mrs.  Hannah  M.  Currier,  widow  of 
ex-Governor  Moody  Currier,  gave  nearly  a  million  dollars  to  establish  an  art 
institution  in  Manchester,  to  be  known  as  the  Currier  Gallery  of  Art.     Trus- 
tees are  allowing  the  money  to  accumulate. 

MONTCLAIR,    N.    J. 

i^MONTCLAIR  ART  MUSEUM 

MONTCLAIR    ART    ASSOCIATION 
Bloomfield   and    South   Mountain   Aves.,    Montclair 

F.  Ballard  Williams President       Charles  Bull Treasurer 

Burt  Brown  Barker..  1st  Vice-Pres.       Mrs.  M.  M.  LeBrun  Secretary 

Mrs.  Henry  Lang 2d  Vice-Pres.  8  South  Mountain  Ave.,  Montclair 

Katherine  Innes,  Director 

For  foundation  sec  Vol.  XI,  p.  195. 

Organized  1910 ;  building  opened  1914.  Permanent  collection  and  monthly 
loan  exhibits.  Board  meetings  second  Monday  each  month ;  annual  in 
February.     Annual  dues  $10;  sustaining  $25;  life  $100;  membership  400. 

Co-operates  with  the  schools  in  interesting  the  pupils  in  an  appreciation 
of  art ;  gives  special  lectures  to  children.     Concerts  and  lectures  for  members. 

Exhibitions,  1920-21. — Paintings  and  sketches  by  New  York  artists,  and 
sculpture  by  Abastenia  St.  Leger  Eberle ;  drawings  of  New  York  by  Peter 
Marcus ;  paintings  by  Blakelock,  Carlsen,  Crane,  Couse,  Murphy,  Ranger  and 
Wyant  from  the  Isidor  collection ;  pictorial  photographs  by  Kenneth  and 
Guy  Gayler  Clark;  paintings  in  oil  by  Julius  Rolshoven ;  rugs  lent  by  S. 
K.  Costikyan ;  work  by  artists  of  Montclair  and  vicinity ;  and  annual  flower 
show. 

NEWARK,    N.    J. 

^NEWARK   MUSEUM   ASSOCIATION 
Free   Public  Library   Building,   5  Washington  Street,   Newark 

Chester  R.  Hoag President      Arthur  F.  Egner..     ..2d  Vice-Pres. 

Milton  E.  Blanchard,  1st  Vice-Pres.      Louis   Bamberger Treasurer 

John  Cotton  Dana,  Secretary  and  Director 
Beatrice  Winser,  Assistant  Secretary  and  Assistant  Director 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  196. 

Open  daily,  12  to  6.30  and  7.30  to  9.30  p.m.  ;  Sundays  and  holidays,  2  to  6 
and  7.30  to  9  p.m.  During  July,  August  and  September,  daily  excepting 
Saturdays,  Sundays  and  holidays,  2  to  6  p.m.  only. 

Organized  1909.  Annual  meeting  fourth  Tuesday  in  January;  Trustees' 
meetings  third  Tuesday  in  April,  October  and  January.  Annual  dues  from 
$1  to  $25  ;  life  $100.  The  Musuem  occupies  the  whole  of  the  fourth  floor  and 
two  rooms  on  third  floor  of  the  Free  Public  Library. 

The  collections  include :  Archaeology — classical,  Assyrian  and  Egyptian ; 
arms  and  armor ;  bronzes,  casts,  coins  and  medals ;  ceramics — Indian,  Etrus- 
can and  modern;  metalwork ;  Oriental  objects;  paintings — old  and  modern; 
photographs ;  prints ;  textiles ;  ethnological  models ;  insects  and  birds  for 
nature  study.  The  most  notable  collection  is  the  Disbrow  collection  of  min- 
erals and  economic  botanical  specimens  and  the  Edward  N.  Crane  Memorial 
collection  of  objects  from  Tibet;  J.  Ackerman  Coles  collection  of  paintings, 
sculpture  and  art  objects.  Educational  work  is  carried  on  in  cooperation 
with   the   elementary   public   schools   and   the   general    public;    school   lending 


46  NEW  JERSEY— NEW  MEXICO   MUSEUMS 

NEWARK,    N.    J. 

Newark  Museum  Association — Continued 
collections  cover  art,  science  and  nature  study,  life  and  customs,  geography, 
products,  natural  and  industrial. 

Attendance  during  1920  was  66,385;   membership  3,291. 

Publications,  1920 :  The  Annual  Report ;  educational  pamphlets.  Stories 
of  Statues,  Habitations  of  Man,  Shells  and  Animals ;  works  on  museum  science 
by  J.  C.  Dana;  catalogues  of  exhibitions. 

Exhibitions 
March,  1920 — Collections  of  J.  Ackerman  Coles. 
August — Loan  exhibition  of  ship  models. 
September — Fans   and  old   China. 

October  and  November — Noorian  collection  of  early  American  domestic  art. 
December  and  January,   1921 — Colonial  America — an  exhibition  in  connection 

with  the  Pilgrim  Tercentenary. 
April — Work  of  the  Newark  Keramic  Art  Society. 
June — Woodblock    prints    by    Provincetown    artists;    posters    by    high    school 

students. 
October — The  products,  industries  and  arts  of  the  Philippines. 

PRINCETON,    N.    J, 

MUSEUM  OF  HISTORIC  ART  OF  PRINCETON  UNIVERSITY 

Princeton,  N.  J. 

Allan  Marquand Director      Jane   Wright Librarian 

Charles  R.  Morey,  Secretary  of  Department  of  Art  and  Archaeology 
For  foundation  and  details  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  197. 

Open,  free,  daily  9  a.m  to  5  p.m.  and  7  to  10  p.m.  Department  founded 
1882 ;  Museum  Building  1889.  Collections  include  Trumbull-Prime  collec- 
tion of  pottery;  Syrian  collection  of  casts;  Greek  and  Roman  coins;  paint- 
ings and  sculpture.  Large  library  of  art  and  architectural  books ;  photo- 
graphs and  slides. 

SANTA    FE,    N.    M. 

MUSEUM  OF  NEW  MEXICO 
Palace  of  the  Governors,  Santa  Fe 

John  R.  McFie President      Paul  A.  F.  Walter Secretary 

Napoleon   B.  Laughlin.  .  .Treasurer      Edgar  Lee  Hewitt Director 

Lansing  Bloom,  Asst.  Director 
Kenneth  M.  Chapman,  Associate  in  Charge  of  Art  Department 
Sheldon  Parsons,  Associate  in  Charge  of  Exhibitions 
Founded    1909;    a    State    institution    occupying   the    historic    Palace    of    the 
Governors  at  Santa  Fe.     Art  gallery  in  Temple  of  St.  Francis  and  the  Mar- 
tyrs  dedicated    November   24,    1917.     Annual    meeting   in   August.     Conducts 
archaelogical  expeditions ;   does   research  work  in  ethnology ;  special   attention 
is  given  to  revival  of  native  American  art. 

Exhibitions 

July,  1920 — Water  colors  by  Indian  pupils. 

August — 'Paintings,  etchings  and  water  colors  by  resident  and  visiting  artists. 

September  and  October — Exhibiton  of  Southwestern  art,  by  artists  of  Taos 
and  Santa  Fe. 

November — Paintings  by  Williard  Nash. 

December — Paintings  by  Will  Schuster,  Jr. 

January,  1921 — Third  New  Mexico  Loan  Exhibition  (paintings  lent  by  resi- 
dents of  Santa  Fe.) 


NEW  MEXICO— NEW  YORK  CITY  MUSEUMS  47 

SANTA    FE,    N.    M. 
Museum  of  New  Mexico — Continued 
February — Paintings  by  Gerald  Cassidy. 
March— Paintings  by  W.  E.  Mruk. 
April  and  May — Paintings  by  J.  G.  Bakos,  J.  B.  O.  Nordfelt,  Sheldon  Parsons, 

and  Randall  Davey ;  water  color  drawings  by  Pueblo  Indians  ;  silver  work 

by  Bettie  Massie ;  designs  adapted  from  Mayan  and  Pueblo  Indian  motives; 

paintings  by  Will  Schuster. 
June — Character    studies    of    Blackfoot    and    Pueblo    Indians    by    Willard    L. 

Kihn ;    monotypes   by   John   Anson   James ;    etchings   by   Ralph    Pearson ; 

exhibition  of  the  art  classes  of  the  public  schools  of  Santa  Fe. 

NEW    YORK    CITY 

AMERICAN  MUSEUM  OF  NATURAL  HISTORY 

77th   Street  and  Central  Park  West,  Borough  of  Manhattan,   New  York 

Henry  Fairfield  Osborn,  President 

Henry  P.  Davison Treasurer      Adrian    Iselin Secretary 

F.  A.  Lucas,  Director 
Founded  1869.  Open,  free,  to  the  public  every  week  day,  including  legal 
holidays  from  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.,  and  on  Sundays  from  1  to  5  p.m.  Large 
natural  history  collections  artistically  displayed,  including  many  groups  of 
birds  and  other  animals  which  are  exhibited  amid  their  natural  surroundings. 
Exhibits  of  special  interest  to  artists  and  designers,  comprising  collections 
from  the  various  tribes  of  North  American  Indians  and  those  from  Northern 
Siberia.  Especially  rich  in  pottery  and  textiles  from  ancient  Peru,  and  gold 
and  pottery  from  Mexico  and  Central  America. 

AMERICAN    NUMISMATIC    SOCIETY    (Museum) 

Broadway,   between    155th  and    I56th   Streets,   Borough  of   Manhattan. 

Edward  T.  Newell,  President 

John  Reilly,  Jr Treasurer      Howland  Wood Curator 

Sydney  P.  Noe,  Secretary  and  Librarian 
Museum  and  Library  open,  free  10  a.m  to  5  p.m.  daily,  except  Mondays;  Sun- 
days   (Museum  only),    1   to   5   p.m.     Permanent  exhibition   of   American  and 
foreign  coins  and  medals,  ancient  coins,  decorations  and  war  medals,  etc. 

BARNARD  CLOISTERS 

Fort  Washington  Avenue  at  191st  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan 

Open  daily,   10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.     Admission   fee  $1   on  week  days;  50  cents 

on    Sundays.      Erected    1914.      Antique    sculpture    collected    by    George    Grey 

Barnard  is  shown  in  the  building  of  the  type  of  a  French  Gothic  monastery  of 

about  the   13th  century. 

i^BROOKLYN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARTS  AND  SCIENCES 

Academy  of  Music,  Lafayette  Ave.,  Borough  of  Brooklyn,  New  York 

Officers  of  the  Board  of  Trustees 

Frank  L.  Babbott President      Herman   Stutzer Secretary 

George  Foster  Smith Treasurer  815    St.    Marks   Avenue,    Borough 

of  Brooklyn,  New  York 

Organized   1823;   re-incorporated   1890;   reorganized    1915   into  Departments 
of  Education,  of  Museums  and  of  Botanical  Gardens. 


48  NEW  YORK  CITY  MUSEUMS 

Brooklyn   Institute — Continued 
DEPARTMENT    OF    MUSEUMS 

Walter  H,  Crittenden,  Chairman  Department  of  Museums 
Chairmen  of  Committees 

Painting,  Sculpture,  Ethnology Herman    Stutzer 

Walter  H.  Crittenden      Archaeology John  Hill  Morgan 

Decorative  Applied  Art,  Library George  W.  Brush 

Luke  Vincent  Lockwood      Childrens'  Museum, 
Prints Edward  C.  Blum  Herman  Stutzer 

BROOKLYN   MUSEUM 

(Central  Museum) 

Eastern  Parkway  and  Washington  Avenue,   Borough  of  Brooklyn 

Museum  Staff 
(Exclusive  of  scientific  departments) 
William  Henry  Fox,  Director. 

William  H.  Goodyear,  Curator,  Department  of  Fine  Arts. 
Stewart  Culin,  Curator,  Department  of  Ethnology. 
Susan  A.  Hutchinson,  Librarian  and  Curator  of  Prints. 
Herbert  B.  Tschudy,  Artist  Assistant. 
Gertrude  M.  Young,  Assitant. 
Lewis  T.  Hart,  Business  Manager. 

For  details  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  218. 

The  Central  Museum  open  week  days  from  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  ;  on  Sunday 
2  to  6  P.M.  Admission  is  free,  except  on  Mondays  and  Tuesdays,  when  a  fee 
of  25  cents  is  charged  for  adults  and  10  cents  for  all  under  the  age  of  16. 
Copyists  and  public  and  private  school  teachers  and  pupils  are  admitted  free 
at  all  times.     All  holidays  are  free  days. 

The  Brooklyn  Institute  of  Arts  and  Sciences  has  two  museums,  the  Cen- 
tral (Brooklyn)  Museum  and  the  Children's  Museum.  Both  include  in  their 
scope  natural  science  and  ethnology,  as  well  as  art,  the  main  or  Central 
Musuem  being  organized  on  a  well-defined  departmental  plan.  At  present 
comparatively  little  art  work  is  done  at  the  Children's  Museum,  except  through 
its  library. 

The  Central  Museum  established  1889;  first  section  of  the  present  building 
dedicated  1897.    Annual  membership  dues  $10. 

The  art  collections  include  Egyptology;  architecture;  bronzes;  a  hall  of 
casts  of  Greek  and  Roman  antiquity ;  casts  of  the  Renaissance  period ; 
modern  sculpture;  Greek  terra  cottas  (Tanagra)  ;  Greek  vases  (small); 
ancient  glass ;  coins  and  medals ;  drawings ;  Oriental  and  European  ceramics ; 
paintings,  old  and  modern ;  photographs ;  prints ;  textiles  and  vestments. 

The  Central  Museum  has  docent  service,  including  motion  pictures  and 
illustrated  lectures  for  school  children  in  co-operation  with  the  School  Art 
League;  lectures  for  the  public;  furnishes  classroom  or  lectureroom  for 
societies,  teachers,  etc.;  an  information  bureau;  research  work  is  done  by 
various  members  of  the  staff.  The  Library,  containing  about  25,000  vol- 
umes for  reference,  is  open  daily  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  and  on  Sundays  2  to  6  p.m. 

The  Museum  publishes  an  annual  report,  a  Quarterly  Magazine,  and 
scientific  bulletins.  Also  Memoirs  on  Art  and  Archaeology  and  catalogues  of 
its  various  collections. 

Statistics  for  the  year  ending  December  31,  1920:  305,556  visitors  to  the 
Central  Museum;  171,581  visitors  to  the  Children's  Museum;  total  attendance, 
477,137. 

Recent  accessions  include :  Oil  paintings  by  DeCamps,  Ziem,  Monet,  Mrs. 
Swinnerton,  Kever,  Schofield;  water  colors  and  drawings  by  Signac,  Maufra, 


NEW  YORK  CITY  MUSEUMS  49 

Brooklyn  Institute — Continued 
Boudin,  Forain,  Jongkind,  Steer,  Mary  Cassatt,  C.  C.  Coleman ;  sculpture  by 
MacMonnies  and  Chester  Beach ;  ancient  Chinese  bronzes  and  gold  bronzes ; 
additions  to  the  collections  of  Chinese  cloisonne;  Greco-Roman  glass;  Colonial 
and  early  American  furniture  and  Colonial  relics ;  books,  prints,  Oriental  ob- 
jects, laces  and  textiles. 

Exhibitions,  1920-21 :  Fifth  annual  exhibition  of  the  Brooklyn  Society  of 
Etchers;  exhibition  of  the  White  and  Benson  collections  of  illuminated  manu- 
scripts and  printed  Bibles;  Swiss  National  Exhibition  of  paintings  and  sculp- 
ture; Post  Impressionists  and  their  Predecessors;  costumes  and  textiles  of 
central  and  eastern  Europe ;  American  and  European  book-plates ;  Reilly  col- 
lection of  Japanese  gift  clothes;  prints  of  old  Brooklyn,  etc. 

DEPARTMENT   OF   EDUCATION 

Academy  of  Music,  Lafayette  Avenue,  Borough  of  Brooklyn,  New  York 

Charles  D.  Atkins,  Director  of  Department 

Council  of  Associate  Members 

Rev.   Charles  C.  Albertson  . . .  Pres.      J.   Herbert  Low Secretary 

Organized  1823.  Annual  dues :  Associate  members,  $7 ;  registration  fee, 
first  year,  $5 ;  membership,  about  10,000. 

There  are  over  three  hundred  lectures,  exhibitions  and  department  meetings 
open  to  every  member.  The  member's  weekly  ticket  admits  two  persons  in 
the  evening  and  one  person  in  the  daytime ;  all  lectures  and  other  functions 
relating  to  the  fine  arts  are  under  the  joint  auspices  of  the  Institute  and 
Brooklyn  Art  Association,     Weekly  Bulletins  sent  to  all  members. 

DEPARTMENT   OF  ARCHITECTURE 
Arne  Dehli,  President 
Annual  meeting  in  June.     Collections  of  casts  and  photographs  illustrating 
history  of  architecture  and  sculpture.    Lectures  and  conferences  from  Novem- 
ber to  April,  open  to  members. 

DEPARTMENT   OF   FINE  ARTS 

William  H.  Goodyear,  President 
Annual   meeting  in   June.     Courses   of   lectures  each   season  are  conducted 
in  conjunction  with  Brooklyn  Art  Association.     Also  courses  in  co-operation 
with  the  School  of  Pedagogy  of  the  Institute. 

DEPARTMENT   OF   PHOTOGRAPHY 

William   E.  Macnaughton Pres.      Sophie  L.  Lauffer Secretary 

157  Bainbridge  St.,  Borough  of 
Manhattan 
Annual  meeting  in  April.  Lectures,  conferences  and  exhibitions.  Photo- 
graphic room  and  apparatus  in  Academy  of  Music  building.  Instruction  in 
rudiments  of  photography  and  in  artistic  photography;  frequent  exhibitions  in 
Studio.  A  collection  of  photographs  and  lantern  slides  of  Long  Island  is  de- 
posited at  the  Museum. 

BRONX  SOCIETY  OF  ARTS  AND  SCIENCES    (MUSEUM) 
The  Mansion,  Bronx  Park,  Borough  of  Bronx,  New  York 

W.  Stebbins  Smith President      Olin  James  Stephens Treasurer 

Gunther  K.  Ackerman,  Secretary 
Museum  open  10  a.m  to  5  p.m.;  admision  free;  contains  objects  of  science, 
art  and  history.     Also  in  charge  of  Poe  cottage,  Poe  Park ;  open  for  visitors 
every  day,  contains  many  souvenirs  of  Edgar  Allen  Poe. 


50  NEW  YORK  CITY  MUSEUMS 

COOPER  UNION 

FOR  THE  ADVANCEMENT   OF   SCIENCE  AND  ART 

Fourth  Avenue  and  Eighth  Street,  Horough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

R.   Fulton   Cutting President      Edward  R.  Hewitt Treasurer 

Peter  Cooper  Bryce,  Secretary 

Executive  Staff 

Charles    R.   Richards Director      Frederick  Dielman.  . . .  Art  Director 

Edward  L.  Rehm,  Assistant  Secretary 
For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  223. 

Founded  1854.  The  foundation  building  houses  the  Night  Art  School, 
Woman's  Art  School  (see  school  section).  Library  Museum  for  the  Arts  of 
Decoration,  School  of  Stenography,  and  the  Great  Hall,  where  lectures  and 
meetings  are  held. 

MUSEUM   FOR   THE   ARTS    OF   DECORATION 

Directors 

Mrs.  J.  O.  Green  Sarah  Cooper  Hewitt  Eleanor  G.  Hewitt 

Custodians 
Mary  S.  M.  Gibson,  Mrs.  Jessie  B.  Carner,  Berthe  Stieble,  John  Geion, 

Leila  V.  Gordon 
Open,  free,  daily,  except  Sunday  and  Monday,  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  and  6.30  to 
9.30  p.m.  ;  closed  July  1  to  September  15. 

Dedicated  1897.  There  are  three  departments :  Encyclopaedic  library,  with 
1,500  scrapbooks;  Reference  library  of  about  2,500  books  on  arts  and  trades; 
objects  arranged  in  chronological  sequence — furniture,  textiles,  wood  carvings, 
interiors,  decorative  panels,  etc.  Decloux  collection  of  about  500  original  draw- 
ings for  ornament  and  decoration;  Piancastilli  collection  of  4,000  original 
drawings  for  ornamental  decoration. 

Over  700  outside  workers  made  over  6,825  copies,  studies  and  designs ;  some 
1,700  students  of  the  two  schools  work  in  the  Museum  as  part  of  their  regular 
curriculum.     Attendance,  4,120. 


DYCKMAN  HOUSE,  PARK  AND  MUSEUM 

204th   Street  and  Broadway,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Honorary  Curators 

Bashford  Dean  Alexander  McM.  Welch 

Open,  free,  daily  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  except  mornings  of  Sunday  and  Monday. 

Building  erected  1783-85  by  William  Dyckman,  and  lived  in  by  his  family 
until  1868;  restored  and  given  to  the  city  in  1916  by  two  of  the  descendants, 
Mrs.  Bashford  Dean  and  Mrs.  Alexander  McM.  Welch  in  memory  of  their 
parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Isaac  M.  Dyckman. 

It  is  the  last  Dutch  farmhouse  on  Manhattan  Island,  has  been  restored  to 
its  early  condition  and  furnished  with  its  original  furniture  and  family  belong- 
ings. In  the  garden  is  the  restoration  of  a  Revolutionary  Army  hut,  materials 
for  which  were  obtained  in  the  neighboring  hillside. 

Collections  of  family  furniture,  costumes,  portraits,  china,  glass,  silver, 
Revolutionary  documents  of  local  interest,  etc.,  lent  by  Mrs.  Dean  and  Mrs. 
Welch.      Archaeological  finds  from  the  neighborhood  lent  by  R.  P.  Bolton. 


NEW  YORK  CITY  MUSEUMS  51 

HISPANIC  SOCIETY  OF  AMERICA 
155th  Street,  West  of  Broadway,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Archer  M.  Huntington.  .  .President      George  B.  Grinnell Secretary 

H.  F.  Osborn Vice-President      Juan  Riano Hon.  Vice-Pres. 

Museum  open,  free,  daily  and  Sunday,  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m. 

Permanent  collections  of  paintings,  sculpture,  wood  carving  and  other  works 
of  Spanish  art.  Occasional  special  exhibitions.  Annual  meeting  in  January. 
Members  limited  to  100. 

Founded  1904.  Building  opened  1908  (see  Vol.  VIII,  p.  187).  For  the  ad- 
vancement of  the  study  of  the  Spanish  and  Portuguese  languages,  literature, 
history  and  art.  The  publications  (some  out  of  print)  number  150  and  in- 
clude catalogues,  reprints  and  works  upon  special  Hispanic  subjects.  The 
"Revue  Hispanique"  is  issued  every  two  months  in  Paris  ($4  a  year).  Photo- 
graphs of  the  chief  objects  have  been  prepared. 

During  1921  a  new  wing  for  the  photograph  collection  and  publications  of 

the  Society  was  opened.    The  photograph  collection  numbers  about  40,000. 

►^METROPOLITAN  MUSEUM  OF  ART 
Fifth  Avenue  at  82d  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Robert  W.  de  Forest President      Henry  Walters 2d  Vice-Pres. 

Elihu  Root 1st  Vice-President      Howard    Mansfield Treasurer 

Henry  W.  Kent,  Secretary 

Executive  Staff 
Edward  Robinson,  Director  and  Curator  of  Classical  Art. 
Joseph  Breck,  Assistant  Director  and  Curator  of  Decorative  Arts. 
Bryson  Burroughs,  Curator  of  Paintings. 
Albert  M.  Lythgoe,  Curator  of  Egyptian  Art. 
Bashford  Dean,  Curator  of  Armor. 
S.  C.  Bosch  Reitz,  Curator  of  Far  Eastern  Art. 
William  M.  Ivins,  Jr.,  Curator  of  Prints. 
Elial  T.  Foote,  Assistant  Treasurer. 
GisELA  M.  A.  Richter,  Assistant  Curator  Classical  Art. 

Arthur  C.  Mace  and  Herbert  E.  Winlock,  Assistant  Curators  Egyptian  Art. 
Frances  Morris,  Meyric  R.  Rogers,  Charles  O.  Cornelius  and  C.  Louise 

Avery,  Assistant  Curators  of  Decorative  Arts. 
William  Clifford,  Librarian. 

Alice  L.  Felton,  Assistant  in  Charge  of  Photographs. 
Edith  R.  Abbot,  Anna  Curtis  Chandler,  Mrs.  Elise  P.  Carey  and  Alice 

T.  Coseo,  Museum  Instructors. 
Theodore  Y.  Hobby,  Keeper  Benjamin  Altman  Collection. 
Richard  F.  Bach,  Associate  in  Industrial  Art. 
Winifred  E.  Howe  and  Robert  T.  Nichol,  General  Assistants. 
Mildred  A.  Gash,  Assistant  in  charge  of  cataloguing. 
Juliet  W.  Robinson,  Assistant  in  charge  of  Information  Desk. 
Bessie  D.  Davis,  Assistant  in  charge  of  Lending  Collection. 
Henry  F.  Davidson,  Registrar. 
Conrad  Hewitt,  Superintendent  of  the  Building. 

For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  232. 

Open  daily;  Saturdays  and  holidays,  10  a.m.  to  6  p.m.;  Sundays  and  Christ- 
mas Day,  1  to  6  p.m.  ;  other  days  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  in  winter  and  6  p.m.  in 
summer.  Free  except  Monday  and  Friday,  when  admission  is  25  cents ;  free 
at  all  tirnes  to  members,  copyists  and  Public  School  teachers  and  pupils,  sol- 
diers, sailors  and  marines. 

Four  members   of   the   staff   are  detailed    for  expert  guidance;   the  cost   is 


52  NEW  YORK   CITY  MUSEUMS 

Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art — Continued 

25  cents  a  person,  with  minimum  charge  of  $1  an  hour,  except  for  members 
and  Public  School  teachers  and  pupils  to  who/n  this  service  is  free. 

Photographic  copies  of  all  objects  belonging  to  the  Museum  (not  only  paint- 
ings, but  the  objects  in  every  collection)  are  made  by  the  Museum  photog- 
rapher and  by  several  firms.  Prices  range  from  postals  two  for  five  cents 
to  large  colored  prints  at  $10.  The  publications  in  print  number  over  sixty 
and  include  catalogues  of  the  various  departments,  handbooks  of  special  ex- 
hibitions, and  a  history  of  the  Museum;  a  monthly  Bulletin  is  issued,  which 
is  sent  free  to  members,  to  others  $2  a  year  and  20  cents  a  number;  a  quar- 
terly Children's  Bulletin  is  issued  at  $1  a  year,  25  cents  a  number. 

Incorporated  1870.  Board  meetings,  February,  April,  June,  October  and 
December.  Dues,  annual  members,  $10;  sustaining,  $25;  fellowship,  $100; 
contributing,  $250;  total  membership  Dec.  31,  1920,  was  9,371. 

Collections  include  the  fine  arts — painting,  sculpture  and  architecture — as 
well  as  what  are  usually  called  decorative  or  industrial  arts.  Ancient  art  in- 
cludes Egyptian,  Babylonian,  Assyrian,  Phooenician,  Cypriote,  Etruscan,  Greek 
and  Roman  antiquities.  In  painting  the  attempt  is  made  to  illustrate  the  history 
of  the  art  from  the  Middle  Ages  to  the  present  time,  with  especial  attention 
to  the  work  of  American  artists.  The  decorative  arts  include  woodwork, 
metalwork,  ceramics  and  textiles.  The  collections  represent  the  East  and  the 
Near  East  (China,  Japan,  Persia  and  Asia  Minor),  Europe  and  America. 
Special  attention  is  given  to  American  art. 

Broadly  speaking,  the  first  floor  of  the  Museum  is  filled  with  the  Egyptian 
and  classical  collections,  the  casts,  arms  and  armor,  musical  instruments  and 
modern  sculpture ;  the  second  floor  with  the  art  of  the  East  and  Near  East, 
textiles,  laces,  paintings,  including  the  Altman  collection,  and  prints.  The 
Pierpont  Morgan  collection  of  European  decorative  arts,  chronologically 
arranged — the  Merovingian  period  to  the  nineteenth  century — occupies  a  wing 
by  itself.  The  Library  and  Photograph  Departments  occupy  a  separate  wing. 
A  guide  to  the  collections,  sold  at  10  cents,  points  out  the  most  interesting  or 
important  objects  in  the  different  galleries. 

The  most  important  event  in  the  history  of  the  Museum  during  1920  was 
the  celebration  of  the  completion  of  a  half-century  of  growth  by  formal 
exercises  with  addresses  and  the  unveiling  of  tablets  commemorative  of  the 
founders  and  the  benefactors  of  the  Museum,  and  by  a  loan  exhibition  of 
objects_of  the  highest  merit  belonging  to  the  most  distinguished  collections  of 
the  city.  The  attendance  was  the  largest  of  any  year  except  1909,  when  the 
Hudson-Fulton  celebration  brought  large  crowds  to  the  city ;  and  the  attend- 
ance of  those  who  came  to  the  Museum  for  instruction  the  largest  of  any 
year  without  exception.  The  most  important  additions  to  the  collections  of 
the  Museum,  either  acquired  or  first  exhibited  during  the  year,  were  the  fol- 
lowing :  two  bequests  of  great  value  and  interest,  one  an  extensive  collection 
of  objects  of  Near  Eastern  art  from  William  Milne  Grinnell,  the  other,  ten 
important  paintings  and  two  unique  pieces  of  French  furniture  from  William 
K.  Vanderbilt;  a  remarkable  Egyptian  "find"  of  painted  wooden  funerary 
models  disclosed  at  Thebes  in  the  tomb  of  Mehenkwetre,  a  dignitary  of  about 
2000  B.  C. ;  important  examples  of  French  eighteenth  century  woodwork — a 
shop-front  and  a  paneled  room — the  gift  of  J.  Pierpont  Morgan;  a  large  pot- 
tery Lohan  of  the  T'ang  period;  two  complete  suits  of  horse  armor,  richly 
etched,  and  originally  parcel  gilt,  from  a  castle  of  the  Princes  Collalto ;  the 
gift  from_  William  E.  Baillie  of  his  collection  of  approximately  25,000  book- 
plates, believed  to  be  the  most  important  collection  of  its  kind  ever  made  by  a 
private  person  in  America;  and  the  loan  from  Ogden  Codman  for  an  in- 
definite period  of  his  large  and  important  collection  of  prints  and  illustrated 
books  about  architecture  and  interior  decoration. 

The  total  number  of  visitors  was  926,908.    The  cost  of  operating  the  Museum 


NEW  YORK  CITY  MUSEUMS  53 

Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art — Continued 
was  $797,646.84;  the  amount  available  for  the  payment  of  this  expense— city 
appropriation  ($312,648.29),  income  from  endowment  funds,  admission  fees, 
sales  of  handbooks,  etc.— was  $524,120.02,  leaving  a  deficit  of  $273,526.82. 
Acquisitions  of  the  year  numbered  11.824,  of  which  290  were  received  by 
bequest,  3,881  by  gift  and  7,653  by  purchase. 

The  use  of  the  Museum  by  special  classes  is  shown  in  the  following  table  : 

Artists  and  Designers :  1919  1920 

Working  in  Galleries  12,702  14,742 

Working  in  Study  Rooms 716              1,120 

Individuals,  with  Instructor 2,626              1.410 

Lantern   Slide   Borrowers    1.161  2,177 

Lectures,  Museum 15,559  21,033 

Story  Hours,  Museum 27,115  26.401 

Lectures  and  Story  Hours  given  by  Societies,  etc. .  14.173  15,228 

Library  Readers    16,259  17,161 

Library  Photograph  Users    •  3,614              4,987 

Photographers    370              1,069 

Schools  and  Instructors  in  Museum  11.168  16,037 

Museum  Instructors  in  Schools  12,118  12,680 

Schools  without  Instructors    21,712  25,593 

During  the  season  of  1920-21  the  educational  work  included  free  public  lec- 
tures on  Saturday  and  Sunday  afternoons  from  November  to  March ;  story 
hours  for  the  children  of  members  weekly  during  the  same  period;  another 
course  of  story  hours  from  October  to  April  for  all  children ;  a  special  course 
of  gallery  conferences  on  Northern  Art  in  the  XV  and  XVI  Centuries  for 
members  and  others ;  weekly  lectures  throughout  the  school  year,  correlating 
with  the  school  curriculum,  for  teachers  and  pupils  in  the  high  schools  of  the 
city;  four  courses  of  study  hours  for  practical  workers — designers,  buyers  and 
salespeople ;  six  lectures  for  the  deaf,  three  lectures  for  the  blind,  and  two  for 
crippled  children  in  the  public  schools.  To  a  greater  extent  than  before  the 
Museum  co-operated  with  the  public  schools,  meeting  classes  in  the  Museum 
and  giving  lectures  in  both  high  and  elementary  schools.  The  plan  of  co- 
operation between  the  New  York  Training  School  for  Teachers  and  the  Voca- 
tional School  for  Boys  and  the  Museum,  was  continued,  including  illustrated 
talks  in  the  school  and  classroom  meetings;  55.852  objects — lantern  slides,  pho- 
tographs, casts  and  textiles  in  the  lending  collection — were  lent  for  use  outside 
the  Museum  in  many  places  cast  of  the  Mississippi  River;  38,392  people — stu- 
dents, designers  and  manufacturers — worked  in  the  galleries,  study  rooms  and 
library;  and  41,630  children  came  in  classes  from  the  schools. 

Educational  work  in  the  Museum  was  conducted  by  many  outsiders,  among 
them  Barnard  College.  Teachers  College,  Columbia  and  New  York  Universities, 
Hunter  College,  Packer  Institute,  Cooper  Union,  and  Pratt  Institute,  the 
School  Art  League  and  various  art  schools. 

Eight  free  orchestral  concerts  were  given  in  the  main  entrance  hall  on 
the  Saturday  evenings  of  January  and  March  by  a  symphony  orchestra  under 
the  conductorship  of  David  Mannes  to  audiences  aggregating  43.628.  The 
cost  of  these  public  concerts  was  a  contribution  from  several  public-spirted 
friends  of  the  Museum. 

Exhibitions  and  Special  Receptions 
May  7  to  Oct.  31,   1920— Fiftieth  Anniversary  Exhibition. 
Dec.   15,   1920  to  Jan.  30,   1921— Fifth   Exhibition  of  work  by  manufacturers 

and  designers  showing  Museum  influence. 
Jan.  8  to  Feb.  11— Loan  Exhibition  of  War  Portraits. 
Feb.  13  to  May  2— Etched  Work  of  J.  Alden  Weir. 


54  NEW  YORK  CITY  MUSEUMS 

Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art — Continued 
May  2  to  Sept.  15 — French  Impressionist  and  Post-Impressionist  Paintings. 
May  16  to  Sept.  15 — Modern  French  Prints  and  Drawings. 
June  15  to  Oct.  15 — Japanese  Sword  Guards  lent  by  the  Armor  and  Arms  Club. 
July  15  to  Oct.  31. — Drawings,  Woodcuts,  and  Sketches  by  Florence  Wyman 
Ivins. 

NEW  YORK  HISTORICAL   SOCIETY 

170  Central  Park  West   (76th  Street  to  77th  Street),  Borough  of  Manhattan, 

New  York 

John  Abeel  Weekes President      Arthur  Curtiss  James Cor.  Sec. 

R.  Horace  Gallatin Treasurer      Stuyvesant  Fish Rec.  Secretary 

Alexander  J.  Wall,  Librarian 

For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  I,  p.  266. 

Art  Gallery  and  Museum  open  free  to  the  public  daily  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  ; 
Sundays  2  to  5  p.m.  Library  9  a.m  to  5  p.m.,  Sundays  excepted;  on  holidays 
1  to  5  P.M.,  except  Christmas,  New  Year  and  Fourth  of  July. 

Library  founded  1804;  present  building  erected  1908.  Board  meetings  third 
Tuesday  of  each  month;  annual  in  January.    Annual  dues  $10;  membership  819. 

The  collection  includes  the  New  York  Gallery  of  Fine  Arts,  received  in 
1858;  the  Bryan  Gallery  of  old  masters,  presented  in  1867  by  the  late  Thomas 
J.  Bryan;  the  Durr  collection,  presented  in  1882  by  the  executors  of  the  late 
Louis  Durr;  the  Peter  Marie  collection  of  miniatures,  presented  to  the  Society 
in  1905 ;  the  Isaac  J.  Greenwood  collection  of  405  water-color  drawings  of 
powder  horns,  presented  in  1907;  a  collection  of  miniatures  of  the  Bryant 
family  and  manuscript  poems  by  William  Cullen  Bryant ;  and  the  Audubon 
collection  of  464  original  water-color  drawings  by  John  James  Audubon. 
The  gallery  consists  of  1,076  paintings,  of  which  325  are  portraits. 

The  Department  of  Antiquities  contains  the  Abbot  collection  of  Egyptian 
antiquities,  which  includes  three  mummies  of  Apis,  the  sacred  bull  of  the 
Egyptians,  received  by  the  Society  in  1859,  and  the  Nineveh  Sculptures,  pre- 
sented by  James  Lenox  in  1857. 

The  Library  contains  132,806  bound  volumes,  151,655  pamphlets  and  5,386 
volumes  of  newspapers  and  colonial  papers.  There  is  a  large  collection  of 
relics,  prints  and  views  of  New  York  City.     Lectures  and  exhibitions. 

In  June,  1921,  the  New  York  Historical  Society  and  the  Sons  of  the  Revolu- 
tion of  the  State  of  New  York  erected  a  Liberty  Pole  in  City  Hall  Park. 

NEW  YORK  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 

ASTOR,   LENOX  AND   TILDEN  FOUNDATION 

Fifth  Avenue  and  42nd  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

ART  GALLERIES 

For  foundation  see  Vol,  XI,  p.  252. 

Open,  free,  daily  9  a.m.  to  6  p.m.  ;  Sundays  1  to  5  p.m.,  excepting  the  Stuart 
Room.  Two  large  galleries  devoted  to  the  Lenox,  Astor  and  Stuart  collec- 
tions-of  paintings  and  objects  of  art. 

ART  AND   PRINTS   DIVISION 

Frank  Weitenkampf,  Chief 

For  development  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  252. 

Department  established  1899.  The  total  number  of  prints  is  about  75,000. 
There  arc  special  facilities  for  study  in  the  print  room,  which  adjoins  the 
art  reading  room  (No.  313).  Two  or  more  exhibitions  always  on  view;  the 
principal  one  in  Print  Gallery  (Room  321). 

A  permanent  exhibition  of  processes  has  been  established  and  is  being  con- 


NEW  YORK  CITY   MUSEUMS  55 

New  York  Public  Library — Continued 
stantly  added  to :   this  shows  the  making  of  an  etching,  a  line  engraving,  a 
mezzotint,  a  wood-engraving,  a  Japanese  color-print,  a  process  block. 

Numerous  publications  at  nominal  cost;  list  sent  upon  request. 

Exhibitions,  1920-21:  Illustrated  books  of  the  past  four  centuries;  Amer- 
ican etchings  of  today;  the  making  of  a  mezzotint;  American  lithographs  of 
today ;  the  making  of  a  Japanese  print ;  American  wood-block  prints  of  today ; 
Series  of  six  exhibitions  of  French  prints  (old  prints,  modern  portraits,  land- 
scapes and  animal  subjects;  Manet,  Paris  in  prints)  ;  French  railway  posters; 
memorial  exhibitions  of  work  by  J.  Alden  Weir,  C.  F.  W.  Mielatz,  Samuel 
Colman,  Helen  Hyde  and  C.  A.  Vanderhoof. 

STATEN  ISLAND  INSTITUTE  OF  ARTS  AND  SCIENCES 

Stuyvesant  Place  and  Wall  Street,  Saint  George,  Staten  Island,  New  York 

Howard  R.  Bayne President      Agnes  L.   Pollard Curator 

William  T.  Davis Vice-Pres.      Charles  W.  Leng Secretary 

Charles  A.  Ingalls Treasurer  439      Clove      Road,      West      New 

Brighton,  S.  I.,  N.  Y. 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  265. 

Museum  open,  free,  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.,  except  Sunday.  Art  collections  in- 
clude Roman  and  Grecian  pottery  and  some  mediaeval  bronzes.  Museum  also 
has  collections  of  anthropology,  botany,  zoology,  etc. 

Institute  founded  1885 ;  Public  Museum  established  1907.  Annual  meeting 
third  Saturday  in  May ;  Board  meetings  first  Saturday  in  October,  December, 
February  and  April.  Entrance  fee  $3;  annual  dues  $3.  There  are  338 
members. 

The  work  of  the  Association  includes  sectional  meetings  and  special  museum 
exhibits,  afternoon  lectures  for  school  children  and  museum  exhibition  work 
in  connection  with  public  schools  and  civic  organizations.  The  proceedings 
are  published  and  a  monthly  leaflet  is  issued. 

Britton  Cottage,  at  New  Dorp,  Staten  Island,  presented  to  the  Association 
by  Dr.  and  Mrs.  Nathaniel  L.  Britton  in  1915.  Local  chapters  of  the  Daugh- 
ters of  the  American  Revolution  given  privilege  of  installing  objects  and 
holding  meetings.  Members  and  their  friends  are  admitted  free  to  the  cottage ; 
to  all  others  admission  fee  is  twenty-five  cents. 

During  1921  there  were  177  lectures  and  meetings;  flower  show;  extension 
lectures  in  schools.  There  are  Z2)  loan  exhibits  of  scientific,  historical,  and 
industrial  material. 

Exhibitions,  1920-1921:  Tercentenary  exhibition  arranged  in  cooperation- 
with  the  general  committee  on  museums  and  libraries,  showing  books,  paint- 
ings, prints,  photographs  and  medals ;  photographs  and  original  documents 
relating  to  George  Washington ;  exhibition  of  rare  and  old  laces. 

WASHINGTON  HEADQUARTERS  ASSOCIATION 

Jumel  Mansion,  West  160th   Street  and  Edgecombe  Avenue, 

Borough   of   Manhattan,   New   York 

Mrs.  Simon  Baruch President      Mrs.  Joseph  K.  Butler Cor.  Sec. 

Mrs.  O.  M.  Bostwick. Vice-President  28  Lefferts  PI.,  Brooklyn. 

Mrs.  C.  St.  J.  Queck-Berner,  William  H.  Shelton Curator 

Treasurer 
For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  266. 

Open  free,  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  every  day  in  the  year,  except  that  from  Novem- 
ber to  May  it  closes  at  4:30.  Acquired  by  the  city  1903;  opened  as  public 
rnuseum  1907.  It  is  a  museum  of  Washingtoniana  and  Colonial  and  Revolu- 
tionary relics.  Founded  by  the  Daughters  of  the  American  Revolution  and 
the  following  chapters  have  individual  rooms  with  collections :  Washington 
Heights,  Mary  Washington,  Colonial,  Manhattan  and  Knickerbocker. 


56  NEW  YORK  STATE  MUSEUMS 

BINGHAMTON,    N.    Y. 

ART  GALLERY  AND  MUSEUM  OF  BINGHAMTON 
PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
William  F.  Seward,  Custodian 
The  collection,  which  is  in  the  art  gallery  of  the  Public  Library,  includes 
Indian    tools,    arrowheads,    vessels,    etc. ;    Iroquois    pottery,    old    deeds,    maps, 
documents  and   drawings  illustrating  pioneer   days   of   Binghamton ;   portraits 
of  some  of  the  pioneers.     Exhibitions,  1920-21 :  Handicraft  exhibition ;  exhibi- 
tion of  posters ;  children's  book  week  exhibition ;  steel  engravings  and  colored 
French  posters ;  paintings  by  Edward  M.  C.  Hawkins ;  architectural  exhibition ; 
oil  paintings  by  Edgar  Keller. 

BUFFALO,    N.    Y. 

HhBUFFALO  FINE  ARTS  ACADEMY 

ALBRIGHT  ART   GALLERY 

Delaware  Park,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

Charles   Clifton President      Henry  J,  Auer Treasurer 

Edward  B.  Green Vice-President      Wjlliam  Warren  Smith.  .Secretary 

Mrs.  Cornelia  B.  Sage  Quinton,  Art  Director 
For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  270. 

Open  daily,  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.,  except  Sundays,  Mondays  and  holidays, 
when  the  hours  are  1  to  5  p.m.  Admission  free  Tuesdays,  Thursdays,  Sat- 
urdays, Sundays  and  holidays;  other  days  (to  non-members)  25  cents.  Gal- 
leries of  old  and  modern  paintings,  sculpture,  drawings,  prints,  photographs, 
library.     Collection  of  work  by  American  artists. 

Organized  1862.  Albright  Gallery  dedicated  1905.  Annual  meeting  first 
Wednesday  after  the  first  Tuesday  in  January.  Board  meetings  held  quar- 
terly on  the  third  Wednesday  in  January,  April,  July  and  October.  Perma- 
nent invested  funds  $488,360.14;  the  income  of  a  little  over  half  is  restricted 
to  the  purchase  of  pictures.  Annual  dues  for  "Friends"  $5.  Total  member- 
ship 612.  'Academy  Notes"  published  semi-annually.  Educational  work  is 
carried  on  with  the  public  schools  and  with  clubs.  Museum  extension  work 
is  carried  on  in  the  local  schools,  and  also  includes  the  New  York  State 
Normal  School.  An  art  school  is  maintained  (see  school  section).  Occa- 
sional public  lectures  and  lecture  promenades  by  members  of  the  staff.  Total 
number  of  sales  from  exhibitions  held  in  the  Gallery  during  1920  was  7Z. 
Attendance  for  the  year  1920  was  88,901. 

Exhibitions 
Sept.   14  to   Oct.   3,   1920 — Paintings  by  Victor  Higgins,  Ernest  L.   Blumen- 
schien,    and    Walter   Ufer;    paintings   by    Everett   L.    Bryant;    pastels    of 
Indian  dancers  by  William  Penhallow  Henderson ;   pastels  by  Charles  S. 
Kaelin. 
Oct.    10   to    Nov.    15 — Foreign   paintings    from   the   Carnegie    Institute    Inter- 
national  Exhibition,   supplemented  by  other   foreign  works,  and   a  group 
of  recent  paintings  by  Menard. 
Nov.  14  to  Nov.  28 — Decorative  screens  by  Robert  W.  Chanler ;  batik  decora- 
tions ;  wood  carvings  by  Charles  Haag ;  wrought  iron  by  Thomas  Goog- 
erty ;   pottery   from  Adelaide  A.   Robineau,  Rookwood   Pottery   Co.,  etc. ; 
tapestries  from  the  Herter  Looms. 
Dec.  11  to  Jan.  3,   1921 — Paintings  by  F.   C.  Frieseke;   paintings  by  Maurice 
Fromkes ;    paintings  and   etchings   by  Hayley   Lever ;   paintings  by   Jonas 
Lie. 
Jan.  8  to  Jan.  31 — Paintings  lent  by  R.  C.  and  N.  M.  Vose. 
Feb,  5  to  Feb.  28 — Twenty-seventh  annual  exhibition  of  the  Buffalo   Society 
of    Artists;    second    salon    of    the    Buffalo    Camera    Club;    Architectural 
drawings    by    the    associated    Buffalo    architects    of    the    Buffalo    School 
Program. 


NEW  YORK  STATE  MUSEUMS  57 

BUFFALO,    N.    Y. 

Buffalo  Fine  Arts  Academy — Conlinucd 

Mar.  12  to  Mar.  30 — Paintings  by  Nicolas  Roerich. 

Mar.  4  to  Mar.  28 — Water  colors  by  American  artists. 

Apr.  10  to  May  1 — Exhibition  of  British  Arts  and  Crafts. 

May  8  to  May  22 — Paintings,  carved  jades  and  other  hard  stones,  cloisonne 
enamels  and  bronzes  from  collection  of  the  late  Edward  R.  Bacon. 

June  4  to  Sept.  6 — Fifteenth  annual  exhibition  of  selected  paintings  by  Amer- 
ican artists  and' a  group  of  small  selected  bronzes  by  American  sculptors; 
collection  of  early  American  portraits ;  paintings  and  tapestries  collected 
by  Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  J.  Albright. 

ELMIRA,    N.    Y. 

4-ARNOT  ART  GALLERY 
235  Lake  Street,  Elmira 

Frederick  Collin President      Casper  G,  Decker Treasurer 

E.  J.  Dunn Vice  Pres.      Burton  S.  Chamberlin Secretary 

Mrs.  Jeannette  Murdock  Diven,  Director 
Incorporated  1911.  Annual  meeting  in  May.  Board  meetings  third  Tues- 
day in  month.  Income,  $10,000  a  year.  There  are  75  paintings  of  the  Flemish, 
Dutch,  German  and  French  schools.  Lectures  are  given  by  the  director  four 
days  a  week  to  school  children.  During  1921  acquired  portrait  of  the  donor 
of  the  gallery  by  August  Franzen.  Exhibitions  were  held  each  month  during 
1920-21. 

HUNTINGTON,    N.    Y. 

HERKSCHER  PARK  ART  MUSEUM 

Huntington,   Long   Island 

Frederick  W.  Webber,  Curator 

Open  daily,  during  summer  from  10  a.m.  to  12  m.,  and  2  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays 

2  to  5  P.M.;    during   the  winter  the  museum   is   open   only   on   Sundays   and 

holidays,  from  2  to  5  p.m. 

The  museum  was  the  gift  to  the  people  of  Huntington  of  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
August  Heckscher,  and  was  opened  to  the  public  on  July  10,  1920. 

The  collection,  which  numbers  about  150  paintings,  includes  work  by  Murillo, 
Diaz,  Sir  Thomas  Lawrence,  Gerome,  Meissonier,  Cranach,  Beechey,  Van 
Dyck,  Courbet,  Edward  and  Thomas  Moran,  Troyan,  Bierstadt,  Inness,  Blake- 
lock,  etc.  There  are  also  several  pieces  of  statuary,  including  "The  Rape  of 
Proserpine"  by  Girardon. 

ITHACA,    N.    Y. 

MUSEUM  OF  CLASSICAL  ARCHEOLOGY 
Goldwin  Smith  Hall,  Cornell  University,  Ithaca 
Eugene  P.  Andrews,  Curator 
For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  274. 
Open  week  days,  9  a.m.  to  12  m.  and  2  p.m.  to  5  p.m. 

Dedicated  1894.  The  collection  consists  principally  of  casts  from  notable 
examples  of  Greek  sculpture;  collections  of  Greek  pottery  and  coins  and 
replicas  of  pre-Greek  antiquities. 

The  Museum  is  used  primarily  for  laboratory  instruction.  The  Curator, 
who  is  also  Professor  of  Archaeology,  holds  his  classes  in  the  Museum  and 
also  gives  courses  of  popular  lectures  there. 


58  NEW  YORK  STATE  MUSEUMS 

OYSTER    BAY,    N.   Y.  r  n     ^ 

LOUIS  COMFORT  TIFFANY  FOUNDATION 

ART  GUILD 

Laurelton  Hall,  Oyster  Bay 

Stanley  Lothrop.  .Resident  Director      George  F.  Heydt Sec. -Treasurer 

Trustees 
Louis  Comfort  Tiffany,  Founder 

Robert  W.  de  Forest President      George  F.  Kunz 

Daniel  Chester  French.  .Vice-Pres.      A.  Douglas  Nash 
Francis  C.  Jones  Charles  Tiffany 

Edwin  H,  Blashfield 

Advisory  Art  Committee 
Cass  Gilbert  Barry  Faulkner 

Harry  W.  Watrous  Frederick  Wilson 

Robert  Vonnoh  Gifford  Beal 

Mrs.  W.  a.  A.  Stewart  Robert  Aitken 

Paul  Manship  Gurdon   S.   Parker 

Philip  L.  Hale  Frederick  C.  Clayter 

(The  Founder  and  artist  members  of  the  Board  of  Trustees  are  ex-officio 
members  of  this  committee.) 

Established  1919.  The  purpose  of  the  institution,  which  provides  an  at- 
tractive place  of  residence  and  convenient  working  facilities,  is  to  bring  to- 
gether a  group  of  artists  and  craftsmen  of  ability  and  technical  training  who 
will  work  out  their  own  particular  problems,  assisting  one  another  by  their 
various  points  of  view.  The  artists  who  enter  the  Foundation  are  encouraged 
to  devote  themselves  to  the  study  of  nature  and  every  variety  of  natural  growth. 
The  Foundation  maintains  a  museum,  which  is  open  to  the  public  on  one 
afternoon  of  each  month.  The  art  collections  contain  objects  of  sculpture, 
painting  and  industrial  arts.  The  collections  are  especially  rich  in  examples 
of  oriental  art.     (See  school  section). 

POUGHKEEPSIE,    N.    Y. 

TAYLOR  HALL 

Vassar  College,  Poughkeepsie 

Frank  L.  Babbott,   Chairman  Art  Committee 

Oliver  S.  ToNKS Curator      Elizabeth  D.  Pierce.  .Asst.  Curator 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XII,  p.  178. 

Dedicated  1915.  Six  exhibition  rooms,  reference  library,  and  a  studio  for 
the  use  of  the  practical  art  courses.  Monthly  exhibition  from  October  to 
June  of  work  by  notable  artists  and  annual  exhibit  of  student  work. 

ROCHESTER,    N.    Y. 

►IMMEMORIAL  ART    GALLERY 
University  of  Rochester 

Rush  Rhees President      Julius  M.  Wile Bursar 

James    S.    Watson Vice-Pres.      George  L.  HERDLE..Sec.  and  Director 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  276. 

Open  week  days  from  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  and  on  Sunday  afternoon  from 
1.30  to  5  P.M.  Admission  free  every  day  except  Friday,  when  the  admission  is 
25  cents. 

Dedicated  1913.  Annual  meeting  second  Thursday  in  April;  meetings 
second  Thursdays  in  June,  October,  December,  February  and  April.  Mem- 
bership supporters,  $250  a  year ;   sustaining,  $100  a  year ;  contributing  $25  a 


NEW  YORK  STATE  MUSEUMS  59 

ROCHESTER,    N.    Y. 

Memorial  Art  Gallery — Continued 
year ;  annual  $10,  and  associate  $5  a  year — the  last  class  being  confined  to 
professional  artists  and  teachers.  Membership  300.  Maintains  an  art  gal- 
lery, art  library  and  lecture  room  for  benefit  of  the  public.  Picture  story 
hour  for  children  bi-monthly  during  season.  Regular  monthly  exhibitions 
during  the  year.     Attendance,    1920-1921,   about   40,000. 

SKANEATELES,    N.    Y. 

SKANEATELES  LIBRARY  ASSOCIATION 
Lydia  a.  Cobane,  Librarian 
Open,  free,  every  day  except  Sunday. 

Barrow  Art  Gallery  opened  1900.  Presented  to  the  Library  by  John  D. 
Barrow  and  contains  over  300  paintings  by  him.  Also  by  other  American 
artists,  including  Charles  Elliott,  De  Cost  Smith,  S.  Montgomery  Roosevelt, 
etc. 

SOUTHAMPTON,    N.    Y. 

•i-PARRISH  MEMORIAL  ART  MUSEUM 

Southampton,  Long  Island,   N.   Y. 

Samuel  L.  Parri£,h,  President-Treasurer 

James  Parrish  Lee Vice-Pres.      Frank  P.  Hoffman Secretary 

For  description  see  Vol.  I,  p.  233. 

Open,  free,  10  a.m.  to  1  p.m  and  2.30  to  5.30  p.m.  on  week  days;  2  to  5.30 
P.M.  on  Sundays,  from  May  to  October.  During  the  winter,  admission  may 
be  obtained  upon  application  to  the  caretaker. 

A  private  museum  established  by  Samuel  L.  Parrish  in  1898.  Contains 
casts  of  noted  antique  and  Renaissance  sculpture;  a  number  of  paintings 
mostly  by  unknown  Italian  artists  of  the  fifteenth,  sixteenth  and  seventeenth 
centuries ;  about  a  dozen  full-sized  copies  in  oil  of  some  of  the  best-known 
Italian  Renaissance  paintings;  also  about  100  framed  photographs  of  paint- 
ings of  the  same  period. 

A  pipe  organ  installed  in  the  main  hall  permits  and  encourages  the  cultiva- 
tion  of   community   music  throughout   the   year. 
Attendance  during  four  summer  months  between  6,000  and  7,000  out  of  resi- 
dent population  of  about  3,000,  which  is  probably  doubled  in  summer. 

During  1920  an  annex  was  built,  and  opened  in  the  form  of  a  Memorial 
Hall.     Several  exhibitions  held  during  1920-1921. 

SYRACUSE,    N.    Y. 

►J-SYRACUSE   MUSEUM   OF   FINE   ARTS 
Carnegie  Library  Building,   Syracuse,  N.  Y. 

George  G.  Fryer President      Newell  B.  Woodworth.  . .  .Treasurer 

Salem   Hyde Vice-President      Fernando  A.  Carter.  .  .Dir.  and  Sec. 

Open,  free,  week  days  from  9  a.m.  to  6  p.m.;  Sundays,  from  2  p.m.  to  6  p.m. 

Organized  1896.  Trustees'  annual  meeting  first  Tuesday  in  February ;  stated 
meetings  first  Tuesday  in  January,  February  and  November.  Income  from 
the  City  of  Syracuse,  $10,000  annually,  which  is  used  for  maintenance.  Attend- 
ance during  the  year  was  51,140. 

The  permanent  collection  contains  paintings  by  American  artists ;  casts  of 
ancient  and  modern  sculpture ;  arms  and  armor ;  the  original  Burlingame 
collection  of  Chinese  curios ;  examples  of  Robineau  pottery ;  a  large  collec- 
tion of  mounted  birds. 

Exhibitions 
October,  1920 — Exhibition  of  laces,  cameos  and  India  shawls. 
November — Paintings  and  drawings  by  Louis  Maurice  De  Monvel. 


60  NEW  YORK  STATE— OHIO   MUSEUMS 

SYRACUSE,    N.    Y. 

Syracuse  Museum  of  Fine  Arts — Continued 

December — Water  colors  by  a  group  of  American  artists. 

January,  1921 — Oil  paintings  by  noted  American  artists,  assembled  by  the 
American  Federation  of  Arts. 

February — Paintings  by  Jonas  Lie. 

March — Landscapes  and  portraits  by  Frank  Von  der  Lancken  and  Harry  Leith- 
Ross. 

April — Paintings  and  etchings  by  Hayley  Lever. 

May — Exhibition  of  etchings   and  interior   decorations. 

June — Paintings  by  Maurice  Fromkes. 

July — Portraits  by  Orlando  Rouland. 

August — Antique  ecclesiastical  vestments,  paintings,  tapestries  and  rare  em- 
broideries. 

CINCINNATI,    OHIO 

►^CINCINNATI  MUSEUM  ASSOCIATION 

Eden  Park,  Cincinnati 

Charles  P.  Taft,  President 

C.  J.  LiviNGOOD Vice-President       Edward    Goepper Treasurer 

Executive  Staff 

J.  H.   Gest,  Director  and  Secretary. 

Henry  J.  Koch,  Cashier. 

Elizabeth  Kellogg,  Librarian. 

H.  H.  Wessel,  Curator  of  Paintings. 

C.  J.  Barnhorn,  Curator  of  Sculpture. 

Philip  Hinkle,  Curator  of  American  Archaeology. 

F.  W.  Hinkle,  Curator  of  Arms  and  Armor. 

J.  W.  Bullock,  Honorary  Curator  of  Book  Plates. 

F.  V.  H.  Raymond,  Official  Photographer. 

For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  284. 

Open  week  days,  9  a.m.  to  6  p.m  ;  Sundays,  1  to  6  p.m.;  in  winter  it  closes 
at  4.30  p.m.  Admission  is  free  on  Saturdays,  ten  cents  on  Sundays,  twenty- 
five  cents  on  other  days  or  ten  cents  by  purchasing  ten  tickets  for  one  dollar. 
Teachers  with  classes  from  schools  admitted  free  at  any  time. 

Incorporated  1881.  Annual  meeting  first  Monday  in  March;  Board  meet- 
ings second  Tuesday  of  each  month.    Annual  dues,  $10;  membership,  173. 

The  collections  embrace  :  the  graphic  arts — painting,  drawing,  etching,  etc. — 
the  most  notable  being  the  collection  of  contemporary  American  painting, 
which  includes  one  gallery  devoted  to  the  work  of  Frank  Duveneck  and  one 
to  that  of  Robert  Blum ;  sculpture — casts  of  Egyptian,  Assyrian,  Greek,  Roman, 
Gothic,  Renaissance  and  Modern  works ;  also  original  modern  sculptures ; 
metal  work — originals  and  reproductions  of  silver  and  goldsmiths'  works; 
arms  and  armor ;  textiles— Oriental  and  European,  including  an  historical 
collection  of  lace  and  an  important  series  of  Indian  shawls ;  also  a  collection 
of  costumes  from  various  sources,  but  more  particularly  American  of  the  last 
hundred  years;  ceramics — Oriental,  European  and  American,  including  the 
Rookwood  historical  collection ;  musical  instruments  from  all  countries ;  and 
over  30,000  specimens  of  American  archaeology  and  ethnology. 

An  art  school  is  maintained  (see  school  section).  There  is  a  large  refer- 
ence library  in  the  museum  and  a  small  circulating  library  for  the  use  of 
students ;  in  connection  with  the  library  various  classes  in  the  history  of  art 
are  conducted.  Expert  guidance  and  instruction  are  given  free  to  classes 
visiting  the  Museum.  Lantern  slides  are  circulated  among  the  public  schools 
with  accompanying  explanatory  notes. 


OHIO  MUSEUMS  61 


CINCINNATI,    OHIO 
Cincinnati  Museum  Association — Conliniicd 
During  1920  total  income  was  $84,719.35;  11  objects  were  purchased;  15,057 
objects  lent;  attendance  about  51,000;  the  Museum  owns  90,596  objects;  5,539 
bound  volumes  and  12,173  pamphlets  in  the  library. 

Acquisitions,  1920-21 :  "An  Arrangement  in  Pink  and  Purple,"  by  Whistler ; 
"Melting  Snows,"  by  J.  Alden  Weir;  "Woman  with  Veil,"  by  Duveneck; 
"Beatrice,"  by  Robert  Henri ;  "Hawk's  Nest,"  by  Daniel  Garber ;  "Eastern 
Storm,  Rockport  Harbor,"  by  C.  S.  Kaelin;  "Niagara  Falls,"  by  Godgrey 
Frankenstein ;  "Madonna,  St.  Catherine  and  St.  Dominick,"  XV  Century, 
Siena ;  "Old  Docks,"  by  H.  H.  Wessel ;  three  drawings  by  Degas ;  prints,  guns 
and  various  war  relics  given  by  the  French  Republic ;  many  additions  to  textile 
collections. 

Exhibitions 
October,  1920 — Official  Greek  Government  exhibition;  pastels  by  S.  S.  Kaelin. 
November — French  Government  exhibition  of  paintings,  sculpture,  etc. 
December — Work  by  the  Duveneck  Society  of  Painters  and  Sculptors. 
January,  1921 — Paintings  by  Gaston  La  Touche ;  etchings  by  Lester  G.  Hornby ; 

paintings  by  F.  C.  Frieseke. 
March — French    paintings,    mostly    from    private    collections    in    Cincinnati ; 

Chinese  textiles,  wood  engravings  and  drawings  by  August  Lepere. 
April — Italian  paintings  from  Giotto  to  Titian  and  Tintoretto. 
May  to  September — Twenty-eighth  annual  exhibition  of  American  Art. 

CLEVELAND,    OHIO 

i^CLEVELAND  MUSEUM   OF  ART 
East  Boulevard,  Wade  Park,  Cleveland 

J.  H.  Wade President      John  H.  Hord Treasurer 

Ralph  King 1st  Vice-Pres.      Hermon  A.  Kelley Secretary 

John  L,  Severance 2d  Vice-Pres.  Rockefeller  Bldg.,  Cleveland. 

Executive  Staff 
Frederic  Allen  Whiting,  Director. 
J.  Arthur  MacLean,  Curator  of  Oriental  Art. 
William   M.  Milliken,  Curator  of  Decorative  Arts, 
Lawrence  Park,  Curator  of  Colonial  Art. 
Frank  J.  Pool,  Registrar  and  Assistant  Secretary. 
Olive  Cook  Whiting,  Assistant  to  the  Director. 
Dorothy  L.  Blair,  Secretary  to  the  Director. 
Rossiter  Howard,  Curator,  Department  of  Educational  Work. 
Gertrude  Underhill,  in  charge  of  Educational  Work  for  Adults. 
Louise  M.  Dunn,  in  charge  of  Educational  Work  for  Children. 
Ruth  Field  Ruggles,  in  charge  Extension  Exhibits. 
Henry  Turner  Bailey,  Advisor. 

Thomas  Whitney  Surette,  in  charge  of  Musical  Arts, 
William  McC.  McKee,  Librarian  and  Acting  Curator  of  Prints. 
E,  A,  Ruggles,  in  charge  Sales  Department, 
Margaret  Numsen,  Membership  Secretary. 
L  T,   Frary,  Publicity  Secretary. 
James  F.  McCabe,  Superintendent  of  Building  and  Grounds. 

For  foundation,  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  289. 

Open  daily,  9  a.m  to  5  p.m.,  except  Wednesday  and  Friday,  9  a.m  to  10  p.m.; 
Sunday,  1  p.m.  to  10  p,m.  Admission  fee  25  cents  on  Mondays,  Tuesdays, 
Thursdays  and  Fridays  to  6  p.m.;  free  from  6  to  10  p.m.  Friday;  other  days 
free,  including  Sundays  and  holidays  (gallery  closed  Thanksgiving  day,  Christ- 
mas Day  and  July  4).    Free  admission  is  granted  at  all  times  to  members  and 


62  OHIO  MUSEUMS 


CLEVELAND,    OHIO 

Cleveland  Museum  of  Art — Continued 

their  families,  students  and  children;  those  under  7  years  must  be  accom- 
panied by  an  adult. 

Incorporated  1913.  Museum  building  opened  1916.  Annual  meeting  second 
Monday  in  November ;  board  meetings  monthly.  Annual  dues,  $10 ;  sustaining, 
$25;  life,  $100.    Membership,  about  5,000.    Bulletin  published  ten  times  a  year. 

Permanent  collections  include  tapestries  and  armor;  classical  art;  sculpture 
and  iron  work  in  Garden  Court ;  prints ;  Italian  Renaissance  paintings ;  early 
American  paintings;  modern  paintings  of  all  schools;  Egyptian,  Japanese, 
Chinese  and  Near  Eastern  art ;  textiles  and  handicrafts.  The  collections  espe- 
cially emphasize  Colonial  art,  armor,  Oriental  art,  and  early  Italian  paintings. 
Three  galleries  are  reserved  for  temporary  exhibitions. 

There  is  a  reference  library  of  works  on  art,  with  current  art  magazines ; 
open  week  days  from  9  a.m  to  5  p.m.  During  lecture  season  is  open  on  Sunday 
from  3  to  6  p.m.,  and  on  Wednesday  until  8  p.m. 

The  educational  work  covers  a  broad  field.  Lectures  are  given,  on  the 
average,  two  or  three  times  a  week  during  the  season.  Children's  entertain- 
ments are  given  on  Saturday  afternoons  and  interpretative  talks  on  Sunday 
afternoons.  Clubs  and  conventions  are  invited  to  the  Museum.  Docent  service 
free.  About  four  classes  of  the  public  school  children  of  the  seventh  and 
eighth  grades  come  each  day  for  study  and  instruction  under  the  supervisor 
of  drawing  stationed  at  the  Museum  by  the  school  board,  and  there  are  special 
classes  for  talented  students  from  these  classes.  In  addition  there  are  frequent 
visits  from  public  and  private  school  classes.  Extension  exhibits  are  main- 
tained in  the  Branch  Libraries  of  the  city  each  month. 

During  the  season  of  1920-21,  lecture  courses  were  given  on  "Oriental  Art" 
and  "Some  Phases  of  American  Art,"  by  specialists  in  those  fields.  "The  Ap- 
preciation of  Chamber  Music,"  by  Thomas  Whitney  Surette,  illustrated  by 
members  of  the  Cleveland  Symphony  Orchestra ;  "Landscape  Architecture,"  by 
seven  experts  on  that  subject;  "Great  Masters  of  Painting  Represented  in  the 
Museum  Collections,"  by  Henry  Turner  Bailey,  and  a  number  of  lectures  on 
miscellaneous  subjects.  Two  accredited  courses  were  given  for  college  stu- 
dents on  "The  Appreciation  of  Beauty,"  by  Henry  Turner  Bailey,  and  "The 
Appreciation  of  Music,"  by  Thomas  Whitney  Surette  and  Walter  S.  Pope. 

The  Department  of  Musical  Arts  aims  to  create  a  correct  appreciation  for 
good  music.  Interpretative  pictures  are  given  which  are  illustrated  by  artists 
of  recognized  ability;  periods  of  singing  are  held  in  the  lecture  hall  on  Sunday 
afternoons;  classes  in  singing  are  arranged  for  members'  children  on  Saturday 
mornings  and  short  periods  of  singing  are  given  the  public  school  children 
who  come  to  the  Museum.  A  memorial  endowment  of  $250,000  has  made 
possible  a  considerable  development  of  this  work  and  an  order  has  been  placed 
for  a  pipe  organ  which  will  be  installed  above  the  Garden  Court. 

Important  accessions,  1920-21 :  "La  Sortie  du  Bain,"  by  Mary  Cassatt ; 
"Mrs.  Collyear,"  by  Sir  Joshua  Reynolds;  "Les  Bergers,"  by  Rene  Menard; 
"Mrs.  Mason,"  by  Gilbert  Stuart;  marble  relief  by  Bartollomeo  Ballano;  wal- 
nut settee  and  armchair,  English,  XVIII  Century ;  two  pieces  XV  Century 
stained  glass ;  complete  set,  in  duplicate,  of  French  Government  war  medals ; 
about  500  pieces  of  lace ;  about  550  etchings  and  other  prints ;  about  100  Japa- 
nese prints ;  134  pieces  Japanese  pottery  and  Chinese  porcelain ;  collection  of 
Peruvian  pottery;  collection  of  Chinese  jade  and  porcelain;  Japanese  enamel, 
pottery  and  metal  work ;  collection  of  Korean  pottery ;  collection  of  North 
American  Indian  blankets ;  collection  of  miscellaneous  Japanese  items. 

The  Print  Club  of  Cleveland  was  organized  in  1920  for  the  purpose  of 
acquiring  "prints  for  the  Cleveland  Museum  of  Art,  with  the  object  of  aiding 
in  the  growth  of  a  Print  Department  for  the  Museum,  to  stimulate  an  interest 
in  and  an  appreciation  for  prints  in  the  community,  and  to  promote  education 


OHIO  MUSEUMS  63 


CLEVELAND,    OHIO 

Cleveland  Museum  of  Art — Continued 
in  respect  to  them."     The  club  has  been   instrumental  in  securing  about  550 
prints  during  the  year  and  has  arranged  lectures. 

Statistics  for  the  year  ending  June  20,  1921 :  Objects  acquired  for  the  col- 
lection, 2,285  by  gift,  722  by  purchase;  3,938  were  loaned.  Library  accessions 
included  849  books,  1,395  photographs,  1,740  lantern  slides,  447  post  cards  and 
5000  clippings;  4,011  readers  visited  the  library  and  5,610  lantern  slides  were 
loaned.  Educational  Department:  252  exhibits  placed  in  libraries,  etc.;  35,105 
attended  lectures,  including  12,100  children  and  23,005  adults;  29,648  received 
docent  service;  89  classes  of  adults  and  792  classes  of  school  children  worked 
in  the  Mijseum,  the  attendance  being  22,469 ;  60  clubs  met  for  art  study ;  dele- 
gates from  17  conventions  were  taken  through  the  galleries.  The  total  attend- 
ance was  302,027. 

Exhibitions 
July  1  to  Oct.  15,  1920 — Etchings,  lithographs,  etc.,  by  August  Lepere. 
July  3  to  Sept.  13 — American  paintings  owned  in  Cleveland. 
Sept.  17  to  Oct.  19 — Paintings,  sculpture  and  posters  from  the  Cleveland  School 

of  Art. 
Oct.  15  to  Dec.  11 — Lithographs,  by  Henri  Fantin-Latour. 
Oct.  24  to  Dec.  6 — Japanese  prints, 

Dec.  8  to  Dec.  29 — Printed  books  and  other  printed  matter. 
Dec.  11  to  Jan.  11,  1921— Prints  of  the  Barbizon  School. 
Dec.  11  to  Jan.  12 — Prints  of  the  Modern  French  School. 
Dec.  29  to  Apr.  4 — The  Charles  G.  King,  Jr.  collection  of  Musical  Instruments. 
Jan.  8     to  Feb.  14 — ^Hand  illuminations  and  printing. 
Jan.  12  to  Mar.  1 — Paintings  by  A.  H.  Knighton  Hammond. 
Jan.  15  to  Mar.  3 — Etchings,  drypoints,  etc.,  by  Frank  W.  Benson. 
Feb.  16  to  Mar.  28 — Paintings  by  contemporary  American  artists. 
Mar.  4  to  Apr.  7— Etchings  by  Otto  H.  Bacher. 
Mar.  30  to  Apr.  21 — Paintings,   drawings,  etc.,   by  Louis   Maurice  Boutet  de 

Monvel. 
Apr.  2  to  June  6 — Third  annual  exhibition  of  work  by  Cleveland  artists  and 

craftsmen. 
Apr.  6  to  Apr.  27 — Paintings  by  Gaston  La  Touche. 
Apr.  8  to  Apr.  29 — Early  Italian  engravings,  XV  and  XVI  Century. 
June    to    September — Modern    Japanese    paintings    by    members  _  of    Nippon 

Bijutsu-in,   Tokyo,   Japan;   paintings  by   contemporary   American   artists; 

British  arts  and  crafts ;  etchings,  drypoints,  etc.,  by  Troy  Kinney,  Arthur 

Heintzelman  and  Lester  Hornby. 

DAYTON,    OHIO 

4-DAYTON  MUSEUM  OF  ARTS 
Monument  Avenue  and  St.  Clair  Street,  Dayton 

Mrs.  H.  G.  Carnell President      Dan   Blau Treasurer 

B.  B.  Thresher Vice-President      Mrs.  Robert  Patterson.  ..  .Secretary 

1115  Oak  wood  Ave.,  Dayton. 
Reorganized  in  1919;  new  building  opened  in  1920.  Annual  meeting  in 
April ;  board  meetings  third  Tuesday  of  each  month.  Annual  dues,  active,  $2 ; 
sustaining,  $10;  contributing,  $25;  friends,  $50;  life,  $500;  membership,  309. 
Lectures  on  art  given.  School  maintained.  Amount  of  sales  during  season, 
about  $6,000. 

Exhibitions 
October,  1920 — Paintings  by  Jaime  Carret. 

November — Memorial  exhil)ition  of  paintings  by  Henry  Golden  Dearth. 
December — Etchings   lent  by   Keppel. 
January,   1921 — Paintings  by  American  artists. 
February — Taos  paintings. 


64  OHIO  MUSEUMS 


DAYTON,    OHIO 

Dayton  Museum  of  Arts — Continued 
March — Leigh  Hthographs  and  loan  exhibition. 
April — Paintings  by  Robert  Henri. 

May — Exhibition  of  local  architecture,  and  high  school  exhibition. 
June — Work  of  students  of  Dayton  Museum. 
July — 'Exhibition  of  landscape  architecture. 

OBERLIN,    OHIO 

DUDLEY  PETER  ALLEN  MEMORIAL  ART  MUSEUM 

Oberlin  College,  Oberlin 

Clarence  Ward,  Director 

Building  dedicated  1917.     The  museum  is  open  free  and  its  contents  are  the 

property  of  the  college.     The  collection  is  made  up  of  objects  formerly  in  the 

Olney  Art  Gallery,  also  a  collection  of   Oriental  rugs,  Japanese  and  Chinese 

vases  and  pictures,  Rookwood  pottery ;  a  number  of  paintings  and  a  collection 

of  casts,  all  of  which  are  the  gifts  of  benefactors  to  the  college. 

TOLEDO,    OHIO 

HhTOLEDO  MUSEUM  OF  ART 
Scott  Place,  Toledo 

Edward  D.  Libbey President       Isaac  E.  Knisely Treasurer 

William  Hardee 1st  Vice-Pres.      Charles  A.  Schmettau Secretary 

Arthur  J.  Secor 2d  Vice-Pres,      Irving  E.  Macomber Asst.  Sec. 

Executive  Staff 
George  W.  Stevens,  Director. 
Nina  Spalding  Stevens,  Assistant  Director. 
Blake-More  Godwin,  Curator. 
C.  Justus  Wilcox,  Assistant  Treasurer. 
Elisabeth  Jane  Merrill,  Supervisor  of  Education. 
Mrs.   Caroline  Ransom  Williams,  Honorary  Curator  of  Egypt- 
ology. 
LiNA  C.  Keith,  in  charge  of  Music. 
Molly  C.  Ohl,  Secretary  to  Assistant  Director. 
Nell  L.  Jaffe,  Secretary  to  Curator. 
EuLA  Lee  Anderson,  Publicity. 
Julia  B.  Hedborg,  Bursar. 

Morrison  R.  Van  Cleve,  Supervisor  of  Nature  Study. 
Mrs.  Grace  Ri-ioades  Dean,  Instructor  in  Graphic  Arts. 
Miriam  R.  Harris,  Instructor  in  Theory  of  Design. 
Maude  Ide  Streeter,  Instructor  in  Applied  Design. 
William  B.  Campbell,  Superintendent  of  Buildings. 
Charles  Foreman,  Superintendent  of  Grounds. 
W.  H.  Steffins,  Home  Gardens. 

For  foundation  and  history,  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  295. 

Open  daily  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  ;  Sundays  and  holidays,  1  to  5  p.m.  Admission 
free  Tuesday,  Thursday,  Saturday,  Sunday  and  holidays;  other  times,  25 
cents ;  free  at  all  times  to  members  and  their  families  and  to  school  children 
and  study  clubs.  Permanent  collections  include  paintings,  sculpture,  prints, 
ceramics,  glass,  textiles.  Oriental  art,  Egyptian  antiquities,  early  printed  books 
and  manuscripts. 

Incorporated,  1901;  building  erected,  1911.  Annual  meeting,  second  Wednes- 
day in  January.  Annual  dues,  associate  members,  $5;  active,  $10;  sustaining, 
$25  to  $500;  total  membership,  2,100.  During  1920  the  total  attendance  was 
113.960. 

The  most  important   feature  of  the  Museum   is  its  educational  work  with 


OHIO  MUSEUMS  65 


TOLEDO,    OHIO 

Toledo  Museum  of  Art — Continued 
the  children  and  adults  of  Toledo,  carried  on  both  in  the  Museum  and  outside, 
through  the  schools,  clubs,  libraries  and  other  organizations.  These  activities 
include :  art  history  classes,  weekly  concerts  for  adults,  art  lectures  and  lecture 
recitals  for  high  school  and  university  students  and  adults,  music  hours  for 
children,  classes  in  the  rudiments  of  music  for  children,  story  hours  for  chil- 
dren on  the  permanent  collections,  temporary  exhibitions,  and  the  artists  and 
their  works,  on  Saturday  and  Sunday  educational  motion  pictures,  nature  study 
classes  for  adults  and  children,  weekly  evening  lectures  and  instruction  and 
guidance  in  the  galleries,  all  free.  The  total  enrollment  for  1920  in  the 
Museum's  free  school  of  design  was  1,218  students,  including  children  and 
adults.  There  are  classes  in  Theory  of  Design  and  Applied  Design  and 
Graphic  Arts  on  week  days,  including  Saturdays  and  on  two  evenings  each 
week.  Numerous  other  activities  include  the  Museum  Bird  Club  with  15,000 
members. 

Principal  acquisitions,  1920-21:  Collection  of  Amerind  objects;  464  pieces 
of  early  American  glass ;  "Black  Angel  Fish,"  water  color,  by  Stephen  Haweis ; 
23  etchings,  including  Rembrandt's  "Three  Trees,"  "The  Virgin  and  Child" 
and  "Knight,  Death  and  the  Devil,"  by  Diirer ;  "The  Little  Forge,"  by  Jacque ; 
"A  Sunset  in  Ireland,"  by  Haden ;  "David  Playing  the  Harp  Before  Saul,"  by 
Lucas  Van  Leyden ;_  "Souvenir  of  Tuscany,"  by  Corot;  "The  Doorway,"  by 
Whistler,  and  3  etchings  by  Millet ;  5  Greek  vases ;  3  pieces  of  Persian  pottery ; 
2  Assyrian  reliefs ;  21  early  Spanish,  French  and  English  bindings ;  "Shrine 
of  the  Rain  Gods,"  by  E.  Irving  Couse,  and  many  standard  works  on  art  and 
archaeology. 

Exhibitions 
October,  1920 — Lithographs  by  Honore  Daumier,  fifth  annual  exhibition  of  con- 
temporary. American  bookplates;  sketches  by  Thomas  S.  Parkhurst,  David 
L.  Stine,  Benjamin  A.  Cratz  and  George  W.  Stevens. 
November — Paintings  by  George  Oberteuff  er ;  bronze  busts  by  Jo  Davidson  ; 
photographs  of  domestic  architecture ;   Whistler  etchings  and  lithographs. 
December — Paintings  by  Martha  Walter ;  etchings  by  Arthur  W.  Heintzelman  ; 

batik  scarfs;  lithographs  and  etchings  by  Whistler. 
January,   1921 — Paintings  by  Hayley  Lever;   photographs  of   interior   decora- 
tions ;  paintings  and  drawings  by  H.  I.   Stickroth. 
February — Water  colors  by  American  artists ;  water  color  portraits  of  children 

by  Elinor  M.  Barnard. 
March — Greek   photographs  ;   paintings   by    Seven   Canadian   artists  ;    paintings 

by  the  Mahoning  Society  of  Artists. 
April  and  May — Fourth  annual  exhibition  of   the  Toledo   Federation   of  Art 

Societies ;  exhibition  of  work  of  the  Museum  School  of  Design. 
June  to  Septem.ber— Tenth  annual  exhibition  of  selected  paintings  by  American 
artists. 

YOUNGSTOWN,    OHIO 

►I-BUTLER  ART  INSTITUTE 
524  Wick  Avenue,  Youngstown 

J.  G.  Butler,  Jr Pres.-Treas.      John  W.  Ford Secretary 

Margaret   Evans Director  39  Madison  Ave.,  Youngstown. 

May  L.  Wiesen,  Assistant  Director 
Open  week  days  10  a.m.  to  6  p.m.;  Sundays  and  holidays,  2  p.m.;  Sundays 
and  holidays,  2  p.m.  to  6  p.m. 

Established  1919,  by  J.  G.  Butler,  Jr.,  and  given  by  him  to  the  City  of 
Youngstown.  The  building  was  designed  by  McKim,  Mead  and  White,  and  is 
built  of  Georgia  marble  in  the  style  of  the  early  Italian  Renaissance.     It  con- 


66  OHIO— OREGON— PENNSYLVANIA  MUSEUMS 

YOUNGSTOWN,    OHIO  • 

Butler  Art  Institute — Continued 
tains  the  private  collection  of  paintings  of  Mr.  Butler,  the  majority  of  which 
are  by  American  artists.     Special  attention  is  given  to  educational  work  with 
children,  and  in  1921  an  art  school  was  opened.     (See  School  Section,)     Lec- 
tures and  musicals  are  given,  and  exhibitions  are  changed  every  two  weeks, 

PORTLAND,    ORE. 

i^PORTLAND  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Fifth  and  Taylor  Streets,  Portland 

William  M.  Ladd President       Charles  F.  Adam Treasurer 

WiNSLOw    Ayer Vice-President      Anna  B.  Crocker Secretary 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  300. 

The  Museum  open  week  days,  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays  and  holidays  (except 
Christmas  and  the  Fourth  of  July),  from  2  to  5  p.m.  Admission  fee,  25 
cents ;  free  the  afternoons  of  Tuesday,  Thursday,  Friday,  Saturday,  Sunday 
and  holidays. 

Organized  1892.  Building  erected  1905.  Annual  meeting  in  February; 
Board  meetings  second  Monday  of  each  month.  Annual  dues,  $10;  annual 
student's  ticket,  $2.50 ;  life  membership,  $100 ;  membership,  350. 

Collections  include  14,955  Braun  carbon  photographs  of  noted  paintings  and 
drawings;  107  Arundel  chromolithographs;  367  books  on  art;  electrotypes  of 
Greek  and  Roman  coins ;  American  medals  and  bronzes ;  25  oil  paintings  by 
European  and  American  painters  and  one  water  color ;  1  Chinese  painting ;  90 
objects  of  art,  including  Rhodian  pottery,  Chinese  porcelains,  jades,  lacquers, 
etc.,  and  over  1200  lantern  slides. 

Systematic  instruction  is  carried  on  for  public  school  pupils.  Numerous 
lectures  given ;  daily  visits  of  school  children.  An  Art  School  is  maintained 
in  the  Museum  Building  (see  school  section).  During  1920-21  ten  exhibitions 
were  held. 

NEW    BRIGHTON,    PA. 

MERRICK  FREE  ART  GALLERY,  MUSEUM  AND  LIBRARY 
E.  D.  Merrick,  Director 
Founded  1865;   buildings  erected   1867,   1888  and  1901.     Art  department  in- 
cludes  5,000   prints    and   engravings;    600   oil   paintings,   about   half   being   by 
E.   D.   Merrick,   balance  by   European  and   American   artists.     Open    free   to 
public  week  days,  9  a.m.  to  4  p.m. 

PHILADELPHIA,    PA. 

NATIONAL  MUSEUM,  INDEPENDENCE  HALL  GROUP 

Independence  Square,  Philadelphia 

Wilfred  Jordan,  Curator 

Open,  free,  9  a.m.  to  4  p.m.  daily;  Sundays,  1  p.m.  to  4  p.m. 

Organized  July  4,  1876.  The  group  consists  of  the  State  House,  Congress 
Hall,  Old  City  Hall  and  the  East  and  West  Wings,  forming  a  public  museum 
and  art  gallery.  Owns  collection  of  portraits  and  relics  bearing  on  the  his- 
tory of  the  United  States  from  earliest  times  to  1800.  The  collection  includes 
369  paintings  and  40  pastels;  chiefly  of  Colonial  and  Revolutionary  characters. 

Congress  Hall,  one  of  the  buildings  in  the  group,  was  restored  in  1913  and 
contains,  in  addition  to  the  permanent  collection,  a  loan  exhibition  of  water 
colors  by  J.  L.  G.  Ferris  depicting  scenes  in  American  history.  Docent  serv- 
ice. Issues  historic  bulletins  free  to  public.  Special  exhibitions  on  historical 
subjects  during  the  winter  for  school  children.  In  May,  1920,  held  exhibition 
of  official  photographs  of  the  Great  War  made  by  the  United  States  Signal 
Corps. 


PENNSYLVANIA   MUSEUMS  67 

PHILADELPHIA,    PA. 

►^PENNSYLVANIA  ACADEMY  OF  THE   FINE   ARTS 
Broad  and  Cherry  Streets,  Philadelphia 

John  Frederick  Lewis President      George  H.   McFadden Treasurer 

Arthur  H.  Lea Vice-President       John  Andrew  Myers Secretary 

Eleanor  B.  Barker,  Curator  of  Schools. 
Arthur  H.  Lea,  Chairman  Committee  on  Instruction. 
D.  Roy  Miller,  Resident  Manager,  Chester  Springs  Summer  School. 
Clement  B.  Newbold,  Chairman  Committee  on  Exhibitions. 
For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  I,  p.  330,  and  Vol.  XI,  p.  309. 
Open  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  week  days ;  1  to  5  p.m.  Sundays.     Permanent  collec- 
tions free ;  fee  for  special  exhibitions. 

Founded  1805.  Board  meetings,  monthly,  from  October  to  June;  annual  in 
February.     Annual  dues.  $10 ;  membership,  4.250. 

Permanent  collection  of  early  American  portraits ;  Gibson  collection  of  nine- 
teenth century  foreign  paintings ;  contemporary  American  paintings  and  sculp- 
ture; collection  of  portraits  of  artists  by  artists;  Temple  collection  of  modern 
American  paintings ;  Phillips  collection  of  60,000  old  prints.  Gallery  talks  by 
artists  and  critics  during  exhibitions ;  special  talks  to  public  school  students. 
Frequent  lectures  given.    Art  school  maintained  (see  school  section). 

The  Temple  collection  purchase  was  "The  Golden  Screen,"  by  Robert  Susan ; 
the  Lambert  Fund  purchases  were  "A  Fishing  Port,"  by  Frank  H.  Kidder ; 
"The  Old  Antique  Shop."  by  Richard  M.  Kimbel ;  "The  Circus,"  by  Edith 
McMurtie;  "The  Easter  Window,"  by  George  Biddle. 

Exhibitions  and  Awards 

Nov.  7  to  Dec.  12,  1920 — Eighteenth  annual  exhibition  of  Philadelphia  Water 
Color  Club,  and  nineteenth  annual  exhibition  of  Pennsylvania  Society  of 
Miniature  Painters.  Beck  prize  awarded  to  F.  Walter  Taylor ;  Philadelphia 
water  color  prize  of  $200  to  John  R.  Frazier.  The  Dana  gold  medal  to 
M.  W.  Zimmerman. 

Feb.  6  to  Mar.  27,  1921 — 116th  annual  exhibition  of  paintings  and  sculpture. 
Edward  T.  Stotesbury  prize  of  $1,000  awarded  to  William  M.  Paxton  for 
his  group  of  paintings ;  Temple  gold  medal  to  Leopold  Seyffert  for  "The 
Model";  Lippincott  prize  ($300)  to  Irving  Couse  for  "The  Chant  to  the 
Rain  God" ;  Mary  Smith  prize  ($100)  to  Katherine  Patton  for  "Deep  in 
the  Woods" ;  Jennie  Sesnan  gold  medal  to  Charles  Morris  Young  for 
"Wind  on  the  Sound";  Beck  gold  medal  to  George  Bellows  for  "Eleanor, 
Joan  and  Anna"  ;  Widener  Memorial  gold  medal  to  Evelyn  Beatrice  Long- 
man for  "The  Future";  Philadelphia  prize  ($250)  to  picture  receiving  the 
most  votes  by  visitors  to  the  exhibition  during  the  week — $150  to  artist 
and  $100  for  scholarship  in  the  schools— to  William  M.  Paxton  for  "Nude 
Girl  Combing  Her  Hair." 

Apr.  2  to  Apr.  30 — Portraits  of  distinguished  leaders  of  the  American  and 
Allied  Nations,  by  American  artists,  circulated  by  The  American  Federation 
of  Arts. 

Apr.  9  to  Apr.  30 — Paintings  and  sculpture  by  artists  of  Switzerland. 

Apr.  16  to  May  15 — Paintings  and  drawings  by  American  artists  showing  the 
Later  Tendencies  in  Art. 

PENNSYLVANIA  MUSEUM  AND  SCHOOL  OF  INDUSTRIAL  ART 
Museum,  Memorial  Hall,  Fairmount  Park;   Schools  Broad  and  Pine  Streets, 

Philadelphia,  Pa. 

John  D.  McIlhenny President      Charles  T.  Patton Asst.  Treas. 

John  Story  Jenks 1st  Vice-Pres.       Huger  Elliott Principal  of 

John  G.  Carruth 2d  Vice-Pres.  School. 

James  Butterworth Treasurer       Charles  H.  Winslow Secretary 


68  PENNSYLVANIA  MUSEUMS 

PHILADELPHIA,    PA. 

Pennsylvania  Museum  and  School  of  Industrial  Art — Continued 
Museum  Staff 
Langdon  Warner,  Director 

Samuel  W.  Woodhouse,  Jr.,  Keeper  of  the  Collections. 
Curator  and  Lecturer. 
Catherine  F.  Woodhouse,  Registrar, 

For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  311. 

Admission  to  Museum  is  free.  Opening  hours :  Mondays,  closed ;  other 
week  days,  9.30  a.m.  ;  Sundays,  1  p.m  ;  closing  hour  in  summer  5  p.m.  on 
week  days  and  6  p.m.  Sundays;  in  winter  closes  a  half  hour  before  sunset. 

Organized  in  1877.  Annual  meeting,  second  Monday  in  June ;  Board  meet- 
ing, second  Thursday  in  each  month  from  September  to  June,  and  second 
Monday  in  June.     Annual  dues,  $10.     Membership,  1,560. 

The  art  collections  include  the  following  departments  :  Greco-Roman  (clas- 
sical), Egyptian,  arms  and  armor,  ceramics,  enamels,  furniture,  glass,  ivories, 
lacquers,  textiles,  woodwork,  metal  work,  numismatics.  Oriental  art,  library. 
Among  the  more  important  special  collections  are  those  of  American  pottery 
and  porcelain  and  American  glass. 

An  Annual  Report  and  a  Bulletin,  appearing  three  times  a  year,  are  issued ; 
several  Handbooks  and  Art  Primers  on  special  subjects.  The  Museum  staff 
supplies  guides  and  instructors  for  classes  or  organizations,  on  application, 
without  charge.  A  Bureau  of  Identification  is  maintained,  where  art  objects 
may  be  sent  or  brought  for  identification.  Numerous  scholarships  and  prizes 
are  awarded. 

PHILADELPHIA  MUSEUM  OF  ART 
127  City  Hall,  Philadelphia 

E.  T.  Stotesbury President       Sidney  W.  Keith Treasurer 

Eli  Kirk  Price Vice-President      Thomas  S.  Martin Secretary 

Eli  Kirk  Price,  Chairman  of  Art  Museum  Committee. 

Joseph   E.  Widener,  Chairman,  Wilstach  Bequest. 

Under  control  of  Fairmount  Park  Cornmission 

The  Museum  Building  is  now  in  course  of  preparation  on  a  raised  terrace 
facing  the  Plaza  at  the  end  of  the  Parkway  leading  from  City  Hall. 

UNIVERSITY  MUSEUM 
University  of   Pennsylvania,  33d  and  Spruce  Streets,   Philadelphia 

C.  C.  Harrison President      Jane  M.  McHugh Secretary 

F.  C.  Morgan Treasurer      G.   B.   Gordon Director 

Open,  free,  to  the  public,  week  days  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  ;  Sundays,  2  to  6  p.m. 
Sections :    Babylonian,  Egyptian,  Mediterranean,  Oriental,  Anthropological. 

Organized  1889;  first  section  of  Museum  opened  in  1899;  second  section 
opened  in  1916.  Annual  meeting  in  December ;  Board,  third  Friday  of  each 
month  except  July  and  August.  Annual  dues,  $10;  sustaining,  $25;  contribut- 
ing, $100;  membership,  640. 

Total  value  of  accessions  during  1920  was  $95,285 ;  number  of  visitors,  June, 
1920,  to  June,  1921,  was  89,190. 

Two  expeditions  are  at  work  abroad.  Exhibition  of  Arabic  Art,  Primitive 
Art  and  Indian  Basketry  opened  on  January  15,  1921.  Illustrated  lectures 
given  for  adults  and  also  for  school  children  from  October  to  June. 


PENNSYLVANIA   MUSEUMS  69 

PITTSBURGH,    PA. 

^CARNEGIE  INSTITUTE 

Schenley  Park,  Pittsburgh 

Samuel  H.  Church President      James  H.  Reed Treasurer 

John  D.  Shafer Vice-President      A.  K.  Oliver Secretary 

FINE  ARTS   DEPARTMENT 

Fine  Arts  Committee 
George  E.  Shaw,  Chairman  J.  D.  Hailman 

Taylor  Allderdice  John  L.  Porter 

W.  S.  Arbuthnot  a.  W.  Mellon 

S,  H.  Church  W.  H.  Robertson 

William   Frew  A.  Bryan  Wall 

Executive   Staff 

John  W.  Beatty,  Director  of  Fine  Arts. 

Homer  Saint  Gaudens,  Assistant  Director. 

Edward  Duff  Balken,  Curtor  of  Prints. 

John  O'Connor,  Jr.,  Business  Manager. 

Helen  M.  Beatty,  Educational  Department  and  Editor  of  Publications. 

Anna  M.  McCracken,  Docent. 

For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  323. 

Galleries  open  free,  daily,  10  a.m.  to  10  p.m.  ;  Sundays,  2  to  6  p.m.  The 
permanent  collection  contains  modern  paintings,  drawings  and  prints ;  bronzes ; 
sculpture  in  marble;  and  casts  of  classic  and  modern  sculpture  and  of 
architecture. 

Founded  1896.  The  Carnegie  Institute  is  now  composed  of  the  Department 
of  Fine  Arts,  the  Museum,  the  Library  and  the  Carnegie  Institute  of  Tech- 
nology. The  Department  of  Fine  Arts,  the  Museum,  the  Library  and  the  Car- 
negie Husic  Hall  occupy  the  same  building.  Endowment  fund  for  the  Depart- 
ment of  Fine  Arts  gives  an  annual  income  of  $100,000. 

Annual  International  Exhibitions  of  Paintings  are  held  each  spring,  ^  and 
other  special  exhibitions  are  presented  throughout  the  year.  The  Institute 
maintains  a  Children's  Museum  of  Art  for  exhibitions,  lectures,  and  other 
activities  of  interest  to  children;  courses  of  lectures  for  adults  are  also  pre- 
sented. 

There  is  regular  co-operation  between  the  public  school  system  of  Pitts- 
burgh and  the  Carnegie  Institute,  whereby  the  eighth  grades  of  the  public 
schools,  comprising  about  5,000  children,  are  sent  for  three  afternoons  each 
year  to  the  Institute  for  instruction.  The  school  board  voted  the  necessary 
funds  for  the  payment  of  carfares  and  the  Superintendent  of  Schools  has  made 
this  instruction  a  part  of  the  required  work.  During  1920-21  about  1,500  chil- 
dren from  the  parochial  schools  and  about  1,000  children  from  schools  in 
nearby  towns  also  came  three  times  for  this  instruction,  which  is  always  given 
by  a  museum  instructor.  Three  lessons  on  the  appreciation  of  art,  one  on 
painting,  one  on  sculpture  and  the  third  on  architecture,  have  been  prepared 
for  use  in  this  work.  These  lessons  have  been  published  by  the  Department  of 
Fine  Arts  of  Carnegie  Institute. 

Guidance  in  the  galleries  is  free  to  all  visitors.  A  School  of  Design  is 
maintained  as  part  of  the  Carnegie  Institute  of  Technology  (see  school 
section). 

Exhibitions 
April  29  to  June  1,  1920— Etchings  by  D.  Y.  Cnnicion 
June  1  to  Oct.  15 — Japanese  prints. 
July  1  to  Oct.  1 — Extension  cases. 
Oct.  2  to  Dec.  1— Silhouettes. 


70  PENNSYLVANIA  MUSEUMS 


PITTSBURGH,    PA. 

Carnegie  Institute — Continued 

Oct.  22  to  Nov.  20 — Exhibition  of  work  by  the  Associated  Artists  of  Pitts- 
burgh. 

Nov.  5  to  Dec.  15 — Modern  etchings. 

Dec.  1  to  Dec.  14 — Work  by  children  of  Neighborhood  Art  School,  Greenwich 
house,  New  York  City. 

Dec.  8  to  Feb.  7,  1921 — Drawings  by  Boutet  de  Monvel. 

Dec.  13  to  Dec.  31 — Recent  accessions. 

Dec.  18  to  Feb.  5 — Sculpture  and  paintings  of  animals  by  Charles  Livingston 
Bull. 

Jan.  8  to  Feb.  7 — Etchings  by  Anders  Zorn. 

Feb.  5  to  Mar.  14 — Sculpture  and  paintings  of  animals  by  Frank  W.  Benson. 

Feb.  15  to  May  17 — Early  line  engravings. 

Mar.  2  to  Mar.  31 — Eighth  annual  Pittsburgh  Salon  of  Photography. 

Mar.  15  to  Apr.  28 — Water  colors  by  F.  Luis  Mora. 

Apr.  28  to  June  30 — Twentieth  International  Exhibition  of  Paintings. 

May  18  to  Sept.  1 — Lithographs  by  J.  McN.  Whistler. 

READING,    PA. 

READING  PUBLIC  MUSEUM  AND  ART  GALLERY 
Reading 

J,  Newton  Rhoads President      Haery    P.    Yost Vice-President 

Levi  W.  Men  gel.  Director 

Museum  established  1905 ;  Art  Gallery  1913.  .Reading  School  District  pays 
all  maintenance  expenses,  but  accessions  are  made  by  public  contributions 
and  private  donations.  During  1920-21  paintings  by  R.  B.  Farley,  George 
Sotter  and  the  George  De  B.  Keim  collection,  including  many  examples  by 
Corot,  Diaz,  Daubigny,  Dupre,  Ziem,  Rousseau,  Cazin  and  others,  were  pre- 
sented to  or  purchased  for  the  Museum. 

Permanent  art  collection  consists  of  about  300  paintings  by  American  and 
foreign  artists  Greco-Roman  pottery,  terra  cotta,  porcelain,  glass  and  bronzes. 
Museum  collection  embraces  commercial  and  natural  history  material ;  collec- 
tion of  50,000  specimens  of  butterflies. 

Free  public  lectures  and  school  lectures.  Photographs  and  small  collections 
are  circulated  among  the  schools. 

SCRANTON,    PA. 

EVERHART  MUSEUM  OF 
NATURAL  HISTORY,  SCIENCE,  AND  ART 
R.  N.  Davis,  Curator 
Organized  1907.     Chiefly  natural  history  museum.     Art  department  not  yet 
organized. 

STATE    COLLEGE,    PA. 

MUSEUM  OF  INDUSTRIAL  AND  FINE  ARTS 

OF  THE  PENNSYLVANIA   STATE  COLLEGE 

A.  L.  Kocher,  Director 

Organized  1916.     Has  permanent  collection  of  paintings  by  49  Pennsylvania 

artists;   numerous   prints  and   30  pieces  of   sculpture.     Acquisitions,    1920-21: 

"Coast  of  Brittany,"  by  Edward  Redfield ;   "Spring  Time,"  by  Emil  Walter; 

"Afternoon  Sunlight,"  by  Will  Coffee;  "The  Rising  Woman,"  plaster  cast  by 

George  Gray  Barnard.    " 

Exhibitions  :  Nov.  20  to  Dec.  8,  1920,  water  colors  by  Bertha  Perrie ;  Jan.  10 
to  Jan.  29,  1921,  American  photography,  circulated  by  The  American  Federa- 
tion of  Arts;  May  1  to  May  15,  oil  paintings  by  Margaret  Law;  May  20  to 
June  12,  water  colors  by  members  of  the  Philadelphia  Water  Color  Society. 


RHODE  ISLAND  MUSEUMS  71 

PROVIDENCE,    R.    I. 

ANNMARY  BROWN  MEMORIAL 
21  Brown  Street,  Providence 

Arthur  L,  Brown President      Margaret  B.  Stillwell Curator 

R.  H.  I.  Goddard Vice-President      Edwin  A.  Burlingame Secretary 

Walter  F.  Angell Treasurer 

Open  free  to  the  public  Tuesday,  Wednesday,  Thursday  and  Friday,  10  a.m. 
to  4  P.M.;  summer,  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m. 

Dedicated  1907.  It  was  the  private  collection  of  Gen.  Rush  C.  Hawkins. 
The  first  room  contains  about  540  examples  of  printing  earlier  than  1500; 
beyond  are  paintings.  The  rooms  terminate  with  a  bronze  door  behind  which 
is  the  marble  crypt  with  the  tomb  of  Mrs.  Hawkins. 

HhRHODE  ISLAND  SCHOOL  OF  DESIGN 

11  Waterman  Street,  Providence 

Museum 

Mrs.  Gustav  Radeke President      Stephen  O.  Metcalf Treasurer 

Theodore  Francis  Green,  Vice-Pres.      G.  Alder  Blumer Secretary 

Executive  Staff 
L.  Earle  Rowe,  Director. 
Roger  Oilman,  Dean. 
Lena  M.  Danforth,  Registrar. 
Mary  Shakespeare -Puech,  Librarian. 
Sybil  A.  Fowler,  Museum  Attendant. 
Charles  M.  Parker,  Supt.  of  Buildings. 

For  foundation  and  history,  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  ?>2>2. 

Open  to  the  public  daily  (except  Thanksgiving  Day,  Christmas  and  the 
Fourth  of  July)  ;  July  1st  to  September  7th  from  1  to  5  p.m.  on  week  days 
and  2  to  5  p.m.  on  Sundays;  from  September  7th  to  July  1st,  from  10  a.m. 
to  5  P.M.  week  days  and  2  to  5  p.m.  on  Sundays.  The  Pendleton  Collection 
is  open  from  2  to  5  p.m  daily.  Admission  to  the  Museum  on  Mondays, 
Wednesdays  and  Fridays  is  25  cents ;  other  days  free. 

Incorporated  1877.  Corporation  meeting  first  Wednesday  in  June ;  Trustees' 
meetings  second  Wednesday  of  October,  January,  April  and  June.  Dues : 
Annual  members,  $3;  governing,  $10;  life,  $100;  total  membership,  717. 

The  Museum  contains  paintings  and  engravings,  casts  and  originals  of  the 
masterpieces  of  classic  and  Renaissance  sculpture;  Greek  vases;  Japanese  and 
other  pottery;  metal  work,  lacquer  and  textiles;  Chinese  painting  and  sculp- 
ture ;  old  Italian  paintings  and  sculpture ;  Persian  miniatures,  pottery  and  iron 
work.  The  Colonial  House  contains  the  Pendleton  collection  of  antique  fur- 
niture, pottery,  textiles  and  painting. 

Educational  work  is  carried  on  in  co-operation  with  Brown  University  and 
the  public  schools.  There  is  docent  service  in  the  galleries  each  Sunday, 
December  to  April,  inclusive.  By  arrangement  with  the  city  and  State  authori- 
ties special  docent  service  is  given  to  the  pupils  of  the  grammar  schools  by 
appointment  as  part  of  their  school  work.  Free  public  lectures  are  given  in 
Memorial  Hall.  Library  closed  during  June,  July  and  August.  A  year  book 
and  quarterly  Bulletin  are  published.  (For  details  of  the  School,  see  school 
section.) 

During  1920-21  attendance  was  78,045  ;  there  are  4,534  books  in  the  Library, 
17,055  photographs,  3,480  postal  cards,  3,546  lantern  slides;  circulated  3,542 
books  and  8,921  reproductions. 

Accessions  include:  Greco-Roman  sarcophagus,  II  Century;  "Madonna  and 
Child,"  terra  cotta,  probably  by  Jacopo  della  Quercia ;  statuette  of  "Madonna 
and  Child"  by  Andrea  Pisano ;  bronze  statuette  of  "Eve"  by  Peter  Vischer; 


72  RHODE   ISLAND— TENNESSEE   MUSEUMS 

PROVIDENCE,    R.  I. 

Rhode  Island  School  of  Design — Continued 
statue  of  St.  Peter,  French,  Languedoc  School,  XII  Century;  "Madonna  and 
Child,"  Sienese  painting,  by  Andrea  di  Giovanni ;  "Woman  in  Blue,"  by  Edouard 
Manet;    "Nude,"  by   Richard   E.    Miller;    water   colors   by   Sargent,   Winslow 
Homer  and  B.  Jonkind. 

Exhibitions 
June  24  to  Sept.  30,  1920 — Early  American  partraits  and  furniture;  Renaissance 

art,  including  sculpture,  painting,  iron  work  and  furniture. 
Oct.  6  to  Oct.  28 — Annual  exhibition  of  contemporary  American  painting. 
Nov.  3  to  Nov.  25 — Exhibition  of  Chinese  paintings;  paintings  and  color  studies 

by  Gaston  La  Touche. 
Dec.  2  to   Dec.  27 — ^Early  American  portraits,   furniture  and  applied  arts,   in 

honor  of  the  Pilgrim  Tercentenary  celebration. 
Jan.  1  to  Jan.  24,  1921 — Pictorial  photographs  of  Greece,  the  work  of  Frederick 

Boissonnas  of  Geneva,  Switzerland. 
Jan.  1  to  Jan.  13 — Japanese  prints  showing  the  Tokaido  Road,  by  Hiroshige. 
Jan.  24  to  Jan.  26 — French  portrait  engravings  of  the  XVII  and  XVIII  Cen- 
turies. 
Feb.  2  to  Feb.  27 — French  and  Flemish  tapestries  and  embroidered  armorial 

hangings,  lent  by  R.  Livingston     Beeckman ;  water  colors  by  William  H. 

Drury,  John  R.  Frazier  and  Anna  A.  Mitchell. 
Mar.  3   to    Mar.  23 — Portraits   of   distinguished   leaders   of   America  and   the 

Allied   Nations,   circulated  by  the  American   Federation  of  Arts;   twenty 

pieces   of   wrought   iron   work  by-  Thomas   Googerty;   pencil   sketches   by 

Kenneth  Conant. 
Mar.  26  to  Apr.  27 — Drawings  and  color  studies  of  French  and  English  XII 

and  XIII  Century  stained  glass  windows,  by  Joseph  G.  Reynolds,  Jr. 
Apr.  1  to  Apr.  27 — Small  bronzes  and  medals  by  American  sculptors,  assembled 

by  National   Sculpture   Society. 
May  3  to  June  1 — Chinese  paintings  and  sculpture. 

CHARLESTON,    S.    C. 

>^CHARLESTON  MUSEUM 

Charles  W.  Kollock President      Oscar  W.  Schleeter Treasurer 

Patrick  Carter Vice-President      Edward  A.  Simmons Secretary 

Laura  M.  Bragg,  Director  and  Curator  of  Anthropology. 

Nathaniel  W.  Stephenson,  Honorary  Curator  of  Art. 

Helen  von  Kolnitz,  Curator  of  South  Carolina  Culture  Collection. 

John  Bennett,  Honorary  Curator  of  South  Carolina  Culture  Collection. 

Edward  A.  Hyer,  Curator  of  Preparation  Department. 

Open  10  A.M.  to  6  P.M.  week  days;  Sundays,  3.30  to  6  p.m.  A  natural  history 
museum  in  which  art  museum  material  is  incorporated  in  culture  exhibits  illus- 
trating the  evolution  of  civilization.  This  includes  Greek,  Egyptian  and  As- 
syrian casts;  pottery  and  porcelains;  textiles;  Colonial  furniture;  primitive 
handicraft. 

Founded  1773;  incorporated  1915.  Meetings  in  April  and  October;  annual 
in  January.  Annual  members,  $10;  sustaining,  $25;  annual  patrons,  $100; 
membership,  59.  Bulletin  published  monthly  October  to  May.  Research  work 
is  done. 

MEMPHIS,    TENN. 

^BROOKS  MEMORIAL 

Overton  Park,  Memphis 

Florence  McIntyre,  Director  and   Secretary 

Mrs.  S.  H.  Brooks  gave  $115,000  in  1914  for  a  memorial  art  gallery,  which 

was    erected    in    1916    in    Overton    Park,    Memphis.      James    Gamble    Rogers, 


I 


TENNESSEE— TEXAS   MUSEUMS  IZ 

MEMPHIS,    TENN. 
Brooks  Memorial — Continued 
architect;  cost,  $115,000.     Open  daily  11  a.m.  to  6  p.m.     Special  efforts  made 
to  reach  school  children  and  to  encourage  local  art. 

The  educational  department  is  conducted  by  voluntary  workers  secured 
through  the  Memphis  Art  Association  and  the  Junior  Art  Association. 

Attendance,  1920,  52,435.  Acquired:  "Frozen  Stream,"  by  E.  W.  Redfield; 
"The  Courtyard,"  by  Robert  Spencer;  miniature  by  George  Healy;  "Morning 
After  Snow,"  by  Birge  Harrison;  "Cupid  Hauling  Net,"  by  unknown  artist; 
"Landscape,"  by  George  Inness,  Jr.;  six  pieces  of  Newcomb  Pottery;  collec- 
tion of  gold  coins;  original  print  of  the  last  address  of  George  Washington, 
bound  by  Otto  Zahn. 

Exhibitions 

October,  1920 — Paintings  by  Brush,  Carlsen,  Metcalf,  Hassam,  Couse,  Crane, 
Dewing,  Dougherty,  Garber,  Spencer,  Wiggins;  work  from  New  York 
public  schools,  circulated  by  the  American  Federation  of  Arts. 

November — Loan  exhibition  of  paintings. 

December — Portraits  by  Sully,  Copley,  West,  Peale,  Stuart ;  exhibition  of 
domestic  architecture,  circulated  by  the  American  Federation  of  Arts. 

January,  1921 — Textiles,  circulated  by  the  American  Federation  of  Arts. 

February — Paintings  by  Mary  Cassatt,  Waugh,  Reid,  Miller,  Tryon,  J.  W. 
Alexander  and  other  American  artists,  circulated  by  the  American  Federa- 
tion of  Arts ;  artistic  photographs  and  textiles,  lent  by  Mrs.  W.  M.  Chase. 

March — Exhibition  of  work  by  National  Association  of  Women  Painters  and 
Sculptors. 

April — Paintings  by  Wiles,  Symonds,  Redfield,  Spencer  and  Hassam ;  w^ork  by 
local  artists  and  from  the  local  schools. 

May — Paintings  by  Gerrit  A.  Beneker. 

June  to  September — Exhibtion  of  paintings  in  Memphis. 

AUSTIN,    TEXAS 

HhTEXAS  FINE  ARTS  ASSOCIATION 

AND 

ELISABET  NEY  MUSEUM 
"Formosa,"  Hyde  Park,  Austin 

W.  J.  Battle President      Emma  Burleson Custodian 

Mrs.  Thomas  F.  Taylor.  .Vice-Pres.      Samuel  Gideon Secretary 

Mrs.  a.  C.  Goeth Treasurer  University  of  Texas,  Austin 

Mrs.  R.  W.  Long Associate  Sec. 

Organized  1911.  Annual  meeting  in  June.  Annual  dues,  $2.50;  associates, 
$5;  life  members,  $50;  honorary  members,  $100.     Membership,  350. 

Purpose  is  to  develop  interest  in  art  and  preserve  the  art  collection  of 
Elisabet  Ney.  This  consists  of  sculpture  by  her  given  to  the  University  of 
Texas,  but  remaining  in  her  former  home  and  studio.  The  property  was 
purchased  by  Mrs.  J.  B.  Dibrell  and  gallery  fitted  up  for  use  of  Association. 

Frequent  exhibitions  are  held. 

FORT    WORTH,    TEXAS 

►^FORT  WORTH  ART  ASSOCIATION 

FORT  WORTH   MUSEUM  OF  ART 
Carnegie  Library  Building,  Fort  Worth 

Mrs.  M.  p.  Bewley President      George  W.   Steere Auditor 

George  H.  Colvin Treasurer      Mrs,  Charles  Scheuber.  .  .Secretary 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  339. 

Open  9  A.M.  to  6  p.m.  on  week  days;  2  to  6  p.m.  Sundays  and  holidays. 


74  TEXAS— WASHINGTON    MUSEUMS 

FORT    WORTH,    TEXAS 

Fort  Worth  Art  Association — Continued 
Admission  free  except  during  special  exliibitions,  when  an  admission  fee  is 

charged  on  week  days,  but  it  is  free  Sundays ;  children  admitted  free  at  all 

times.    Permanent  collection  of  paintings. 

Organized   1910.     Annual   meeting  first   Saturday  in   March.     Annual   dues, 

$2 ;  active  membership,  165. 

Exhibitions:  Jan.   11  to  Feb.  14,  1921,  twelfth  annual  exhibition  of  selected 

paintings  by  American  artists,  assembled  by  the  American  Federation  of  Arts; 

prizes  offered  to  pupils  of  grammar,  primary  and  secondary  schools  for  best 

estimates  of  the  paintings ;   attendance,  6,993. 

MONTPELIER,    VT. 

WOOD  ART  GALLERY 
Montpelier 

O.  D.   Clark President      William  S.  Smith Sec.-Treas. 

Charles  D.  Mather.  .Vice-President 

Founded  1895.  Gallery  open  three  days  a  week.  Annual  meeting,  third 
Tuesday  in  December.  The  Gallery  contains  original  paintings  by  American 
artists  and  a  number  of  copies  of  noted  foreign  masters  made  by  Thomas  W. 
Wood,  N.  A. 

ST.    JOHNSBURY,    VT. 

ST.  JOHNSBURY  ATHEN.liUM 

St.  Johnsbury 
Cornelia  T.  Fairbanks,  Librarian 
Open,  free,  daily,  9  a.m.  to  9  p.m.;  Sundays,  3  to  5  p.m. 

Established  1873.  The  Art  Gallery  contains  about  eighty  works  of  art,  chiefly 
American  and  foreign  paintings  of  the  nineteenth  century  and  copies  of  old 
masters.  There  is  a  bust  of  the  founder  by  J.  Q.  A.  Ward.  The  art  library 
contains  some  rare  and  many  standard  works ;  a  general  library,  lecture  hall 
and  reading  room  also  form  part  of  the  institution. 

RICHMOND,    VA. 

VALENTINE  MUSEUM 
Eleventh  and  Clay  Streets,  Richmond 

Edward  V.  Valentine President      Granville  G.  Valentine.  .Treasurer 

M.    S.   Valentine Vice-Pres.      Mary  O.  Cringan Secretary 

Open,  free,  daily,  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m. 

Licorporated  1894.  Endowment,  $50,000.  The  Museum  contains  books,  pic- 
tures, curios  and  objects  of  archaeology,  anthropology  and  other  kindred  arts. 
Meetings  second  Monday  of  January,  April,  July  and  October.  Average 
annual  attendance,  3,000. 

SEATTLE,    WASH. 

STATE  MUSEUM 

University  of  Washington,  Seattle 

F.  S.  Hall,  Director 

Established  by  Act  of  Legislature  in   1899,  and  under  the  direction  of  the 

Board  of  Regents  of  the  University  of  Washington.     Owing  to  improvements 

to  the  building  only  one  exhibition  was  held  in  1921,  which  was  of  work  by  the 

students  in  the  Fine  Arts  Department  of  the  University  of  Washington. 


WASHINGTON— WISCONSIN  MUSEUMS  75 

TACOMA,    WASH. 

FERRY  MUSEUM 
401  North  Cliff  Avenue,  Tacoma 

W.  L.  McCoRMiCK President       Frank  B.  Cole Treasurer 

Eliza  Ferry  Leary.  ,  .Vice-President      W.  P.  Bonney Secretary 

Organized  1893.  Annual  meeting  in  October.  Annual  dues,  $5.  Contains 
collections  of  marbles  and  antiques;  also  Alaskan,  Indian  and  Oriental  curios, 
baskets,  utensils  and  pioneer  relics.  South  Hall,  first  section  of  the  new  Ferry 
Museum  Building,  was  dedicated  October  24,  1918. 

BELOIT,    WIS. 

ART  HALL  OF  BELOIT  COLLEGE 
Beloit 
Caroline  L.  Burr,  Director 
For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XII,  p.  122. 

Open  free  to  the  public  daily.  Collections  contain  several  hundred  casts,  a 
few  original  sculptures,  paintings,  prints,  36,000  photographs,  lantern  slides, 
furniture,  objects  of  art  and  library  of  several  thousand  volumes. 

Founded  1892.  The  work  is  carried  on  by  the  income  from  the  Azariah 
Eldridge  fund  and  contributions.  Lectures  given  and  loan  exhibitions  held. 
Class  in  drawing  and  sketching. 

A  fine  arts  prize,  open  to  all  students,  given  annually  for  the  best  essay 
upon  a  subject  connected  with  art. 

GREEN    BAY,    WIS. 

GREEN  BAY  PUBLIC  MUSEUM 
Kellogg  Public  Library,  Jefferson  Street,  Green  Bay 

Mrs.  R.  C.  Buchanan President      A.    C.    Neville Treasurer 

F.  T.  Blesch Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  William  Joannes  ....  Secretary 

Mrs.  Wm.  Luckenbach.  .  .Custodian  South  Jefferson  St.,  Green  Bay 

Organized  1916.  Annual  meeting  in  May ;  Board  monthly.  Rooms  in  Public 
Library  are  fitted  up  with  museum  cases ;  open  Wednesdays  and  Saturdays, 
2  to  5  P.M.    Lectures  given  and  exhibitions  held. 

MILWAUKEE,    WIS. 

-CLAYTON  ART  GALLERY 

438  Jefferson  Street,  Milwaukee 

J.  K.  Ilsley President      Howard    Greene Vice-Pres. 

Charles  Dickens,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Gallery  open  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  daily,  except  Monday;   Sundays,  2  to  5  p.m. 
Admission  free,  except  Wednesday  and  Friday,  when  it  is  25  cents.     Modern 
paintings. 

Incorporated  1888.  Annual  meeting  in  December.  Endowment  fund  of 
$100,000  given  by  Frederick  Layton.  The  collection  originally  consisted  of  65 
modern  paintings  and  a  few  pieces  of  sculpture ;  it  now  numbers  nearly  300. 

"      ^MILWAUKEE  ART  INSTITUTE 
456  Jefferson  Street,  Milwaukee 

Samuel  O.   Buckner President      Joseph    Huebl Treasurer 

Ernest    Copeland Vice-President      Mrs.  William  Mayhew.  ..  Secretary 

Dudley  Crafts  Watson,  Director 
Open  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  week  days;  2  to  5  p.m.  Sundays.     Closed  only  on 
Thanksgiving  Day,  Christmas  Day  and  New  Year's  Day.     Admission  fee,  25 
cents  on  four  days;  free  Wednesday,  Saturday  and  Sunday.     Permanent  col- 


16  WISCONSIN  MUSEUMS 

MILWAUKEE,    WIS. 

Milwaukee   Art   Institute — Continued 
lection  includes  American  and  foreign  paintings,  sculpture,  small  collection  of 
antiques  and  textiles,  library. 

Organized  1910.  Meetings  fourth  Thursday  in  October,  January,  April  and 
July;  annual  in  October.  Annual  dues,  $10;  school  teachers,  $2;  contributing, 
$25;  life,  $100;  supporting,  $100;  benefactors,  $1,000.     Membership,  730. 

No  admission  charged  to  Wisconsin  artists,  students,  and  teachers  for  ex- 
hibitions and  educational  lectures.  Total  attendance  January,  1920,  to  January, 
1921,  59,910;  total  for  activities  free  to  the  public,  29,246  (359  programs  for 
adults)  ;  35  gallery  tours  for  school  children,  attendance,  2,132;  twenty-three 
lectures  at  schools,  attendance,  15,040;  ninety-three  gallery  tours  for  adults, 
attendance,  3,666;  thirty-two  outside  organizations  entertained.  Publishes  bul- 
letin eight  times  a  year. 

Exhibitions 

January,  1920 — Paintings  by  Henry  Golden  Dearth ;  Dutch,  Polish,  Japanese 
and  Chinese  handicrafts;  Syrian  handicrafts;  paintings  by  Nicolas  Mac- 
soud. 

February — Paintings  by  Bryson  Burroughs ;  crayon  portraits  by  Max  Wiec- 
zorek ;  paintings  by  Edward  C.  Volkert ;  sculpture  in  bronze,  marble  and 
stone  by  Cartaino  Scarpitta ;  students'  work  in  design  from  Boston  Museum 
and  Rhode  Island  School  of  Design,  circulated  by  the  American  Federation 
of  Arts;  Italian  handicrafts;  French  and  Russian  handicrafts. 

March — Exhibitions  by  fifteen  American  artists;  handicrafts  of  the  British 
Isles ;  Roumanian  handicrafts ;  paintings  in  tempera  by  Henry  G.  Keller ; 
paintings  by  E.  Ambrose  Webster;  exhibition  of  textiles;  Belgian  handi- 
crafts; Czech-Slav  handicrafts;  paintings  by  Mrs.  A.  M.  Ross. 

April — Seventh  annual  exhibition  of  Wisconsin  Painters  and  Sculptors,  and 
Wisconsin  Society  of  Applied  Arts. 

May — Paintings  by  Martha  Walter;  bas-reliefs  and  intaglios  by  Mary  B.  Adels- 
perger;  exhibit  of  students'  work  of  Milwaukee  Art  Institute  classes; 
drawings  by  Paul  Kunze  of  Munich ;  water  colors  by  Vaclav  Vytlacil ; 
paintings  by  Frances  Cramer  Greenman. 

June — Official  exhibit  of  French  Artin  the  United  States;  exhibition  of  textiles. 

July  and  August — Oil  paintings,  water  colors  and  etchings  by  Charles  H. 
Woodbury ;  paintings  by  Louis  Ritman. 

August — Flower  paintings  by  Gertrude  J.  Barnes ;  paintings  by  Ignacio  Zulo- 
aga ;  Wudart  toys ;  prize  drawings  for  the  county  hospital.  Van  Ryn  and 
De  Gelkcke ;  line  drawings  by  Ananda  Coomarasawamy. 

September — Paintings  by  Emily  Groom ;  water  colors  by  Mabel  Key ;  paintings 
of  Venice  by  Frida  Gugler ;  Lepere  wood  engravings ;  exhibition  of 
American  paintings ;  paintings  by  Charles  Russell ;  water  colors  by  Mrs. 
Frank  M.  Hoyt ;  wrought  iron  work  by  Thomas  Googerty;  batiks  by 
American  crafters. 

October — Paintings  by  Stephen  Haweis ;  wood  carvings  by  Charles  Haag ; 
Cheney  silks ;  paintings  by  business  men  of  Chicago ;  Lamson  textiles, 
coverlets  and  Persian  shawls. 

November — Loan  portrait.  Tercentenary  Exhibition  of  Colonial  and  early 
American  textiles ;  batiks  by  Herman  Sachs  ;  paintings  by  Charles  Lesaar. 

December — Paintings  and  etchings  by  Eugene  Higgins ;  etchings  by  Arthur 
Heintzelman ;  drawings  and  water  colors  by  Jessie  King;  Mrs.  E.  B.  Hodge 
collection  of  embroideries  of  the  Near  East;  toys  made  by  the  Saturday 
scholarship  class ;  paintings  by  six  American  artists ;  paintings  by  William 
E.  Ellis;  photographs  by  G.  R.  Ballance. 


Associations  and  Societies 


(Not  including  museums  which  are  given  in  separate  section,     see  pages 

13-76) 

Note. — Each  organization  is  listed  under  the  city  where  the  office  is  located.  State 
societies  are  entered  immediately  following  the  State  heading  and  precede  the  cities  in 
each  State. 

Federations  and  national  societies  without  permanent  headquarters  form  the  first 
group  and  are  entered  before  the  States.  A  full  index  with  cross  references  will  be 
found  at  the  end  of  the  book. 

The  Greek  cross  (►J*)  preceding  the  name  of  an  organization  indicates  that  it  is 
a  Chapter  of  The  American   Federation   of   Arts. 

NATIONAL  SOCIETIES 

THE  AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS 
1741  New  York  Avenue,   N.W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Robert  W.  de  Forest President 

New  York 


Chas.  L.  Hutchinson,  1st  Vice-Pres. 

Chicago 
Leila    Mechlin Secretary 

Washington 
Helen  H.  Cambell.  . .  Asst.  Secretary 

Washington 


Richard  F.  Bach.  ..  .Extension  Sec. 

New  York 
Charles  D.  Norton Treasurer 

New  York 
Irene  M.  Richards Asst.  Treas. 

Washington 


Vice-Presidents 


James  Barnes,  Princeton 
Cecilia  Beaux,  New  York 
W.  K.  BixBY,  St.  Louis 
E.  H.  Blashfield,  Nev/  York 
Glenn  Brown,  Washington 
C.  T.  Crocker,  San  Francisco 
Frederick  A.  Delano,  Washington 
A.  E.  Gallatin,  New  York 
William  O.  Goodman,  Chicago 
Morris  Gray,  Boston 
A.  A.  Hamerschlag,  Pittsburgh 
Edgar  L.  Hewett,  Santa  Fe 


Archer  M.  Huntington,  New  York 
Ralph  King,  Cleveland 
Alexander  R.  Lawton,  Savannah 
John  F.  Lewis,  Philadelphia 
E.  D.  Libbey,  Toledo 
John  Barton  Payne,  Washington 
A.  W.  Mellon,  Washington 
William  B.  Sanders,-  Cleveland 
John  R.  Van  Derlip,  Minneapolis 
Charles  D.  Walcott,  Washington 
Henry  White,  Washington 


1919-1922 
Helen  C.  Frick 
Cass  Gilbert 
Francis  C.  Jones 
R.  P.  Lamont 
Charles  Moore 
Charles  D.  Norton 
Duncan  Phillips 
Edward  Robinson 


Board  of   Directors 
1920-1923 
Herbert  Adams 
George  G.  Booth 
Charles  A.  Coolidge 
Robert  W.  de  Forest 
Otto  H.  Kahn 
Charles  Allen  Munn 
Mrs.  Gustav  Radeke 
G.  D.  Seymour 


1921-1924 
Mrs.  John  W.  Alexander 
John  W.  Beatty 
Robert  Woods  Bliss 
Andrew  Wright  Crawford 
Charles   L.   Hutchinson 
H.W.  Kent 
Florence   N.  Levy 
Elihu  Root 


Chairmen  of   Special   Committees 

Charles  Moore,  Chairman  General  Committee  on  War  Memorials 

Charles  Allen  Munn,  Chairman,  Publication  Committee 

Francis  C.  Jones,  Chairman,  Exhibition  Committee 

n 


78  AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS 

Editorial   Staff  and  Offices 

"The  American  Magazine  of  Art,"  Leila  Mechlin,  Editor. 

"American  Art  Annual,"  Frances  R.  Howard,  Editor. 

Editorial  Office,  1741  New  York  Ave.,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Organized  1909.  Incorporated  1916.  The  membership  is  made  up  of  both 
individuals  and  organizations,  the  latter  styled  Chapters.  Annual  dues  of 
chapters  $10;  Associate  members  $3  (receive  "The  American  Magazine  of 
Art")  ;  Active  members  $10  (have  the  privilege  of  voting,  receive  "The 
American  Magazine  of  Art,"  and  other  publications  distributable  to  members)  ; 
Contributing  members  $100  a  year.  There  are  277  chapters,  799  active  members, 
2,161  associate  members. 

The  Twelfth  Annual  Convention  of  the  American  Federation  of  Arts  was 
held  in  Washington,  D.  C,  May  18th,  19th  and  20th,  1921.  Over  two  hundred 
delegates  were  in  attendance.  Five  of  the  six  sessions  were  held  in  the 
auditorium  of  the  Corcoran  Gallery  of  Art.  The  exception  was  the  after- 
noon session  on  the  first  day,  which  was  held  in  the  auditorium  of  the 
National  Museum. 

Colonel  C.  O.  Sherrill,  Secretary  of  the  National  Commission  of  Fine  Arts, 
made  the  address  of  welcome  and  directed  attention  to  the  plan  for  the 
artistic  development  of  Washington  drawn  up  by  the  Burnham  Park  Com- 
mission, urging  those  interested  in  art  througl;iout  the  country  to  exert  their 
influence  to  induce  its  realization.  The  address  of  the  President,  Mr.  Robert 
W.  de  Forest,  dealt  chiefly  with  the  possible  danger  of  a  tariff  being  placed 
on  art  in  the  revision  of  the  tariff  laws,  and  called  on  Mr.  John  Quinn,  of  New 
York,  to  amplify  the  subject.  The  Secretary,  the  Treasurer,  the  Extension 
Secretary  and  Professor  Paul  H.  Grummann,  in  charge  of  the  Federation's 
Western  office,  presented  reports. 

The  afternoon  session  on  May  18th  opened  with  a  demonstration  by  Mr. 
Ross  Crane  of  the  Better  Homes  Institute,  of  the  Art  Institute  of  Chicago. 
Mr.  L.  M.  Churbuck,  Director  of  Art  of  the  Brockton,  Massachusetts,  Fair, 
spoke  on  "Art  in  State  Fairs";  Miss  Mary  Powell,  head  of  the  Art  Depart- 
ment of  the  St.  Louis  Public  Library,  on  "Art  in  the  Public  Library" ;  Mr. 
Allen  Eaton  on  "Art  in  the  Schools";  and  Mr.  John  F.  Braun,  President  of 
the  Philadelphia  Art  Alliance,  on  "The  Alliance  of  the  Arts." 

The  morning  session  on  the  19th  had  as  a  general  topic,  "The  Artist's 
Point  of  View,"  with  addresses  by  Mr.  Herbert  Adams,  on  "Sculpture," 
Mr.  J.  Monroe  Hewlett,  on  "Mural  Painting,"  Mr.  George  Harding,  on  "Il- 
lustration," Mr.  John  Taylor  Arms,  on  "Etching  and  the  Graphic  Arts,"  and 
Mr.  Albert  Kelsey  on  "Architecture."  The  general  topic  of  the  afternoon 
session  of  that  day  was  Professional  Art  Problems  and  there  was  general  dis- 
cussion of  the  following  sub-topics:  Prizes — Do  They  Stimulate  Art?;  How 
to  Promote  the  Sale  of  Works  by  American  Artists?  The  Handicrafts — How 
They  Can  be  Encouraged?  At  this  session,  by  special  request  Mrs.  Whitford 
gave  a  brief  talk  on  "Art  for  the  Farmer's  Wife." 

On  May  20th  at  the  morning  session  the  program  was  as  follows  :  "The  Art 
Education  We  Need,"  by  Leon  Loyal  Winslow,  of  the  University  of  the 
State  of  New  York;  "School  of  Illustration  and  Commercial  Art  for  Dis- 
abled Soldiers,  by  W.  A.  Rogers,  director  of  the  school;  "The  American 
Academy  in  Rome,"  by  Charles  D.  Norton;  "The  Tiffany  Foundation,"  by 
Stanley  Lothrop,  Director;  "The  Peterborough  Colony,"  by  Mrs.  Edward 
MacDowell,  Director. 

A  special  feature  of  the  afternoon,  and  closing  session  on  the  20th  was  an 
illustration  of  "Methods  of  Appreciation  of  Music,"  by  Mr.  Thomas  Whitney 
Surette,  of  Concord,  Massachusetts,  Director  of  Music  at  the  Cleveland  Art 
Museum,  illustrated  by  Brahms  Quartet  for  violin,  viola,  violoncello  and  piano, 
and  by  Mrs.  Walter  Bruce  Howe  and  members  of  the  National  String  Quartet. 
At  this  session  Mr.  Rossiter  Howard  of  the  Cleveland  Museum  spoke  on 
"Educational  Work  of  an  Art  Museum,"     Mr.  William  Laurel  Harris  spoke 


AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS  79 

on  the  "Art  Center  Incorporated,  of  New  York— Its  Objects  and  Aims." 
Certain  resolutions  were  passed,  dealing  with  art  education,  the  tariff  laws, 
and  the  advancement  of  the  handicrafts.     The  annual  election  took  place. 

A  reception  was  given  in  honor  of  the  delegates  on  the  afternoon  of  May 
18th  in  the  National  Gallery  of  Art,  where  a  collection  of  War  Portraits 
by  eminent  American  artists  was  then  on  view.  In  the  Corcoran  Gallery  of 
Art  the  exhibition  of  British  Arts  and  Crafts  was  set  forth  for  the  special 
benefit  of  the  delegates  to  the  Convention,  through  the  courtesy  of  the 
Washington  Society  of  the  Fine  Arts. 

On  the  19th  the  delegates  were  received  at  the  White  House  by  the 
President  at  noon  and  by  Mrs.  Harding  in  the  afternoon.  That  evening  the 
Pennell  Collection  of  Whistleriana  was  opened  with  a  private  view  to  the 
delegates  in  the  Library  of  Congress.  Opportunity  was  given  the  delegates 
to  visit  the  Phillips  Memorial  Gallery  on  the  afternoon  of  the  20th,  and 
that  evening  the  convention  was  concluded  with  the  usual  dinner  at 
Rauscher's.  Over  three  hundred  were  in  attendance.  Mr.  de  Forest  pre- 
sided, and  the  speakers  were  Dr.  L.  S.  Rowe,  Director  of  the  Pan-American 
Union,  Mr.  Cass  Gilbert,  Miss  Violet  Oakley  and  Mr.  David  Mannes. 

The  regular  work  of  the  American  Federation  of  Arts  is  chiefly  along  four 
lines.  It  sends  out  traveling  exhibitions ;  circulates  illustrated  lectures  and 
portfolios  of  prints;  publishes  "The  American  Magazine  of  Art,"  an  illustrated 
monthly  magazine,  and  "The  American  Art  Annual,"  a  standard  book  of 
reference  for  art  in  the  United  States. 

The  Federation  maintains  a  branch  office  at  Lincoln,  Neb.,  and  is  repre- 
sented on  the  Pacific  Coast  by  Pedro  J.  Lemos,  Stanford  University,  Calif. 

During  the  year  1920-21  The  American  Federation  of  Arts  sent  out  50  col- 
lections for  which  there  were  214  engagements.  A  complete  list  of  the  last 
season's  exhibitions  is  given  below.  The  Federation  now  has  thirty-six  il- 
lustrated lectures  which  are  sent  to  places  where  authoritative  lecturers  cannot 
be  secured. 

EXHIBITIONS   CIRCULATED    1920-1921 

1.  War  Portraits  of  Leaders  in  the  Great  War,  painted  by  Eminent  Amer- 
ican Artists :  20  pictures — Providence,  R.  I. ;  Philadelphia,  Pa. ;  Washington, 
D.  C. ;  Princeton,  N.  J. ;  New  Haven,  Conn. ;  Boston,  Mass. 

2.  Collection  A — Oil  paintings  by  contemporary  American  painters,  lent 
by  the  artists :  35  pictures— Atlanta,  Ga. ;  Columbia,  S.  C. ;  Youngstown,  O. ; 
Jacksonville,  111.;  Ann  Arbor,  Mich.;  Allentown,  Pa.;  Decatur,  111.;  Spring- 
field, 111. 

3.  Collection  B — Oil  paintings  of  moderate  size  and  cost  lent  by  the  artists: 
40  pictures — Brookings,  S.  D.;  Lincoln,  Neb.;  Sioux  City,  la.;  Topeka,  Kan.; 
Ann  Arbor,  Mich. 

4.  Collection  D — Oil  paintings  lent  by  the  Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art : 
31  pictures— Rochester,  N.  Y. ;  Meadville,  Pa.;  Elmira,  N.  Y. ;  Oberlin,  O. ; 
New  Bedford,  Mass. ;  Emporia,  Kan. ;  Lincoln,  Neb. 

5.  Collection  E — Thirty  paintings  by  early  American  painters  lent  by  the 
Ehrich  Galleries— Vermilion,  S.  D. ;  Lincoln,  Neb. ;  Iowa  City,  la. 

6.  Collection  G — Fifteen  paintings  lent  by  the  National  Gallery  and  by 
special  request — Davenport,  la. ;  Syracuse,  N.  Y. ;  Memphis,  Tenn. ;  Oklahoma 
City,  Okl. ;  Jackson,  Mich. ;  Ann  Arbor,  Mich. ;  La  Crosse,  Wis. 

7.  Collection  H — Twelve  paintings  by  American  artists  lent  by  the  Chicago 
Art  Institute.  (Friends  of  American  Art).  Rochester,  N.  Y. ;  Atlanta,  Ga. ; 
South  Manchester,  Conn. ;  Ann  Arbor,  Mich. ;  Dubuque,  la. 

8.  Oil  paintings  lent  by  Vose  (special  collection) —  Nashville.  Tenn. 

9.^  Oil  paintings  lent  by  the  artists  and  by  dealers  (Pacific  Coast  circuit) 
34  pictures— San  Diego,  Cal. ;  Stanford  University.  Cal. ;  Sacramento,  Cal. 

10.  Oil  paintings  lent  by  the  National  Academy  of  Design  and  by  Boston 
and  Philadelphia  artists;  41  pictures— Prescott,  Ariz.;  Muskogee,  Okla. ;  Ft. 
Worth,  Tex. ;  San  Antonio,  Tex. ;  Savannah,  Ga. ;  Norfolk,  Va. 


80  AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS 

11.  Paintings  and  drawings  by  Capt.  George  Harding:  50  pictures — 
Rochester,  N.  Y. ;  Baltimore,  Md. ;  Washington,  D.  C. ;  Elmira,  N.  Y. ;  Spring- 
field, 111. 

12.  Copies  of  Works  of  the  Old  Masters,  made  by  the  late  Carroll  Beck- 
with :  32  pictures — Decatur,  111. ;  Little  Rock,  Ark. ;  Logansport,  Ind. ;  Em- 
poria, Kan. 

13.  American  Water  Color  Society — 1920  Rotary  :  78  pictures — Des  Moines, 
la. ;  Lincoln,  Neb. ;  Jacksonville,  111. ;  Nashville,  Tenn. ;  Lancaster,  Pa. ;  Ypsil- 
anti,  Mich.;  Grand  Rapids.  Mich.;  Oberlin,  O. 

14.  American  Water  Color  Society — 1921  Rotary  :  98  pictures — Utica,  N.  Y. ; 
Rochester,  N.  Y. ;  Omaha,  Neb. ;  Washington,  D.  C. 

15.  Water  colors  assembled  from  the  Philadelphia  Water  Color  Club's 
Exhibition:  12  pictures  and  a  group  by  Cecil  Brewer — New  Bedford,  Mass.; 
Indianapolis,  Ind. ;  Youngstown,  O. ;  Elmira,  N.  Y. ;  State  College,  Pa. 

16.  Studies  for  Mural  Decorations  by  Violet  Oakley :  132  pictures — Phil- 
adelphia, Pa. 

17.  Mural  Painting  by  Allen  True ;  72  pictures — Norman,  Okla. ;  Stillwater, 
Okla. 

18.  Raemaekers'  Cartoons :    108  prints — Grand  Rapids,  Mich. 

19.  Art  School  Work  from  the  Rhode  Island  School  of  Design,  Pratt  In- 
stitute, Pennsylvania  Museum  and  School  of  Industrial  Art  and  School  of 
Boston  Museum :  121  mounts — Winnipeg,  Can. ;  Muskegon,  Mich. ;  Grand 
Forks,  N.  D. ;  Fargo,  N.  D. ;  Greeley,  Col. ;  Ypsilanti,  Mich. ;  Highland  Park, 
Mich. ;  Springfield,  111. 

20.  Etchings  lent  by  the  Brooklyn  Society  of  Etchers  from  their  5th 
Annual  Exhibition :  100  prints — Columbus,  O. ;  Oxford,  O. 

21.  Etchings  by  the  foremost  contemporary  etchers  lent  by  Keppel  &  Co.; 
50  prints — ^Seattle,  Wash. ;  Indianapolis,  Ind. ;  Akron,  O. ;  Winnipeg,  Can. ; 
Fairmont,  W.  Va. ;  Oxford,  O^ 

22.  British  Etchings  lent  by  the  Print  Society  of  Ringwood,  England :  45 
prints — Washington,  D.  C. ;  Baltimore,  Md. ;  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

23.  Lithographs  by  Joseph  Pennell — Akron,  O. 

24.  Wood  Block  Prints  by  the  late  Helen  Hyde:  63  exhibits — Saginaw, 
Mich.;  Columbus,  O. ;  Oxford,  O.  (Western  College);  Oxford,  O.  (Miami 
University). 

25.  Prints  for  the  Home.  #1 — Reproductions  chiefly  in  color  of  paintings 
by  distinguished  artists  (400)  :  Grand  Rapids,  Mich. ;  New  York,  N.  Y. ; 
Albany,  N.  Y. ;  Towson,  Md. 

26.  Prints  for  the  Home.  #2 — Reproductions  chiefly  in  color  of  paintings 
by  distinguished  artists  (200)  :  Hood  River,  Oregon ;  Eugene,  Oregon ;  Ellens- 
burg,  Wash. ;  Corvallis,  Wash. ;  Ft.  Collins,  Col. ;  Emporia,  Kan. 

27.  Prints  for  the  Home.  #3 — Reproductions  chiefly  in  color  of  paintings 
by  distinguished  artists  (200)— Elmira,  N.  Y. ;  Scranton,  Pa.;  Birmingham, 
Ala. ;  University,  Ala. ;  Fairmont,  W.  Va. ;  Oxford,  O. 

28.  Medici  Prints :  47  fac-similes  in  color  of  paintings  by  the  Old  Masters, 
lent  by  Mr.  Robert  W.  de  Forest— Andalusia,  Ala. ;  Canyon,  Tex. ;  Elmira, 
N.  Y. ;  Winnipeg,  Can. 

29.  Ninety  wood  engravings  by  the  late  Henry  Wolf — Washington,  D.  C. 

30.  Dutch  Etching  in  the  Seventeenth  Century :  24  prints  lent  by  the  Metro- 
politan Museum — Washington,  D.  C. 

31.  Pictorial  Photography  #1—133  unframed  photographs  lent  by  the  Pic- 
torial Photographers  of  America— Savannah,  Ga. ;  State  College,  Pa.; 
Rochester,  N.  Y. ;  Jackson,  Mich. 

32.  Pictorial  Photography  #2—132  unframed  photographs  lent  by  the  Pic- 
tonal  Photgraphers  of  America— Washington,  D.  C. ;  Stanford  University, 
Cal. ;  San  Diego,  Cal. ;  Brookings,  S.  D. 

2>Z.     Pictorial  Photographs  of  Greece  by  M,  Frederic  Boissonnas :  50  pictures 


AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS  81 

— Providence,  R.  I.;   Rochester,  N.  Y. ;  Toledo,  O. ;   St.  Louis,  Mo.;   Boston, 
Mass. 

34.  Industrial  Art  Exhibition :  90  exhibits — Assembled  by  the  Art  Alliance : 
Sacramento,  Cal. ;  New  Orleans,  La.;  Jackson,  Miss. 

35.  Textiles  by  American  Manufacturers  assembled  by  Mr.  William  Laurel 
Harris — Ypsilanti,  Mich.;  Springfield,  111.;  Memphis,  Tenn. ;  Muskegon,  Mich.; 
Jacksonville,  111.;  Youngstown,  O.;  Columbus,  O.;  Kansas  City,  Mo. 

36.  Tapestries  and  Brocades  assembled  by  Mr.  William  Laurel  Harris — 
Philadelphia,  Pa. ;   Kansas  City,  Mo. ;   New  Bedford,  Mass. 

?n .  Textile  Designs  and  Fabrics  assembled  by  Mr.  William  Laurel  Harris — 
Toledo,  O. ;   St.  Paul,  Minn.;  Corvallis,  Ore.;  Berkeley,  Cal. 

38.  British  Commercial  Posters :  64  exhibits — Asheville,  N.  C. ;  Indian- 
apolis, Ind. ;  Columbus,  O. ;  Grand  Rapids,  Mich. ;  Winnipeg,  Can. ;  Chicago,  111. 

39.  Printing  Exhibit — ^examples  by  some  of  the  foremost  printers,  lent  by 
the  Metropolitan  Museum — Savannah,  Ga. 

40.  Domestic  Architecture — Photographs,  plans,  etc.,  assembled  by  the 
Architectural  League  of  New  York — Indianapolis,  Ind.;  Denver,  Col.;  Toledo, 
O. ;  Memphis,  Tenn. ;  Dayton,  O. ;  New  Bedford,  Mass. 

41.  Interior  Decoration  #1.  Color  schemes  for  model  rooms  and  actual 
materials,  arranged  by  Mr.  Henry  W.  Frohne — Stanford  University,  Cal. ; 
Los  Angeles.  Cal. ;  Hollywood,  Cal. ;  Youngstown,  O. ;  Winnipeg,  Can. 

42.  Interior  Decoration  #2.  Color  schemes  for  model  rooms  and  actual 
materials :  arranged  by  Mr.  Henry  W.  Frohne — Mobile,  Ala. ;  Washington, 
D.  C. ;  Toledo,  O. ;  New  Bedford,  Mass.;  University,  Ala.;  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 

43.  Landscape  Architecture— 30  mounts  showing  122  photographs  of  the 
best  work  in  Landscape  Architecture,  assembled  by  the  American  Society  of 
Landscape  Architects — Ypsilanti,  Mich. ;  Columbus,  O. ;  Dayton,  O. 

44.  War  Memorial  Photographs — Set  #1 — Racine,  Wis. ;  Cape  Girardeau, 
Mo. ;  Manhattan,  Kan. ;  Cairo,  111. 

45.  War  Memorial  Photographs  :  Set  #2 — Stanford  University,  Cal. ;  Los 
Angeles,  Cal. 

46.  War  Memorial  Photographs :  Set  #3 — New  Bedford,  Mass. ;  Baltimore, 
Md. ;   Washington,   D.    C. 

47.  Sculpture  Exhibition — 30  small  bronzes  lent  by  the  sculptors — Mus- 
kegon, Mich. ;  Ithaca,  N.  Y. ;  Scranton,  Pa. ;  Providence,  R.  I. 

48.  Public  School  Art  Work — 100  mounts  of  work  ifrom  schools  in  Wash- 
ington, D.  C. — Cape  Girardeau,  Mo. ;  Mobile,  Ala. ;  Peru,  Neb. ;  Sioux  City, 
Iowa ;  Knoxville,  Tenn. 

49.  Art  Work  Done  in  the  New  York  Public  Schools  :  40  mounts — Memphis, 
Tenn. ;  Mobile,  Ala. ;  Akron,  O. ;  Erie,  Pa. ;  New  Haven,  Conn. ;  Bangor, 
Me.;  Columbia,  S.  C. ;  Oxford,  O. 

50.  Children's  Exhibition — pictures,  prints,  books,  handicrafts — Hollywood, 
Cal. ;  Stanford  University,  Cal. ;  Logansport,  Ind. ;  Ypsilanti,  Mich. 

CHAPTERS    OF    THE    AMERICAN     FEDERATION     OF    ARTS 

With  name  and  address  of  secretary,  director  or  delegate 
National  Societies 

American  Academy  in  Rome,  C.  Grant  La  Farge,  101  Park  Avenue,  New 

York,  N.  Y. 
American    Scenic   and    Historic    Preservation    Society,    Edward    H.    Hall, 

154  Nassau  Street,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
American  Society  of  Landscape  Architects,  Bremer  W.  Pond,  18  Tremont 

Street,  Boston,  Mass. 
Association   of  the  Alumni   of   the   American   Academy  in   Rome,   R.   B. 

Barnes,  70  Fifth  Avenue,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Eastern  Arts  Association,  Frank  E.  Matthewson,  Dickinson  High  School, 

Jersey  City.  N.  J. 
Pictorial    Photographers   of  America,   J.   R.   Mason,  65  East   56th   Street, 

New  York,  N.  Y. 


82  AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS 

Alabama 

Birmingham — Alabama  Art  League,  Margaret  McAdory,  Room  27,  Watts 

Building. 
Montgomery — Montgomery     Chapter    of    Alabama     Art    League,     Mrs. 

Churchill  Marks,  301  Church  St. 
University — Art  Department,  University  of  Alabama,  Martha  F.  Fort. 

Arkansas 

Little  Rock — Fine  Arts  Club,  May  Danaher,  2022  Izard  Street. 
California 

Hollywood — Art  Association,  Virginia  E.   Graefif,    director,   1633   Gower 

Street. 
Laguna  Beach — Art  Association,  Mrs.  F.  P.  MacPherson. 
West  Coast  Arts,  Inc.,  Mrs.  Ella  H.  Tanberg,  President. 
Los  Angeles — California  Art  Club,  Dana  Bartlett. 

Friday  Morning  Club,  Mrs.  Randall  Hutchinson,  chairman,  2817  Menlo 
Avenue. 
Oakland — Oakland  Art  Gallery,  Worth  Ryder,  12th  and  Fallon  Streets. 
Palo  Alto — Palo  Alto  Art  Club,  Mrs.  Ellen  C.  Elliot,  Stanford  University, 

Calif. 
Pasadena — Music    and   Art   Association,    Geo.    E.   Hale,    president.    Fair 

Oaks  and  Lincoln  Avenues. 
San  Diego — Friends  of  Art,  San  Diego  Art  Guild,  A.  B.  Titus,  chairman, 
2924  Juniper  Street. 
San  Francisco — Museum  of  Art,  J.  Nilsen  Laurvik,  director. 

Stanford    University — Leland    Stanford   Junior    University,    Pedro    J. 
Lemos,  director  of  Museum  of  Fine  Arts. 
Canada 

Toronto — The  Art  Gallery  of  Toronto,  Edward  R.  Greig,  "The  Grange." 
Winnipeg — Art  Gallery  and  School  of  the  Board  of  Trade,  A.  J.  Mus- 
grove,  director, 
Colorado 

Colorado  Federation  of  Women's  Clubs — Mrs.  Joe  Mills,  chairman,  1012 

15th  Street,  Boulder. 
Colorado    Springs — Broadmoor   Art   Academy,    Stanley    Stoner,   director, 

West  Dale  Street. 
Denver — Art  Commission  of  the   City  and  County  of  Denver,  Marie  L. 
Woodson,  832  S.  Pearl  Street. 
Denver  Art  Association,  George  William  Eggers,  Public  Library. 
Historic  Art  Club,  Mrs.  Will  S.  Arnold,  3814  Vrain  Street. 

Connecticut 

Bridgeport — The  Bridgeport  Art  League,  Mrs.  Philip  Holzer,  1070  Iranis- 

ton  Avenue. 
Hartford— Art  Society  of  Hartford,  Mrs.  H.  B.  Freeman,  1045  Asylum 
Avenue. 
Municipal  Art  Society  of  Hartford,  William  Horniss,  president,   102 
Huntington  Street. 
Waterbury — Mattatuck  Historical  Society,  Frederick  I.  Mason,  119  West 
Main  Street. 
Delaware 

Wilmington— Wilmington   Society  of  Fine  Arts,  George   P.  Bissell,  Du 
Pont  Bldg. 

District  of  Columbia 

Washington— Arts  Club,  W.  E.  Safford.  2017  I  Street. 
Corcoran  Gallery  of  Art,  C.  Powell  Minnigerode. 


AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS  83 

District  of  Columbia — Continued 

Landscape  Club,  A.  J.   Schram,  927  M  Street. 

Public  School  Art  League,  Myra  M.  Hendley,  1216  L  Street. 

Society  of  Washington  Artists,  A.  H.  O.  Rolle,  134  Quincy  Place. 

Washington  Society  of  the  Archseological  Institute  of  America,  Mit- 
chell Carroll,  1741  New  York  Avenue. 

Washington  Society  of  the  Fine  Arts,  Leila  Mechlin,  1741  New  York 
Avenue. 

Washington  Water  Color  Club,  A.  Elizabeth  Sawtelle,  2102  O  Street. 

Florida 

Pensacola — Art  Club,  Mrs.  Susie  E.  Marble,  730  North  12th  Avenue. 

St.  Petersburg — Art  Club,  Mary  M.  Kingsley. 

« 
Georgia 

Athens — Art  Association,  Laura  Blackshear. 

Atlanta — Atlanta  Art  Association,  Janet  Evins,  Cable  Piano  Co.  BIdg. 

Macon — Art  Association,  Mrs.  M.  B.  Hammond,  514  Napier  Avenue. 

Savannah — Telfair  Academy  of  Arts  and   Sciences,  Charles  F.  Groves, 
P.  O.  Box  727. 

Hawaii 

Honolulu — The  Art  League,  Roger  Noble  Burnham. 

Illinois 

Bloomington — Woman's  Club,  Mrs.  James  Riley. 

Charleston — Art  Association  of  Charleston,  Mrs.  E.  H.  Taylor,  820  First 
Street. 
Eastern  Illinois  State  Teachers'  College,  Grace  E.  Messer,  1639  South 
7th. 
Chicago — Arche  Club  Art  Class,  Mrs.  B.  J.  Buckingham,  chairman,  5652 
Kenwood  Avenue. 
Art  Institute  of  Chicago,  Charles  H.  Burkholder. 
Chicago  Academy  of   Fine  Arts,   Carl   N.   Werntz,   director,   81   East 

Madison  Street. 
Chicago    Public    School    Art    Society,    Mrs.    Theodore    Tiecken,    2944 

Washington  Boulevard. 
Chicago  Woman's  Club,  Mrs.  Edward  L.  Murray,  treasurer,  4454  Sid- 
ney Avenue. 
Municipal  Art  League  of  Chicago,  Mrs.  William  Foster  Young,  5319 
Kenmore  Avenue. 
Danville — Art  Association,  Mrs.  Nelle  Wall,  126  N.  Vermilion  Street. 
Decatur — Art  Institute,  Marie  Buckingham,   1171  West  Main  Street. 
Jacksonville — School  of  Fine  Arts  of  Illinois  Woman's  College,  Nellie 

A.  Knopf,  director. 
Peoria — Peoria  Society  of  Allied  Arts,  Mark  H.  Whitmeyer. 
Springfield — Springfield  Art  Association,  Mrs.  Howard  T.  Wilson,  presi- 
dent, Goodland  Place,  Virden,  111. 

Indiana 

Indianapolis — Art  Association  of  Indianapolis,  Evans  Woollen,  president, 

John  Herron  Art  Institute. 
Logansport — Logansport    Art    Association,    Jennie    B.    Alackintosh,    1107 

Broadway. 
Peru— Peru  Art  Club,  Mrs.  Eugene  Ensel,  18  South  Huntington. 
Terre  Haute — Art  Section  of  Woman's  Club,  Junia  Rynerson,  Fairbanks 

Memorial  Library. 


84  AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS 

Iowa 

Cedar  Rapids — Cedar  Rapids  Art  Association,  Airs.  Bert  Rugh,  2900  First 
Avenue,  East  Cedar  Rapids. 

Davenport — Davenport  Academy  of  Sciences,  Edward  K.  Putnam. 
Tri-City  Art  League,  Mrs.  C.  N.  Chubb,  222^  Main  Street. 

Dubuque— Dubuque   Art   Association,   Kate   K.    Van   Duzee,    1471    Main 
Street. 

Fairfield— Art  Study  Club,  Mrs.  P.  A.  Hildreth,  307  South  Main  Street. 

Iowa  City — Iowa  City  Fine  Arts  Association,  Mrs.  J.  White  Brown,  6  East 
Court. 
Kansas 

Emporia — Kansas  State  Normal  School,  W.  H.  Kerr. 

Manhattan — Kansas  State  Agricultural  College,  Araminta  Holman,  De- 
partment of  Home  Art.    ** 

ToPEKA — Art  Guild,  Washburn  College,  Mrs.  L.  D.  Whittemore. 

Wichita — Art  Association,  C.  A.  Seward,  213  Wheeler-Kelley  Bldg. 

Kentucky 

Campbellsville — Tuesday  Book  Club,  Mrs.  J,  T.  Moss. 

Lexington — University  of  Kentucky,  Department  of  Art  and  Design. 

Louisville — Louisville  Art  Association,   Caroline   Q.   Fuller,   Free  Public 

Library. 
North  Middletown — Kentucky  Federation  of  Women's  Clubs,  Mrs.  Alvan 

Harbison,   Shelbyville. 

Louisiana  i]     i  ^  ■  M 

New  Orleans — Art  Association  of  New  Orleans,  Lydia  M.  Brown,  2103 
Chestnut  Street. 
Isaac  Delgado  Museum  of  Art,  E.  W.  Smith,  City  Park. 
Shreveport — Woman's    Department    Club,    Mrs.    Henry    S.    Hinton,    524 
Stoner  Avenue. 

Maine 

Brunswick — Bowdoin  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Henry  E.  Andrews,  director. 
Portland — Society  of  Arts  and  Crafts,  Mrs,  Edward  Stephens,  34  Cod- 
man  Street. 

Maryland 

Baltimore — Charcoal   Club  of  Baltimore,  Henry  H.  Wiegand,  president, 

St.  Paul  and  Preston  Streets. 
Friends  of  Art,  Adaline  D.  Piper,  1022  North  Calvert  Street. 
Handicraft  Club  of  Baltimore,  Eliza  Ingle,  243  West  Biddle  Street. 
Maryland  Institute  for  the  Promotion  of  the  Mechanic  Arts,  Thomas 

G.  Young,  Mt.  Royal  Avenue. 
Municipal  Art  Society  of  Baltimore,  Josias  Pennington,  Professional 

Bldg. 
Peabody  Institute  of  the  City  of  Baltimore,  Louis  H.  Dielman. 

Massachusetts 

Boston — Boston    Art    Club,    James    Fortescue,    Newbury   and    Dartmouth 

Streets. 
Boston  Society  of  Architects,  E.  H.  Hoyt,  220  Devonshire  Street. 
Copley  Society  of  Boston,  Frederick  W.  Coburn,  Cambridge. 
Folk  Handicrafts.  M.  Foster,  93  Tyler  Street. 
Guild  of  Boston  Artists,  Mrs.  T.  S.  Perry,  162  Newbury  Street. 
Massachusetts   Normal    Art    School,    Royal   Bailey   Farnum,   director, 

State  Board  of  Education. 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Benjamin  Ives  Oilman. 
Society  of  Arts  and  Crafts.  H.  Percy  Macomber.  9  Park  Street. 


AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS  85 

Massachusetts — C  ontinucd 
Bourne — Old  Colony  Union,  Mrs.  M.  T.  Garland,  Buzzards  Bay,  Mass. 
Brockton — Brockton  Public  Library,  Frank  H.  Whitmore,  librarian. 
Cambridge — The  William  Hayes  Fogg  Art  Museum,  Edward  W.  Forbes, 

director. 
Concord — Concord  Art  Association,  Elizabeth  W.  Roberts,  Estabrook  Rd. 
Fall  River— Fall  River  Art  Club,  Alice  D.  Almy,  579  N.  Main  Street. 
New  Bedford — Free  Public  Library,  George  H.  Tripp,  librarian. 

Swain  Free  School,  H.  A.  Neyland,  director. 
Northampton — ^Hillyer    Art    Gallery,    A.    V.    Churchill,    director.    Smith 

College. 
Provincetown — Provincetown  Art  Association,  Nina  Williams. 
Springfield — Art  League,  Harold  M.  Vanderbilt,  88  Biltmore  Street. 
Springfield  Art  Museum,  George  Walter  Vincent  Smith,  director. 
Wakefield — Handicraft  Society,  Mrs.  Alice  M.  Hill,  Summer  Street. 
Wellesley — Farnsworth  Museum  of  Wellesley  College,  Alice  Van  Vech- 

ten  Brown,  director. 
Worcester — Worcester  Art  Museum,  Raymond  Wyer,  director. 

Michigan 

Michigan  Chapter  A.  I.  A.,  A.  G.  Donaldson,  1314  Penobscot  Bldg., 
Detroit. 
Ann   Arbor — Ann   Arbor   Art  Association,    Louise   Douglas,   502   Huron 

Street. 
Detroit— Detroit  Institute  of  Arts,  Clyde  H.  Burroughs. 

Detroit  Public  Schools,  Art  Department,  Lily  E.  Goodhew,  504  Yost 

Building. 
Scarab  Club,  Clyde  H.  Burroughs,  Detroit  Institute  of  Arts. 
Society  of  Arts  and  Crafts,  Helen  Plumb,  47  Watson  Street. 
Twentieth  Century  Club,  Mrs.  August  Helbig,  chairman,  Lenox  Hotel. 
Grand  Rapids— Grand  Rapids  Art  Association,  Mabel  Perkins,  327  Wash- 
ington Street. 
Jackson — Jackson  Art  Association,  E.  W.  Browning,  Public  Library. 
Lansing — Michigan  State  Library,  Mrs.  Mary  C.  Spencer,  librarian. 
Muskegon— Hackley  Gallery  of  Art,  Lulu  F.  Miller,  director. 

Minnesota 

Minneapolis— Federal    Schools    Incorporated,    John   C.   Buckbee,   Jr.,    15 
_S.  6th  Street. 
Society  of  Fine  Arts,  G.  S.  Houston,  Jr.,  secretary. 
St.   Paul — Saint  Paul  Institute,  Caryl  Spiller,  Auditorium  Building. 

Missouri 

Kansas   City— Art   Institute,   H.   M.   Kurtzworth,   director.   Armour  and 

Warwick  Boulevards. 
St.  Louis— City  Art  Museum.  R.  A.  Holland,  director. 
St.  Louis  Art  League,  F.  E.  A.  Curley,  Planters'  Hotel. 
St.  Louis  Chapter  A.  I.  A.,  W.  O.  Mullgardt,  Chemical  Building. 
St.  Louis  Public  Library,  Arthur  E.  Bostwick,  librarian. 

Nebraska 

GoTHENSBURG— Art  Department  of  Woman's  Club,  Bess  O'Kane. 
Lincoln — Nebraska  Art  Association,  Paul  H.  Grummann,  State  Univer- 
sity. 
Omaha— Central  High  School  Art  Department.  Ruth  Tompsett,  20th  and 
Dodge  Streets,  Omaha. 
Omaha  Society  of  Fine  Arts,  Mrs.  William  O.  Martin,  Public  Library. 
Peru— Art  Department  of  State  Normal  School,  Mamie  R.  Mutz. 


86  AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS 

New  Hampshire 

Hanover — Department  of  Fine  Arts,  Dartmouth  College,  Prof.  George  B. 

Zug. 
Manchester — Art  Club  of  St.  Anselm's  College,  P.  Raphael. 

Institute  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  George  L.  Kibbe,  514  Hanover  Street. 

New  Jersey 

New  Jersey  Chapter  A.  I.  A.,  Hugh  Roberts,  1  Exchange  PI.,  Jersey  City. 
Montclair — Art    Museum,    Mrs.    M.    M.    Le    Brun,    8    South    Mountain 

Avenue. 
Newark — Newark  Museum  Association,  John  Cotton  Dana. 

New  York 

Central  New  York  Chapter  A.  I.  A.,  W.  V.  Madden,  125  Sibley  Block, 
Rochester. 

Albany — Dramatic  and  Art  Association,  New  York  State  College  for  Teachers, 

Agnes  Scott  Smith. 
Alfred — New  York  State  School  of  Clay-Working  and  Ceramics,  Charles 

F.  Binns,  director. 
Buffalo — Buffalo"  Chapter  A.  I.  A.,  Louis  Greenstein,  Prudential  Bldg. 
Buffalo  Fine  Arts  Academy,  Cornelia  B.  Sage  Quinton,  art  director. 
Guild  of  Allied  Arts,  Priscilla  Pierce,  269  Summer  Street. 
Dunkirk — Art  Club,  Mrs.  Jessie  H.  Woodruff,  JZZ  Central  Avenue. 
Elmira — Arnot  Art  Gallery,  Mrs.  Jeannette  M.  Diven,  director. 
Mt.  Vernon — Art  Club  of  Mt.  Vernon  High  School,  I.  L.  Robinson. 
New  York  City — 

American  Fine  Arts  Society,  Charles  J.  Miller,  215  West  57th  Street. 
American  Society  of  Miniature  Painters,  Helen  Winslow  Durkee,  124 

West  72nd  Street. 
American  Water  Color  Society,  Harry  L.  Hoffman,  50  West  67th  St. 
Architectural  League  of  New  York,  Russell  F.  Whitehead,  215  West 

57th  Street. 
Art  Alliance  of  America,  Elizabeth  B.  Grimball,  65  East  56th  Street. 
Art  Center,  Mrs.  Ripley  Hitchcock,  president,  65  East  56th  Street. 
Art  in  Trades  Club,  James  P.  Rome,  381  Fourth  Avenue. 
Art  Students  League,  Josephine  C.  Howell,  215  West  57th  Street. 
Association    of    Manufacturers    of    Decorative    Furniture,    John    P. 

Adams,  Kensington  Manufacturing  Co.,  14  East  32nd  Street. 
Beaux-Arts  Institute  of  Design,  Lloyd  Warren,  director,  126  East  75th 

Street. 
Brooklyn  Institute  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  William  Henry  Fox,  director, 

Eastern  Parkway  and  Washington  Avenue,  Borough  of  Brooklyn. 
Keramic  Society  of  Greater  New  York,  Miss  C.  P.  'Nelson,  32  Elk 

Avenue,  New  Rochelle.  N.  Y. 
Master  Craftsmen,  Robert  Dulk.  70  Fifth  Avenue. 
Metropolitan   Museum  of  Art,   H.  W.   Kent,   Fifth  Avenue  and  82d 

Street. 
Municipal  Art  Society,  Mrs.  Herbert  B.  Keen.  119  E.  19th  Street. 
Mural  Painters,  Ezra  Winter,  58  West  57th  Street. 
National  Academy  of  Design.  Charles  C.  Curran,  39  West  67th  Street. 
National  Arts  Club,  John  Clyde  Oswald,  15  Gramercy  Park. 
National   Association   of    Portrait    Painters,    Earl    Stetson    Crawford, 

4  West  40th  Street. 
National  Association  of  Women  Pamters  and  Sculptors,  Elizabeth  H. 

Ingham,  Corresponding  Secretary,  215  West  57th  Street. 
National  Sculpture  Society,  Charles  L.  Hinton,  215  West  57th  Street. 


I 


AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS  87 

New  York — Continued 
Needle  and   Bobbin   Club,   Mrs.   W.   T.   Van   Alstyne,   Corresponding 

Secretary,  1   West  72nd  Street. 
New  York  Chapter  A.  I.  A.,  R.  H.  Shreve,  215  W.  57th  Street. 
New   York   School  of   Applied   Design    for    Women,   Ellen   J.    Pond, 

Superintendent,  160  Lexington  Avenue. 
New  York  Society  of  Craftsmen,  Jane  Hoagland,  65  East  56th  Street. 
New  York  Water  Color  Club,  Alphseus  Cole,  33  West  67th  Street. 
Pratt  Institute  of  Fine  and  Applied  Arts,  Walter  Scott  Perry,  Ryer- 

son  Street,  Borough  of  Brooklyn. 
School  Art  League,  Florence  N.  Levy,  599  Fifth  Avenue. 
Societe    des    Architects    Diplomes    par    le    Gouvernement,    Edwin    H, 

Denby,  333  Fourth  Avenue. 
Society  of   Illustrators,   Ray   Greenleaf,   Corresponding   Secretary,   50 
Union  Square. 
Nyack — Nyack  Club,  Arthur  F.  Buys,  Voorhis  Point. 
Rochester — Memorial    Art    Gallery,    George    L.    Herdle,    University    of 
Rochester. 
Rochester  Athenaeum  and  Mechanics  Institute,  CliiTord  M.  Ulp,  direc- 
tor, Department  of  Applied  and  Fine  Arts. 
Rochester   Industrial   Exposition  Association,   George   L.   Herdle,  306 
Powers  Bldg. 
Southampton,  L.  I. — Parrish  Memorial   Art   Museum,   Samuel   L.   Par- 

rish,  president. 
Syracuse — Syracuse    Museum    of    Fine    Arts,    Fernando    Carter,    Public 
Library. 

North  Dakota 

Fargo — Art  Department  of  Fargo  High  School,  Clara  L.  Rose,  supervisor. 
Art  Section,  Fine  Arts  Club,  Mrs.  Kent  E.  Darrow,  716  8th  Street,  S. 
Art  Department  of  the  North  Dakota  Agricultural  College,   Pauline 
Blake,  director. 

Ohio 

Akron — Fine  Arts  Club,  J.  S.  Stevens,  169  Rhodes  Avenue. 
Cincinnati — Cincinnati  Museum  Association,  L.  H.  Gest,  director. 

Woman's  Art  Club  of  Cincinnati,  Mrs.  Grace  C.  Cone,  194  East  Mc- 
Millan Street,  Mt.  Auburn,  Cinncinnati. 
Cleveland — Cleveland  Museum  of  Art,  F.  Allen  Whiting,  director,  Wade 
Park. 
Cleveland  School  of  Art,  Whiting  Williams,  Juniper  Road  and  Mag- 
nolia Drive. 
Columbus — Columbus  Gallery  of  Fine  Arts,  R.  H,  Piatt,  478  East  Broad 
Street. 
Ohio  State  University,  Carl  E.  Steeb,  business  manager. 
Dayton — Dayton  Museum  of  Art,  Mrs.  Robert  Patterson,  1115  Oakwood 

Avenue. 
Delaware — ^^Ohio  Wesleyan  University,  C.  B.  Austin,  dean. 
Lima — Art  Club  of  Lima  High  School,  Ysabelle  Glentzer,  131  East  North 

Street. 
Oberlin — Oberlin  Art  Association,  Clarence  Ward,  president,  335  E.  Col- 
lege Street. 
Sandusky — Art  Study  Club,  Mrs.  R.  H.  Williams. 
Toledo — Toledo  Museum  of  Art,  George  W.  Stevens,  director. 
Youngstown — Butler  Art  Institute,  J.  G.  Butler,  Jr.,  president. 

Oklahoma 

Muskogee — Art  Association,  Mrs.  W.  M.  Brison,  president,  N  Street  and 
Cincinnati  Avenue. 


AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS 


Oklahoma — Continued 
Norman — Les    Beaux   Arts   of   the   University    of    Oklahoma,    Oscar    B. 

Jacobson,  president. 
Oklahoma  City — Oklahom_a  Art  League,  Mrs.  Byron  D.  Shear,  Carnegie 
Library. 
Oklahoma  State  Fair,  L  S.  Mahn,  Box  974. 

Oregon 

Portland — Portland  Art  Association,  Anna  B.  Crocker,  Fifth  and  Taylor 
Streets. 

Pennsylvania 

Allentown — A.  R.  K.  Art  Club,  Mrs.  A.  R.  Krauss,  president,  116  North 
8th  Street. 
Fine  Arts  Association,  Tod  Lindenmuth,  26  North  6th  Street. 
Erie— The  Art  Club,  Mrs.  W.  L.  Speece,  Box  328. 
Jenkintown — Beechwood  School  of  Fine  Arts,  R.  C.  Nuse,  director. 
Lancaster — Iris  Club,  Agnes  Shand,  305  East  Orange  Street. 
Meadville — Meadville  Art  Association,  T.  J.  Meek,  650  Arch  Street. 
Philadelphia — Alumnse  Philadelphia  School  of  Design  for  Women,  Broad 
and  Master  Streets,  Clara  V.  Richardson. 
Alumni  Association  of  the  Pennsylvania  Museum  and  School  of  In- 
dustrial Art,  John  R.  Sinnock,  Broad  and  Pine  Streets. 
Art  Club  of  Philadelphia,  Samuel  W.  Cooper,  220  South  Broad  Street. 
Arts  and  Crafts  Guild,  Margaret  A.  Neall,  237  South  11th  Street. 
City    Parks    Association,    Andrew    Wright    Crawford,    701    Stephen 

Girard  Building. 
Fairmount  Park  Art  Association,  Roland  L.  Taylor,  320  South  Broad 
Fellowship   of  the   Pannsylvania  Academy  of   the   Fine   Arts,   Elinor 

Earle,  Pennsylvania  Academy. 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts,  John  Andrew  Myers. 
Pennsylvania    School    of    Industrial    Art,    Memorial   Hall,    Fairmount 

Park,  Huger  Elliott,  principal  of  school. 
Pennsylvania  Society  of  Miniature  Painters,  A.  Margaretta  Archam- 

bault,  1710  Chestnut  Street. 
Philadelphia  Art  Alliance,  Clara  R.  Mason,  Rittenhouse  Square. 
Philadelphia  Chapter  A.  I.  A.,  Paul  A.  Davis  III,  1713  Sansom  Street. 
Philadelphia  School  of  Design  for  Women,  Harriet  Sartain. 
Philadelphia  Sketch  Club,  S.  C.  Lomas,  235  South  Camac  Street. 
Philadelphia  Water  Color  Club,  Thornton  Oakley,  905  Clinton  Street. 
Plastic    Club,    Emma   J.    Lawrence,    1954    Bridge    Street,    Frankford, 

Philadelphia. 
Print  Club,  Mrs.  William  B.  Linn,  1614  Latimer  Street. 
T  Square  Club,  Ellery  K.  Taylor,  1627  Sansom  Street. 
School  of  Fine  Arts,  University  of  Pennsylvania,  Warren  P.  Laird. 
Pittsburgh — Art  Society  of  Pittsburgh,  Mrs.  K.  DeN.  Wilson,  manager, 
313   Sixth  Avenue. 
Beaux  Arts  Salon,  Mrs.  Roy  A.  Hunt,  Amberson  Place. 
Carnegie  Institute,  John  W.  Beatty,  director  of  fine  arts. 
Carnegie  Institute  of  Technology,  E.  Raymond  Bossange,  dean. 
Warren — Art  Club,  Sallie  M.  Todd,  treasurer. 

William  sport — Williamsport  Public  School  Art  League,  Lulu  Yount,  937 
Lligh  Street. 

Rhode  Island 

Rhode  Island  Chapter  A.  I.  A.,  Norman  M.  Isham,  915  Turks  Head  Bldg., 

Providence. 
Newport— Art  Association  of  Newport,  Mrs.  Maud  Howe  Elliott,  Melville. 


I 


AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS  89 

Rhode  Island — Continued 
Providence — Providence  Art  Club,  George  L.  Cooke,  P.  O.  Box  813. 

Rhode   Island   School   of   Design,   Mrs.   Gustav  Radeke,  president,   11 
Waterman  Street. 

South  Carolina 

Charleston — Carolina  Art  Association,  T.  R.  Waring,  Gibbes  Memorial 
Art  Building. 
Charleston  Museum,  Laura  M.  Bragg,  director. 
Columbia — Art  Association,  Harold  Tatum,  803  Sumter  Street. 

South  Dakota 

Rapid  City — Current  Events  Club,  Mrs.  Arthur  Clift,  1215  West  Boulevard. 
Sioux  Falls — Sioux  Falls  Art  Society,  Mary  Perkins,  1607  South  Sum- 
mit Avenue. 
Vermilion — University  of  South  Dakota,  J.  H.  Julian. 

Tennessee 

Chattanooga — Art   Study   Club,  Ava  L.   Wright,   president,    1600  Union 

Avenue. 
Memphis — Art  Association,  Florence  Mclntyre,  Corresponding  Secretary, 
707  Adams  Street. 
Brooks  Memorial  Art  Gallery,  Florence  M.  Mclntyre,  director,  Over- 
ton Park. 
Tri-State  Fair,  Frank  D.  Fuller. 
Nashville— Nashville    Art    Association,    Mrs.    Robert    W.    Nichol,    1910 
Ridley  Avenue. 
Art   Department  of   Tennessee   Federation  of   Women's    Clubs,   Mrs. 
George  Washington,  chairman,  Washington  Hall,  Cedar  Hill,  Tenn. 
Art  Department  of  Tennesse  State  Fair,  Mrs.  R.  W.  Nichol,  director, 
1910  Ridley  Avenue. 
Winchester — Twentieth  Century  Association,  Mrs.  Roy  Baker. 

Texas 

Austin — -Texas  Fine  Arts  Association  and  Elisabet  Ney  Museum,  Samuel 
Edward  Gideon,  University  Station,  Austin. 

Canyon — West  Texas  State  Normal  College,  Alimae  Aiken,  P.  O.  Box  261. 

Dallas — Dallas  Art  Association,  Ruth  de  Capree,  South  Akard  Street. 

Fort  Worth — Fort  Worth  Art  Association,  Mrs.  Charles  Scheuber,  Car- 
negie Library. 
Texas  Christian  University,  Mrs.  E.  R.  Cockrell. 

Galveston — Art  League,  Mrs.  Robert  Tschumy,  926  Sixth  Street. 

Houston— Houston  Art  League,  Mrs.  O.  L.  Norsworthy,  3015  Main  Street. 

San  Antonio — San  Antonio  Art  League,  Mrs.  H.  P.  Drought,  president, 
529  Oakland  Street. 

Virginia 

Lynchburg — Woman's    Club,    Georgia    Morgan,    chairman,    700    Church 

Street. 
Norfolk — Norfolk  Society  of  Arts,  Mrs.  F.  F.  Ferguson,  816  Westover 

Avenue. 
Richmond — Virginia  League  of  Fine  Arts  and  Handicrafts,  Adele  Clark, 

519  East  Franklin  Street. 

Washington 

Seattle — Seattle   Fine   Arts    Society,   Irene   Ewing   Davis,   25   West   Roy 
Street. 
West  Seattle  Art  Club,  Mrs.  Dana  W.  Brown.  2711  37th  Street,  West 


90  AMERICAN  FEDERATION  OF  ARTS 

Wisconsin 

Madison — Madison  Art  Association,  Mrs.  Clara  Fuller  Taylor. 
Milwaukee — Layton  Art  Gallery,  James  K.  Ilsley,  president. 

Milwaukee  Art   Institute,  Dudley   Crafts   Watson,   director,  456  Jef- 
ferson Street. 

Wyoming 

Caspar — Natrona  Delphian  Club,  Mrs.  L.  D.  Scott,  614  South  Grant  Street, 
Cheyenne — Cheyenne  Art  Association,  Miss  Olive  Williams,  chairman. 


Societies 


►^AMERICAN  ACADEMY  IN  ROME 
101  Park  Avenue,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Wm.  Rutherford  Mead President      C.  Grant  LaFarge Secretary 

Breck  Trowbridge Vice-President      Roscoe  Guernsey Executive  Sec. 

William  A.  Boring Treasurer 

For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  V,  p.  252,  and  Vol.  XI,  p.  199. 
Organized  1894;  chartered  by  the  State  of  New  York  1897;  incorporated  by 
the  Congress  of  the  United  States  1905,    Consolidated  with  School  of  Classical 
Studies  1913. 

SCHOOLS   IN   ROME 

Porta  San   Pancrazio,  Rome,  Italy 

GoRHAM  P.  Stevens,  Director  of  the  Academy 

Frank  P.  Fairbanks,  Professor  in  charge,  School  of  Fine  Arts 

George  M.  Whicher,  Professor  in  charge.  School  of  Classical  Studies 

Felix  Lamond,  Professor  of  Musical  Composition 

For  details  of  Fellowship  see  Vol.  XIV ,  p.  44. 

Awards  Fellowships  in  architecture,  painting,  sculpture,  classical  studies  and 
Lazarus  scholarship  for  painting.     (See  school  section.) 

►J^ASSOCIATION   OF  THE   ALUMNI  OF   THE  AMERICAN  ACADEMY  IN   ROME 

101  Park  Avenue,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Charles   Keck President      George  Koyle Treasurer 

Eugene    Savage Vice-President      R.  B.  Barnes Secretary 

70  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York 
Organized  1910.    Exhibitions  are  held. 

AMERICAN  ACADEMY  OF  ARTS  AND  LETTERS 

15  West  81st  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

W.  M.  Sloane. President      Robert  Underwood  Johnson Sec. 

Brander  Matthews Chancellor      Hamlin  Garland..  .Acting  Secretary 

Thomas   Hastings Treasurer  71  East  92d  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

For  descriptive  article  see  Vol.  XIII,  p.  55 ;  membership  Vol.  XIV ,  p.  45. 
Organized  1904  by  the  National  Institute  of  Arts  and  Letters   (which  see)  ; 
membership  limited  to  fifty.     Scries  of  addresses  during  season. 

AMERICAN  ASSOCIATION  OF  MUSEUMS 

Frederic  A.  Whiting President      W.  P.  Wilson Treasurer 

Cleveland  Museum  of  Art  Philadelphia  Commercial  Museum 

C.  J.  Hamlin Vice-President      Harold  L.  Madison Secretary 

Buffalo  Society  of  Natural  Sciences  Cleveland  Museum  of  Natural  His- 

tory 

For  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  28. 

Organized  1906.     Publishes  "Museum  Work";  also  "Museum  News  Letter." 

91 


92  NATIONAL  SOCIETIES 

AMERICAN  BOOKPLATE  SOCIETY 
W.  E.  Fisher President      J.  M.  Andreini  Vice-Pres. 

611    West    136th     St.,    Manhattan,  29  West  75th  St.,  Manhattan,  New 

New  York.  York, 

Alfred  Fowler,  Secretary-Treasurer,  17  Board  of  Trade,  Kansas  City,  Mo. 

Organized  1913.  Annual  exhibitions  of  contemparary  designs  are  held  in 
New  York.    A  quarterly  periodical  is  published. 

AMERICAN  CIVIC  ASSOCIATION 
905  Union  Trust  Building,  Washington,  D.  C. 

J.  Horace  McFarland,      .   President      Frank  A.  Vanderlip Treasurer 

Clinton  R.  Woodruff.  1st  Vice-Pres.      Harlean  James Secretary 

For  activities  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  29. 

Organized  1904. 

The  Association  is  active  in  improvement  of  outdoor  conditions  in  American 
cities  and  towns,  giving  special  attention  to  the  acquirement  and  maintenance 
of  city  parks ;  also  directs  movements  for  preservation,  extension  and  larger 
administration  of  the  national  parks.    Numerous  pamphlets  are  issued. 

AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

The  Octagon,  1741  New  York  Ave.,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Henry  H.  Kendall President      D.  Everett  Waid Treasurer 

Boston,  Mass.                                                 New  York 
William  B.  Faville  ...  1st  Vice-Pres.      W.  S.  Parker Secretary 

San  Francisco                                                  120  Boylston  St.,  Boston 
Robert  D.  Kohn 2d  Vice-Pres.       E.  C.  Kemper Executive  Secretary 

New  York  Washington 

For  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  31 ;  chairman  of  Committees,  Vol.  XIV ,  p.  47. 

Chartered  1857.  Annual  conventions.  The  proceedings  have  been  published 
annually  since  1867 ;  an  Annuary  is  issued  and  a  monthly  Journal  was  estab- 
lished in  January,  1913. 

chapters  and  state  associations 
With  date  of  organization  and  name  of  secretary 
Alabama,  1916 — Eugene  H.  Knight,  1607  Empire  Bldg.,  Birmingham. 
Arkansas — Lawson  L.  Delony,  Little  Rock. 

Baltimore.   1870 — Laurence  Hall  Fowler,  347  North   Charles   St. 
Boston,  1870— E.  H.  Hoyt,  220  Devonshire  St. 
Brooklyn,    1894 — Thomas    E.    Snook,    Jr.,    261    Broadway,    Alanhattan,    New 

York,  N.  Y. 
Buffalo,  1890— Paul  F.  Mann,  222  Elicott  Square. 

Central  New  York,  1887— W.  V.  Madden,  125  Sibley  Block,  Rochester. 
Cincinnati,  1870 — Joseph  G.  Steinkamp,  Mercantile  Library  Bldg. 
Cleveland,  1890— Albert  E.  Skeel,  4500  Euclid  Ave. 
Colorado,  1892 — R.  O.  Parry,  407  Clarkson  St.,  Denver. 
Columbus,  1913 — Charles  L.  Inscho,  Brunson  Bldg. 
Connecticut,  1902 — Delbert  K.  Perry,  City  Hall,  New  Britain. 
Dayton,  1899— H.  J.  Williams,  904  Mutual  Home  Bldg. 
Florida — Henrietta  C.  Dozier,  607  Bisbee  Bldg,  Jacksonville. 
Georgia,  1906 — Arthur  N.  Robinson,  Candler  Bldg.,  Atlanta. 
Illinois,  1869 — John  A.  Armstrong,  11  South  La  Salle  St.,  Chicago. 
lowA,  1903 — Eugene  H.  Taylor,  617  Cedar  Rapids  Savings  Bank  Bldg.,  Cedar 

Rapids. 
Kansas  City,  1890— C.  H.  Payson,  202  Reliance  Bldg. 
Kansas  State — Cecil  F.  Baker,  acting  president,  Manhattan,  Kan. 
Kentucky,  1908— Val  P.  Collins,  Paul  Jones  Bldg. 


NATIONAL  SOCIETIES  93 

American   Institute  of  Architects — Continued 
Louisiana,  1910 — Solis  Seiferth,  Maison  Blanche  Bldg.,  New  Orleans. 
Michigan,  1887— A.  G.  Donaldson,  1314  Penobscot  Bldg.,  Detroit. 
Minnesota,  1892 — ^Jerome  Paul  Jackson,  2309  First  Ave.,  South,  Minneapolis. 
Montana — George  H.  Shouley,  Great  Falls. 
Nebraska,  1919— J.  D.  Sandham,  World  Herald  Bldg.,  Omaha. 
New  Jersey,  1900 — Hugh  Roberts,  1  Exchange  Place,  Jersey  City. 
New  York,  1867— R.  H.  Shreve,  215  West  57th  St.,  Manhattan,  New  York, 

N.  Y. 
North  Carolina,  1913 — Erie  G.  Stillwell,  Hendersonville. 
Oregon,  1911 — George  M.  Post,  619  Railway  Exchange  Bldg.,  Portland. 
Philadelphia,  1869 — Paul  A.  Davis,  III,  1713  Sansom  St. 
Pittsburgh,  1891 — Stanley  L.  Rousli,  City-County  Bldg. 

Rhode  Island,  1875 — Norman  M.  Isham,  915  Turk's  Head  Bldg.,  Providence. 
San  Francisco,  1881— J.  Stewart  Fairweather,  1001  Balboa  Bldg. 
South  Carolina,  1913 — H.  Olin  Jones,  Greenville. 
Southern    California,    1907 — R.    G.    Hubby,    6412    Hollywood    Blvd.,    Los 

Angeles. 
Southern  Pennsylvania,  1909 — Edward  Leber,  42  W.  Market  St.,  York. 
St.  Louis,  1890— W.  O.  Mullgardt,  Chemical  Bldg. 
Tennessee,  1919 — Joseph  W.  Holman,  701  Stahlman  Bldg.,  Nashville, 
Texas,  1913— Roy  E.  Lane,  Waco. 
Toledo,  1914— Charles  A.  Langdon,  Nicholas  Bldg. 
Utah — Taylor  Woolley,  Mclntire  Bldg.,  Salt  Lake  City. 
Virginia,  1914 — C.  J.  Calrow,  Hanover  Ave.,  Norfolk. 
Washington,  1887— L.  P.  Wheat,  Jr.,  808  Seventeenth  St.,  N.W.,  Washington, 

D.  C. 
Washington  State,  1894 — H.  O.  Sexsmith,  University  of  Washington,  Seattle. 
Wisconsin,  1911— W.  W.  Judell,  615  Colby-Abbott  Bldg.,  Milwaukee. 

AMERICAN  NUMISMATIC  ASSOCIATION 

Waldo  C.   Moore President       George  J.  Bauer Treasurer 

Lewisburg,  Ohio.  192  St.  Paul  St.,  Rochester,  N.  Y. 

H.  H.  Yawger,  General  Secretary,  438  South  Sixth  St.,  Indiana,  Pa. 
E.  D.  Putnam,  Librarian,  Municipal  Museum,  Rochester,  N.  Y. 
Moritz  Wormser,  Chairman  Board  of  Governors,  95  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York, 

N.  Y. 

district  secretaries 
First — Harry  A.  Gray,  41  Rockland  St.,  Roxbury,  Mass. 
Second — Rudolph  Kohler,  70  Fifth  Avenue,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Third — Henry  Chapman,  333  South  Sixteenth  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Fourth— M.  Marcuson,  1611  East  82d  St.,  N.  E.,  Cleveland,  O. 
Fifth — Fred  Michael,  8  South  Dearborn  St.,  Chicago,  111. 
Sixth — A.  H.  YoDER,  University,  N.  D. 

Seventh — George  H.  King,  Denver  National  Bank,  Denver,  Colo. 
Eighth — I.  Leland  Steinman,  Room  329,  235  Montgomery  St.,  San  Francisco, 

Calif. 
Ninth— B.  Max  Mehl,  P.  O.  Drawer  976,  Fort  Worth,  Texas. 
Tenth — John  A.  Wood,  165  Oak  Ave.,  Hamilton,  Ontario. 
Eleventh — R.  L.  Reid,  Vancouver,  B.  C. 
Twelfth — H.  L.  Doane,  Truro,  Nova  Scotia. 
British  Isles — S.  H.  Hamer,  Halifax,  Yorkshire,  England. 

Organized  1891 ;  Federal  charter  1912.  Official  organ,  "The  Numismatist," 
$1.50  a  year;  Frank  G.  Duffield,  editor  and  business  manager,  1811  Mosher 
Street,  Baltimore,  Md.  Library  maintained  and  books  lent  free  to  members. 
Affiliated  Branch  Societies  offer  facilities  to  members.  Holds  annual  con- 
vention. 


94  NATIONAL  SOCIETIES 

.^AMERICAN  SCENIC  AND  HISTORIC  PRESERVATION  SOCIETY 
Tribune  Building,  154  Nassau  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

George  F.  Kunz President      Edward  Hagaman  Hall.  . . Secretary 

Henry  W.  Sackett 1st  Vice-Pres.      N,  Taylor  Phillips Treasurer 

Incorporated  1895.  A  national  society  for  the  protection  of  natural  scenery, 
the  preservation  of  historic  landmarks  and  the  improvement  of  cities.  An 
illustrated  report  of  the  parks  and  monuments  that  are  under  the  care  of  the 
Society  is  published  annually. 

►^AMERICAN  SOCIETY  OF  LANDSCAPE  ARCHITECTS 

F.  L.  Olmsted President  Bremer  W.  Pond Secretary 

J.  L.  Greenleaf Vice-Pres.  18  Tremont  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 

Carl  R.  Parker Treasurer 

Organized  1899. 

ARCH^OLOGICAL  INSTITUTE  OF  AMERICA 
Columbia  University,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

J.  C.  Egbert President       Charles  Hallam  Keep Treasurer 

Columbia    University,    New    York  Columbia    Trust    Co.,    New    York 

City  City. 

W.  B.  Dinsmoor^  Acting  General  Secretary,  Columbia  University,  New  York, 

N.  Y. 
Curator — ^Mitchell  Carroll,  The  Octagon,  1741  New  York  Ave.,  Washington, 

D.  C. 
Recorder — R.  V.  D.  Magoffin,  Baltimore. 
Editor-in-Chief  "American  Journal  of  Archaeology" — W.  N.  Bates,  University 

of  Pennsylvania,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Director  and  Editor  of  "Art  and  Archaeology" — Mitchell  Carroll,  The  Octa- 
gon, 1741  New  York  Ave.,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Chairman  of  Managing  Committees 
American  School  in  Athens — Edward  Capps,  Princeton  University,  N.  J. 
American  School  in  Jerusalem — J.  A.   Montgomery,  University  of   Pennsyl- 
vania, Philadelphia. 
School  of  American  Archaeology — William   H.   Holmes,  Smithsonian  Insti- 
tution, Washington,  D.  C. 
Mediaeval  and  Renaissance  Studies — Allan  Marquand,  Princeton  University. 
Colonial  and  National  Art  in  North  America — Fiske  Kimball,  University  of 
Virginia,  Charlottesville. 
For  further  data  see  Vol.  XVII,  p.  106. 

Organized  1879;  incorporated  1906.  Managed  by  a  Council,  composed  of  its 
officers  and  of  representatives  of  its  Societies,  one  councillor  for  each  fifty 
members. 

The  Institute  publishes  quarterly  the  "American  Journal  of  Archaeology." 
The  subscription  price  is  $5,  but  the  Journal  is  sent  free  to  all  members.  Also 
a  popular  monthly  magazine,  "Art  and  Archaeology,"  subscription,  $5. 

affiliated  societies  of  the  arch^ological  institute 

With  date  of  organization  and  name  of  Secretary 

Baltimore  Society,  1884 — L.  H.  Baker,  Johns  Hopkins  University,  Baltimore, 

Md. 
Boston  Society,  1879— Seth  T.  Cans,  44  State  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
Buffalo  Society,  1909— Mrs.  J.  J.  Albright,  730  West  Ferry  St.,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 
Chicago  Society,  1889— Gordon  J.  Laing,  University  of  Chicago,  Chicago,  111. 
Cincinnati  Society,  1905— Frank  L.  Clark,  Miami  University,  Oxford,  O. 
Cleveland  Society,  1895 — L.  C.  West,  Citizens'  Bldg.,  Cleveland,  O. 


NATIONAL  SOCIETIES  95 

Archaeological  Institute — Continued 

Colorado  Springs  Branch,  Colorado  State  Society,  1912 — J.  G.  McMurtry, 
Colorado  College,  Colorado  Springs,  Colo. 

Connecticut  Society,  1898 — H.  M.  Hubbell,  268  Willow  Road,  New  Haven, 
Conn. 

Denver  Brancli,  Colorado  Society,  1904 — Mrs.  William  W.  Grant,  7020  East 
12th  Ave.,  Denver,  Colo. 

Detroit  Society,  1889 — Isobel  Weadock,  Institute  of  Arts,  Detroit,  Mich. 

Hartford  Society,  1911 — O.  W.  Means,  44  Forest  Street,  Hartford,  Conn. 

Independence  Society,  1918 — Mrs.  J.  G.  Pointer,  301  South  Spring  St.,  Indepen- 
dence, Mo. 

Iowa  Society,  1902 — E.  B.  T.  Spencer,  Grinnell,  Iowa. 

Kansas  City  Society,  1906 — Maclay  Lyon,  Bryant  Bldg.,  Kansas  City,  Mo. 

Los  Angeles  Society,  1904 — Mrs.  Hector  Alliot,  910  Catalina  St.,  Los  Angeles, 
Calif. 

MiDDLETOwN   (CoNN.)   SociETY,  1920 — K.  P.  Harrington,  Middletown. 

New  Jersey  Society,  1908 — Mrs.  P.  C.  Nye,  64  Nassau  St.,  Princeton,  N.  J. 

New  York  Society.  1884— Allan  P.  Ball,  College  of  the  City  of  New 'York, 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Pennsylvania  Society,  1889 — Rhys  Carpenter,  Bryn  Mawr,  Pa. 

Pittsburgh  Society,  1903 — J.  B.  Hench,  5524  Kentucky  Ave.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

Portland  Society,  1909 — A.  E.  Doyle,  Worcester  Bldg.,  Portland,  Ore. 

Pueblo  Branch,  Colorado  State  Society,  1912 — R.  W.  Corwin,  President, 
Minnequa  Hospital,  Pueblo,  Colo. 

Rhode  Island  Society,  1908 — John  Shapley,  Brown  University,  Providence, 
R.  I. 

Richmond  Society,  1912 — W.  A.  Harris,  Richmond  College,  Richmond,  Va. 

Rochester  Society,  1906 — Theodore  A.  Miller,  18  Sibley  Place,  Rochester, 
N.  Y. 

St.  Louis  Society,  1906— Geo.  R.  Throop,  Public  Library,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 

St.  Paul  Branch  Minnesota  Society — Mrs.  George  R.  Metcalf,  The  Com- 
modore, St.  Paul,  Minn. 

San  Diego  Society,  1912— Mrs.  M.  W.  Kraemer,  3201  First  St.,  San  Diego, 
Calif. 

San  Francisco  Society,  1906— .H.  R.  Fairclough,  Stanford  University,  Calif. 

Santa  Fe,  1916— Lansing  B.  Bloom,  Santa  Fe,  N.  M. 

Syracuse  Society,  1911—1.  J.  Peritz,  608  University  Ave.,  Spracuse,  N.  Y. 

Toledo  Society,  1917— Blake-More  Godwin,  Toledo  Museum,  Toledo. 

Walla  Walla  Branch,  Washington  State  Society,  1906— Louis  F.  An- 
derson, 364  Boyne  Avenue,  Walla  Walla,  Wash. 

•i«WASHiNGT0N  SociETY,  1902— MitchcU  Carroll,  The  Octagon,  Washington. 
D.  C. 

Wisconsin  Society,  1889— Katharine  Allen,  228  Langdon  St.,  Madison,  Wis. 

Canada 
Montreal  Society,  1908— R.  A.  MacLean,  McGill  University. 
Toronto  Society,  1908— N.  W.  DeWitt,  Victoria  College,  Toronto,  Can. 
Vancouver  Society,   1911— Lemuel  Robertson,  2705    Second   Ave.,   W.   Van- 
couver, B.  C, 
Winnipeg  Society,  1909-^John  W.  Taylor,  University  of  Manitoba,  Winnipeg. 

ASSOCIATION  OF  ART  MUSEUM  DIRECTORS 

George  W.  Stevens President      Clyde  H.  Burroughs ,..Vice-Pres. 

Toledo  Museum  Detroit  Institute  of  Art's 

Robert  B.  Harshe,  Secretary-Treasurer,  Chicago  Art  Institute 

Organized    1916.      Handles    circulating    exhibitions    and    other   art    museum 
problems. 


96  NATIONAL  SOCIETIES 

ASSOCIATION    OF   COLLEGIATE    SCHOOLS    OF   ARCHITECTURE 
Emil  Lorch,  President,  Ann  Arbor,  Mich. 

William    Emerson Vice-Pres.      Clarence  A.  Martin Sec.-Treas. 

Mass  Inst,  of  Techology  Cornell  University,  Ithaca,  N.  Y. 

"^Organized  1912.    Annual  meeting  just  prior  to  convention  of  American  Insti- 
tute of  Architects. 

ASSOCIATION  OF  PICTURE  PUBLISHERS 

S.  L.  Newman President      A.  F.  Rice Vice-President 

E.  W.  Tanner,  Secretary-Treasurer 
225  Fifth  Avenue,  New  York  City 
Organized  1916  for  betterment  of  conditions  in  the  picture  industry.    Annual 
meeting  last  Tuesday  in  March.    Membership,  10. 

COLLEGE  ART  ASSOCIATION  OF  AMERICA 

D.  M.  Robinson President      Paul   J.    Sachs Vice-President 

Johns    Hopkins    University,    Balti-  Harvard  University,  Cambridge 

more 

John  Shapley,  Sec.-Treas.,  Brown  University,  Providence 
For  list  of  colleges  represented  see  Vol.  XIV,  p.  53. 

Organized  1912.  Holds  annual  meeting.  Publishes  bulletin  with  scientific 
studies  and  the  results  of  investigation  of  problems  connected  with  art  work 
in  colleges. 

.^EASTERN  ARTS  ASSOCIATION 
Fred  R.  Preagle President      A.  H.  Wentworth Treasurer 

Board  of  Education,  Montclair                  Board  of  Education,  New  Haven 
Frances  H.  Bacheler Vice-Pres.      Frank  E.  Matthewson Secretary 

Public  High  School,  Hartford  Dickinson  High  School,  Jersey  City 

Organized  1899;  re-organized  1913. 

GENERAL  FEDERATION  OF  WOMEN'S  CLUBS 
Mrs.  Thomas  G.  Winter^  President,  2617  Dean  Boulevard,  Minneapolis,  Minn. 

FINE   arts   department 

Mrs.  Rose  V.  S.  Berry,  Chairman,'2975  Piedmont  Ave.,  Berkeley,  Calif. 
Mrs.  Walter  S.  Little,  Chairman  Division  of  Art,  15  Plymouth  St.,  Bridge- 
water,  Mass. 
The  Art  Division  offers  outlines  for  art  study  and  many  traveling  lectures, 
illustrated  with  exhibits  of  prints,  slides  of  paintings,  of  civic  a"rt  in  the  home, 
also  exhibits  of  pottery,  of  industrial  art  products,  and  of  school  art. 

STATE    ART   CHAIRMEN,   GENERAL   FEDERATION    OF    WOMEN's    CLUBS 

Alabama — Miss  Margaret  McAdory,  27  Watts  Bldg.,  Birmingham. 

Arizona — Miss  May  Noble,  R.  2,  Box  162  A,  Phoenix. 

Arkansas — Mrs.  J.  I.  Moore,  Sr.,  Helena. 

California — Mrs.  George  A.  Cheney,  Coronado, 

Colorado— Mrs.  Joe  Mills,  1012  15th  St.,  Boulder. 

Connecticut — Mrs.  Philip  Holzer,  1071  Iranistan  Ave.,  Bridgeport. 

Delaware — Mrs.  J.  Pearce  Cann,  Newark. 

District  of  Columbia — Mrs.  S.  L.  Peackam,  3177  18th  St.,  Washington. 

Florida — Miss  Lucy  W.  Jordan,  Homestead. 

Georgia — Miss  Marcia  L.  Buchhols,  21  King  St.,  Dalton. 

Idaho— Mrs.  F.  C.  Hollingshead,  1605  North  7th  St.,  Boise. 

Illinois — Miss  Catherine  Lester,  307  North  Orange  St.,  Peoria. 

Indiana — Mrs.  J.  W.  Riddle,  Lawrenceburg. 


NATIONAL  SOCIETIES  97 

General   Federation   of   Women's   Clubs — Continued 
Iowa — Miss  Frances  B.  Mason,  Boone. 
Kansas — Mrs.  Nelson  A.  Case,  Oswego. 
Kentucky — Miss  Cora  L.  Webb,  Owensboro. 
Louisiana — Miss  Helen  Graham,  Ruston. 
Maine — Mrs.  Annie  E.  Smith,  Brunswick. 
Maryland — Miss  Annie  L.  Wilson,  Kensington. 
Massachusetts — Mrs.  C.  D.  Thor,  51  High  St.,  Everett. 

Minnesota — Mrs.  J.  H.  Palmer,  2806  West  Lake  of  Isles  Blvd.,  Minneapolis. 
Michigan — Mrs.  B.  W.  Wells,  Ewart. 
Mississippi — Miss  Marie  Ascher,  404  Amite  St.,  Jackson. 
Missouri — Mrs.  Philip  S.  Elliott,  Rockhill  Manor,  Kansas  City. 
Montana— Mrs.  T.  A.  Grigg,  210  North  Clark  St.,  Butte. 
Nebraska — Mrs,  Anna  R.  Morey,  726  North  Hastings  Ave.,  Hastings. 
Nevada — Mrs.  E.  O.  Norton,  Reno. 

New  Hampshire — Dr.  Mary  R.  Farnham,  45  Water  St.,  Peancook. 
New  Jersey — Mrs.  Alvoni  R.  Allen,  55  Bentley  Place,  Jersey  City. 
New  Mexico — Mrs.  E.  D.  Hewett,  Santa  Fe. 

New  York— Miss  Anna  M.  Jones,  230  West  205th  St.,  New  York  City. 
North  Carolina — Mrs.  Marshall  Williams,  Faison. 
North  Dakota — Mrs.  F.  J.  Thompson,  714  Front  St.,  Fargo. 
Ohio — Mrs.  John  MacKee,  Springfield,  O. 
Oklahoma — Mrs.  L.  S.  Hysmith,  Wilburton. 
Oregon— Mrs.  T.  G.  Hein,  910  West  10th  St.,  Medford. 
Pennsylvania — Mrs.  A.  Duncan  Yoacum,  Ridley  Park. 
Rhode  Island — Miss  Nellie  Philips,  54  Wesleyan  Ave.,  Providence. 
South  Carolina — Miss  Elise  Langley,  114  Church  St.,  Charleston. 
South  Dakota — Mrs.  U.  L.  Ferguson,  Midland. 
Tennessee — Mrs.  George  A.  Washington,  Cedar  Hill. 
Texas— Mrs.  W.  S.  Douglas,  Hamlin. 

Utah — Miss  Myra  Sawyer,  763  East  5th  St.,  Salt  Lake  City. 
Vermont — Mrs.  Clarence  Coon,  Castleton. 
Virginia — Mrs.  W.  R.  Meech,  Edgewater,  Norfolk. 
Washington— Mrs.  Henry  Osterman,  508  Lincoln  St.,  Walla  Walla. 
West  Virginia — Mrs.  P.  A.  George,  Ronceverte. 
Wisconsin— Mrs.  W.  J.  Fancher,  1401  Wisconsin  St.,  Racine. 
Wyoming — Mrs.  D.  E.  Goddard,  Lusk. 

committee  of  art  division 

Art  in  the  Home  and  Garden,  Mrs.  Walter  S.  Little,  15  Plymouth  St.,  Bridge- 
water,  Mass. 

Civic  Art  and  War  Memorials,  Mrs.  John  McKee,  731  East  High  St.,  Spring- 
field, O. 

School  and  Industrial  Art,  Frances  B.  Mason,  Boone. 

Painting  and  Sculpture,  Mrs.  R.  V.  S.  Berry,  2975  Piedmont  Ave.,  Berkeley, 
Calif. 

Fine  Arts  Exhibits — Prints,  Mrs.  H.  B.  Burnet,  1864  North  Pennsylvania  St.. 
Indianapolis,  Ind. 

Fine  Arts  Exhibits — Slides,  Mrs.  Anna  R.  Morey,  728  North  Hastings  St., 
Hastings,  Neb. 

Arts  and  Crafts — Pottery,  Mrs.  Fred  Crowley,  1721  Pleasant  St.,  Des  Moines, 
la.,  and  Alrs;  J.  S.  Carpenter,  Des  Moines,  la. 

PIONORARY    advisors    TO    THE    EXECUTIVE    COMMITTEE 

Art  in  the  Home,  Mrs.  John  W.  Alexander. 

Art  in  the  Garden,  Mrs.  Herman  Rosse. 

Civic  Art  and  War  Memorials,  Mrs.  James  E.  Eraser. 

School  and  Industrial  Art,  Helen  E.  Cleaves. 


98  NATIONAL  SOCIETIES 

General   Federation  of   Women's   Clubs — Continued 
Painting,  Violet  Oakley. 
Sculpture,  Anna  Coleman  Ladd. 
Art  and  Crafts,  Mrs.  Douglas  Donaldson. 

Representing  Art  Organizations 
American  Federation  of  Arts,  Leila  Mechlin. 
Art  Alliance  of  America,  Anna  Vaughn  Hyatt. 
Art  and  Archaeology,  Mrs.  Mitchell  Carroll. 
Decorative  Art  and  Industries,  Lucy  D.  Taylor. 

NATIONAL  COMMISSION  OF  FINE  ARTS 
1729  New  York  Avenue,  N.W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
Charles  Moore,  Chairman 
John  Russell  Pope  Henry  Bacon 

James  L.  Greenleaf  Louis  Ayres 

James  E.  Eraser  H.  Siddons  Mowbray 

Lieut. -Col.  C.  O.  Shebrill,  Secretary  and  Executive  Officer 
Established  by  Act  of  Congress,  1910.    For  the  Act  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  7Z. 
The   Commission   is  composed  of  three  architects,   one  landscape  architect, 
one  painter,   one   sculptor,   and   one  layman.     Annual    report   issued   covering 
work. 

The  plans  for  all  new  structures  to  be  erected  in  the  District  of  Columbia 
under  the  direction  of  the  Federal  Government  and  all  questions  involving 
matters  of  art  with  which  the  Federal  Governrnent  is  concerned,  must  be  sub- 
mitted to  the  commission  for  comment  and  advice  before  final  action  is  taken. 

NATIONAL  INSTITUTE  OF  ARTS  AND  LETTERS 

15  West  81st  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Robert  Grant,  President 

Robert  I.  Aitken 1st  Vice-Pres.      Arnold  W.  Brunner Treasurer 

Walter  Damrosch.  .  .  .2d  Vice-Pres.      Jefferson  B.  Fletcher Secretary 

Organized  1898  by  the  American  Social  Science  Association ;  incorporated  by 
Act  of  Congress,  1913.  Its  purpose  is  the  protection  and  furtherance  of  liter- 
ature and  the  arts. 

PACIFIC  COAST  CHAPTER, 
AMERICAN  SOCIETY  OF  LANDSCAPE  ARCHITECTS 

Wilbur  D.  Cook       President      Emmanuel  T.  Mische Treasurer 

Hellman"  Bldg.,  Los  Angeles,  Calif.  Henry  Bldg.,  Portland,  Ore. 

Stephen  Child Vice-President      George   D.   Hall Secretary 

Fairmount    Hotel,    San    Francisco,  Hellman  Bldg.,  Los  Angeles,  Calif. 

Calif. 
Organized  1.918. 

i^PICTORIAL  PHOTOGRAPHERS  OF  AMERICA 
Art  Center,  65  East  56th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

A.  D.  Chaffee President       Sophie   Lauffer Recording   Sec. 

John   Paul  Edwards Vice-Pres.      J.  R.  Mason Cor.  Secretary 

Adele  C.  Shkeve Treasurer  611  West  136th  St.,  New  York  City 

Organized  1917.     Publishes  year  book. 

PRINT  PUBLISHERS'  ASSOCIATION  OF  AMERICA 

Benjamin  Curtis President      Martin   Birnbaum Treasurer 

Boston  New  York 

W.  A.  Livingstone,   Secretary,  Box  555,  Detroit,  Mich. 
Organized  1904.    Work  consists  chiefly  of  bettering  copyright  conditions. 


NATIONAL— CALIFORNIA  99 

WESTERN  ARTS  ASSOCIATION 

Carl  T.  Cotter President      L.  R.  Abbott Sec-Treasurer 

Mabel  Williams Vice-President  234  Division  Ave.,  N.,  Grand  Rapids 

Organized  1893.    Annual  convention  is  held. 

ALABAMA 

ALABAMA  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

George  B.  Rogers President      Eugene  H.  Knight Sec.-Treas. 

Mobile  1607  Empire  Bldg.,  Birmingham 

Bem  Price Vice-President 

Birmingham 
Organized  1916. 

BIRMINGHAM  BIRMINGHAM 

4- ALABAMA  ART  LEAGUE 
27  Watts  Building,  Birmingham 
Two  County  Chapters 
Jefferson  County 

J.  W.  Donnelly President      Lillian    Rosser Treasurer 

A.   A.   Halsted Vice-President      Margaret  McAdory Secretary 

Organized  1918.    Membership  250. 

•^Montgomery  County 

Will  T.  Shehan President      Mr.    Okel Treasurer 

Mrs.  Frank  Elmore,  Jr..  .Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  Churchill  Marks.  .  .Secretary 

BIRMINGHAM  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
City  Hall,  Birmingham 
L.  W.  JossELYN,  Director 
Frequent  small  exhibits  of  the  work  of  the  Art  and  Manual  Training  De- 
partment of  the  Birmingham  public  schools. 

ARIZONA 

TUCSON 

THE  ART  ASSOCIATION  OF  TUCSON 

S.  L.  KiNGAN President      D.  T.  MacDougal Sec-Treasurer 

Tucson,  Ariz. 
Organized  March,  1917. 

CALIFORNIA 

ENGINEERS  AND  ARCHITECTS  ASSOCIATION 
OF  SOUTHERN  CALIFORNIA 
625  Metropolitan  Bldg.,  Los  Angeles 

C.  A.  Heinze President      Everett   H.    Merritt Treasurer 

H.  Z.  Osborne,  Jr Vice-Pres.      Willis  S.  Peffer Secretary 

Organized  1894.     Monthly  addresses,  occasional  field  excursions. 

SOUTHERN  CALIFORNIA  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Edwin  Bergstrom President      Robert   H.   Orr Treasurer 

H.  F.  WiTHEY Vice-President      R.  G.  Hubby Secretary 

6412  Hollywood  Blvd.,  Los  Angeles 
Organized  1894;  incorporated  1907. 


100  CALIFORNIA 


CARMEL 

CARMEL  CLUB  OF  ARTS  AND  CRAFTS 

Mrs.  J.  W.  Hand President      Miss  M.  DeNeale  Morgan  .  Secretary 

Mrs.  Sydney  Yard Vice-President  P.  O.  Box  67,  Carmel 

Mrs.  M.  H.  Brenner Treasurer 

Organized  1907.    Exhibitions  are  held. 
DEL    MONTE 

DEL  MONTE  ART  GALLERY 
Del  Monte 
Josephine  Blanch,  Director 
Advisory  Committee    • 

GOTTARDO    PlAZZONI  WiLLIAM   RiTSCHEL 

Armin  Hanson  Detlif  Sammann 

Organized  1907.  The  gallery  is  maintained  by  private  interests,  but  managed 
by  the  Committee  of  Artists.  It  is  a  continuous  exhibition  of  work  by  pro- 
fessional artists  of  California.  The  pictures  are  for  sale  and  when  one  is  sold 
another  by  the  same  artist  is  invited. 

HOLLYWOOD 

►^HOLLYWOOD  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Douglas  Donaldson President       A.  E.  Sage Treasurer 

Jessica    Lawrence Vice-President      Edith  A.  Jones Secretary 

5628  Carlton  Way,  Hollywood 
Virginia  E.  Graeff,  Educational  Director,  1633  Gower  St.,  Hollywood. 
Organized  1920.    Lectures  are  given,  and  exhibitions  are  held. 
LACUNA    BEACH 

►^LAGUNA  BEACH  ART  ASSOCIATION 

F.  W.  CuPRiEN President      Jessie  Washburn Treasurer 

Anna  A.  Hills 1st  Vice-President      Mrs.  J.  S.  Thurston Secretary 

Emily  White 2d  Vice-President       Mrs.  F.  P.  MacPherson.  .  .Cor.-Sec. 

Organized  1918.     Lectures  given  and  exhibitions  held. 

^WEST  COAST  ARTS 

Mrs.  Ella  H.  Tanberg.  . .  .President      Beulah  May Treasurer 

Donna  Schuster 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mabelle  Lord  Frost Secretary 

Lillian  P.  Ferguson.  .  .2d  Vice-Pres. 

Organized  1921.    Exhibitions  are  held. 
LONG    BEACH 

LONG  BEACH  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Miss  Zaidee  Brown,  Librarian 
Florence  M.  Freeman,  in  Charge  of  Art  Gallery 
Exhibitions  are  held. 
LOS   ANGELES 

4<CALIF0RNIA  ART  CLUB  OF  LOS  ANGELES 
623  Park  View  Street,  Los  Angeles 

Jack  W.  Smith President      Max   Wieczorek Treasurer 

Katheryn  E.  Leighton 1st  Vice-      Dana  Bartlett Cor. -Secretary 

President  E.  Roscoe  Shrader Rec. -Secretary 

Orrin  E.  White.  .  .2d  Vice-President 
For  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  47. 

Organized  1910.    Exhibitions  are  held. 


CALIFORNIA  101 


LOS    ANGELES 

CALIFORNIA  WATER  COLOR  SOCIETY 
516  South  Hill  Street,  Los  Angeles 

Dana   B artlett President      J.  W.  Cotton Treasurer 

Max  Wieczorek.  .  .1st  Vice-President      Henri  de  Kruif Secretary 

C.  O.  BoRG 2d  Vice-President 

Organized  1920.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

EBELL  OF  LOS  ANGELES 
1719  South  Figueroa  .Street,  Los  Angeles 

Mrs.  Charles  H.  Toll President      Mrs.  Birney  Donnell Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.  O.  a.  Trippet Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  Edward  Crumley Cor.-Sec. 

Mrs.  L.  C.  Carlisle Treasurer      Mrs.  W.  H.  Millspaugh.  ..Chairman 

Art  Committee 
Founded  1894.    Lectures  are  given. 

.^FRIDAY  MORNING  CLUB 
940  South  Figueroa  Street,  Los  Angeles 

Mrs.  a.  S.  Lobingier President      Mrs.  H.  R.  Callender Treasurer 

Mrs,  a.  C.  Wier 1st  Vice-Pres.      Helen  Louise  Kimball Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.  Randall  Hutchinson. .2d  Vice-      Mrs.  W.  W.  Slayden Cor.-Sec. 

President  and  Chairman  Art  Com- 
mittee 
Organized  1891.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

MUNICIPAL  ART  COMMISSJON 
City  Hall,  Los  Angeles 

J.  W.  Mitchell President      Mrs.  Sumner  P.  Hunt Vice-Pres. 

J.  J.  Backus,  Secretary 
Founded   1903;   Charter  granted   1911.     Considers   and  approves  plans    for 
city  buildings. 

PRINT  MAKERS  OF  CALIFORNIA 

Benjamin  C.  Brown President      Howell  C.  Brown Secretary 

Frances  H.  Gearhart Treasurer'         120  N.  El  Molino  Ave.,  Pasadena 

Organized  1914.     Circulates  traveling  exhibitions. 

PASADENA 

4*PASADENA  MUSIC  AND  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Fair  Oaks  and  Lincoln  Avenues,  Pasadena 

George  E.  Hale President      George  S.  Patton Treasurer 

Henry  E.  Huntington.  .  .Vice-Pres.      Ernest  A.  Batchelder Secretary 

Organized  1900.    Exhibitions  are  arranged  and  the  St:ckney  Memorial  School 
of  Fine  Arts  is  maintained.     (See  school  section.) 

SACRAMENTO 

KINGSLEY  ART  CLUB 

Mary    Patten President      A.  A.  Osler Treasurer 

Mrs.  Wallace  A.  Briggs.  .Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  W.  A.  Briggs Secretary 

Organized  1892.     Lectures  given  and  exhibits  held. 


102  CALIFORNIA 


SAN    DIEGO 

.^FRIENDS  OF  ART 
Lyman  J.  Gage,  Honorary  President 

Joseph  W.  Sefton,  Jr President      W.  S.  Borland Treasurer 

Alice  Klauber 1st  Vice-Pres.      W.  H.  McFetridge Rec.-Sec. 

Milton  McRae 2d  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  Henry  Foote Cor. -Sec. 

Mrs.  George  McKENziE.3d  Vice-Pres.  3775  Utah  St.,  San  Diego 

Organized  1920,     Exhibitions  are  held. 

SAN  DIEGO  ART  GUILD 
B  and  6th  Streets,  San  Diego 

A.  R.  Valentien President      Sarah  E.  Truax Sec. -Treasurer 

Eugene  De  Vol Vice-President  3620    Fairmount    Ave.,    East    San 

Diego 
Organized  1915.    Lectures  given  and  exhibitions  held. 

SAN    FRANCISCO 

CALIFORNIA  SOCIETY  OF  ETCHERS 
540  Sutter  Street,  San  Francisco 

Perham   Nahl President      Mrs,  M.  H,  Pope Treasurer 

Clark  Hobart Vice-President      L.  W,  Scammon Secretary- 
Organized  1913. 

SAN  FRANCISCO  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

George  A.  Applegarth President      Ernest  A,  Coxhead,  ..Vice-President 

J.  Stewart  Fairweather,  Secretary-Treasurer,  1001  Balboa  Bldg.,  San  Francisco 
Organized  1881. 

SAN  FRANCISCO  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Palace  of  Fine  Arts,  San  Francisco 

Arthur  Brown,  Jr President      Walter  S.  Martin Treasurer 

Charles  T,  Crocker Vice-Pres,      Mrs,  Walter  Fife Secretary 

NiLSEN  Laurvik,  Director 
Lee  F.  Randolph,  Director  of  the  School 
For  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  52,  and  Vol  XVII,  p.  114, 

Open  daily,  except  Sunday,  9  a,m,,  to  5  p,m,;  Tuesday  and  Saturdays,  ad- 
mission free ;  other  days,  25  cents.     Permanent  and  special  exhibitions. 

Organized  1872;  incorporated  1889;  affiliated  with  the  University  of  Cali- 
fornia, February,  1893;  reorganized  1915  when  the  San  Francisco  Society  of 
Artists  and  the  Sketch  Club  were  united  with  the  Association.  California 
School  of  Fine  Arts  is  conducted  by  the  Association  (see  School  section). 
For  exhibitions  see  San  Francisco  Museum  of  Art,  which  is  conducted  by 
the  San  Francisco  Art  Association, 

SANTA    CRUZ 

SANTA  CRUZ  ART  LEAGUE 

Seabright  Crafts  Building,  Santa  Cruz 

Philip  H^nry  Dodge President      Mrs.  J.  M.  Blazer Treasurer 

Margaret  Rogers Vice-President      Mrs.  V.  E.  Arthur Secretary 

Organized  1919,     Continuous  exhibition  with  complete  change  quarterly. 


CALIFORNIA— COLORADO  103 

SEABRIGHT 

SEABRIGHT  CRAFTS 
Seabright,  Santa  Cruz  County 

Margaret  Rogers President      Mrs.  Samuel  Unsworth  .  .Sec.-Treas. 

Rose    Edwards Vice-President 

Organized  1916.  The  purpose  of  the  Society  is  to  encourage  artistic  handi- 
craft, and  to  furnished  a  market  for  the  output  of  homes  as  well  as  of  the 
craft  house.     Studio  open  throughout  the  year. 


COLORADO 

COLORADO  CHAPTER  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Arthur  A.  Fisher President      Richard  Phillips Treasurer 

Albert  J.  Norton Vice-President      R.  O.  Parry Secretary 

407  Clarkson  St.,  Denver 
Organized  1892 ;  incorporated  1898. " 

COLORADO    SPRINGS 

4<BR0ADM00R  ART  ACADEMY 

West  Dale  Street,  Colorado  Springs 

Julie  V.  L.  Penrose President      Stanley  Stoner ". Director 

,D.  V.  Donaldson Vice-President      Ruth  Harter Registrar 

Trustees 
Julie  V.  L.  Penbose  Roland  L.  Boutwell 

Anne  Gregory  Ritter  D.  V.  Donaldson 

Regina  Lunt  Dodge 

Organized  1920,  when  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Spencer  Penrose  gave  as  a  foundation 
their  city  residence  at  Colorado  Springs.  Classes  are  held  in  the  main  building. 
Exhibitions  are  held  monthly  in  the  Gallery.  Concerts  and  performances  by 
the  Drama  League  are  given  in  Assembly  Room. 

DENVER 

►^ART  COMMISSION  OF  THE  CITY  AND  COUNTY  OF  DENVER 
623  Commonwealth  Building,  Denver 

E.  W.  Robinson President      Marie  L.  Woodson Secretary 

832  South  Pearl  St.,  Denver 
For  ivork  see  previous  volumes. 

Organized  1904.  The  Commission  consists  of  six  members.  Routine  work, 
chiefly  city  planning  and  ornamental  municipal  lighting. 

►X<DENVER  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Public  Library,  Denver 

Platt   Rogers President      C.  S.  Haugh wout Treasurer 

S.  Nelson  Hicks Vice-President      Mrs.  A.  F.  Rollins Secretary 

George  William  Eggers Director 

Organized  1893  as  Artists'  Club  of  Denver. 

Permanent  collection  in  Museum  at  City  Park.  Exhibitions  are  held  in  the 
Public  Library  and  changed  frequently.  Co-operates  with  many  other  societies 
in  pageants  and  other  functions. 


104  COLORADO— CONNECTICUT 

DENVER 

PUBLIC  LIBRARY  OF  THE  CITY  AND  COUNTY  OF  DENVER 
West  Colfax  Avenue,  Denver 
Chalmers  Hadley,  Librarian. 
Founded  1898.    Open  9  a.m.  to  9  p.m. 

There  is  a  well  lighted  art  gallery  under  the  management  of  the  Art  Associa- 
tion of  Denver,  which  provides  all  exhibitions,  lectures,  addresses,  receptions 
and  other  functions. 

PUEBLO 

PUEBLO  ARTS  AND  CRAFTS  SOCIETY 

Herman  W.  Nash President      Ida  Peterson Treasurer 

Judith  D.  Baxter,  Secretary,  226  W.  Abriendo  Ave.,  Pueblo 
Organized  1916.     Exhibitions  are  held, 

CONNECTICUT 

CONNECTICUT  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Louis  O.  Walsh President      D.  K.  Perry Secretary-Treasurer 

W.  H.  Hunt.. Vice-President  City  Hall,  New  Britain 

Organized  1902. 

CONNECTICUT  ARTS  ASSOCIATION 

Maud  A.  Simpson President      Rosemary  Brady Secretary-Treas. 

Cora  M.  Crane Vice-President  774  East  Main  St.,  Meriden 

Organized  1908 ;  name  changed  from  Connecticut  Manual  Art  Teachers'  As- 
sociation.    Exhibitions  are  held. 

BRIDGEPORT 

►^BRIDGEPORT  ART  LEAGUE 
528  Clinton  Avenue,  Bridgeport 

Mrs.  S.  W.  Gledhill President      Mks.  Guy  L.  Hammond Treasurer 

Mrs.  p.  L.  Holzer 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  F.  S.  Trumbull Secretary 

Organized  1894.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

GREENWICH 

GREENWICH  SOCIETY  OF  ARTISTS 

Leonard  Ochtman President      W.  B.  Tubby Treasurer 

Edward  C.  Potter.  ..  .Vice-President      George   Wharton   Edwards Sec. 

Organized  1912.  Owns  collection  of  paintings,  drawings  and  sculpture.  Ex- 
hibitions are  held  in  the  Bruce  Art  Museum. 

HARTFORD 

►I-ART  SOCIETY  OF  HARTFORD 
904  Main  Street,  Hartford 

Mrs.  Howell  Cheney President      Helen  Forbest Rec. -Secretary 

Mrs.  Archibald  A.  Welch.  .V.-Pres.      AIrs.  H.  B.  Freeman.  .Cor.-Secretary 
Elizabeth   Burt Treasurer 

Organized  1877.  Annual  exhibition  is  held  in  May.  An  art  school  is  main- 
tained (see  school  section). 


CONNECTICUT  105 


HARTFORD 

CONNECTICUT  ACADEMY  OF  FINE  ARTS 
Box  298,  Hartford,  Conn. 

Daniel  F.  Wentworth.  ..  .President      James  G.  McManus Secretary 

Henry  C.  White Vice-President  86  Pratt  St.,  Hartford 

Ralph  R.  Seymour Treasurer 

Organized  1910.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

CONNECTICUT  COMMISSION  OF  SCULPTURE 
The  Capitol,  Hartford 
Burton  Mansfield/  Chairman,  H.  Siddons  Mowbray,  Washington 

New  Haven  Geo.  Dudley  Seymour,  New  Haven 

Frank  Cheney,  South  Manchester  Francis  Parsons,  Hartford 

Arthur  L.  Shipman,  Clerk,  Hartford 
Commission  established  1886,  by  act  of  Legislature,  which  states  "All  mat- 
ters relating  to  the  decoration  of  the  Capitol  building  and  grounds  with  his- 
torical statues  or  works  of  art  shall,  before  final  action  by  the  General 
Assembly,  be  referred  to  said  Commission."  Powers  of  the  Commission  were 
enlarged  in  1907. 

HARTFORD  ART  CLUB 

Mrs.  J.  L.  English President      Gertrude  O.  Lewis Treasurer 

Mrs.  Edwin  H.  Bingham. Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  Alfred  Weatherby..  .Secretary 

11  Wells  Ave.,  East  Hartford 
Organized  1885. 

HARTFORD  ARTS  AND  CRAFTS  CLUB 

Mrs.  F.  Minot  Blake President      Howard  M.  Penrose Treasurer 

William  B.  Green Vice-President      Jane  L.  Dresser Secretary 

Organized  1903.    Holds  two  sales  a  year. 

HARTFORD  KERAMIC  ART  CLUB 
Atheneum  Annex,  Hartford 

Mrs.  William  Seaver President      Mrs.  George  Merchant.  .  ..Treasurer 

Mrs.  a.  J.  Benedict.  . .  1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.   Eric  Peterson Secretary 

Mrs.  James  J.  MoRCOM.2d  Vice-Pres. 
Organized  1914. 

HhMUNICIPAL  ART  SOCIETY 
102  Huntington  Street,  Hartford 

William  Honiss President      Charles  C.  Russ Treasurer 

Organized  1904. 

LITCHFIELD 

LITCHFIELD  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 

George  M.  Woodruff President      Alain  C.  White Treasurer 

Mrs.  J.  A.  Vanderpoel.  . .  .Vice-Pres.      C.  R.  Duffie Secretary 

Organized  1853.     Exhibitions  held. 

NEEDLE  AND  BOBBIN  CLUB 

Miss    Quincy President      Mrs.  Hazel  Vanderpoel.  .  .Treasurer 

Kate  Thomas,  Secretary 
Organized  1918.     (No  report  1921). 


106  CONNECTICUT 


LYME 

LYME  ART  ASSOCIATION 

W.  H.  Howe President      Charles    Ebert Treasurer 

William    Chadwick.  .Vice-President      Clark  G.  Voorhees Secretary 

Founded  1914.    Art  Gallery  completed  1921.    Annual  exhibition  in  summer. 

MYSTIC 

MYSTIC  ART  ASSOCIATION 

G.  S.  B.  Leonard President      G.  Albert  Thompson Sec.-Treas. 

Founded  1914.    Annual  exhibition  in  summer. 

NEW    BRITAIN 

NEW  BRITAIN  INSTITUTE 

Andrew  J.  Sloper President      George  S.  Talcott, 

Fred  B.  Chamberlain Treasurer  Trustee  Talcott  Art  Fund 

Marcus    White Secretary 

Areta  E.  Brown,  Acting  Librarian 
Founded  1853.    A  few  special  loan  exhibitions  have  been  held. 
NEW   CANAAN 

NEW  CANAAN  SOCIETY  OF  ARTISTS 

Augustus  M.  Gerdes President      William  Francis  Weed.  .Sec.-Treas. 

Ernest    Albert Vice-President  New  Canaan 

Re-organized  1914.     Exhibitions  held.     (No  report  1921.) 
NEW    HAVEN 

MUNICIPAL  ART  COMMISSION  OF  NEW  HAVEN 
Burton  Mansfield,  President 
For  powers  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  66. 

Organized  January,  1914,  and  consists  of  five  members  appointed  by  the 
Mayor  to  serve  for  term  of  five  years.  Public  works  are  referred  to  the 
commission  for  approval. 

NEW  HAVEN  PAINT  AND  CLAY  CLUB 
P.  O.  Box  918,  New  Haven 

John  I.  H.  Downes President      George  H.  Langzettel Treasurer 

E.  C.  Taylor Vice-President      Theodore  Diedricksen Secretary 

Organized  1900.    Exhibitions  are  held. 

SCHOOL  OF  THE  FINE  ARTS 

Yale  University,  New  Haven 
James  Rowland  Angell,  President 

Wm.  Sergeant  Kendall Director      George  H.  Langzettel,  Secretary  and 

J.  I.  H.  Downes Librarian  Assistant   Curator 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  68. 

School  founded  1866;  building  erected  1864.  The  Library  has  about  1,500 
volumes.    Illustrated  lectures  are  given.    Exhibitions  are  held. 

SILVERMINE 

SILVERMINE  GROUP  OF  ARTISTS 
Silvermine,  Norwalk 

Solon  H.  Borglum President      William  A.  Boring Treasurer 

Hamilton   Hamilton Vice-Pres.       Henry  Salem  Hubbell Secretary 

Organized  1908.  Weekly  Sunday  morning  meetings  during  summer,  when 
artists  bring  work  with  them.    Annual  exhibition  during  summer. 


CONNECTICUT— DELAWARE— DISTRICT  of  COLUMBIA     107 

WATERBURY 

i^MATTATUCK  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 
119  West  Main  Street,  Waterbury 
Arthur  Reed  Kimball,  President 

Charles  L.  Holmes Treasurer      Walter  W.  Holmes Curator 

Frederick  G.  Mason Secretary      Lucy  Peck  Bush Asst.  Curator 

Society  founded  1877;  re-organized  and  incorporated  1902;  Archaeological 
Museum  opened  1913.     Lectures  given  and  epchibitions  held. 

Its  chief  object  has  been  to  collect  and  preserve  whatever  may  serve  to 
explain  or  illustrate  the  archaeology,  the  art,  the  literature  and  the  history 
(civil,  ecclesiastical  or  natural)  of  the  State  of  Connecticut,  especially  in 
the  region  anciently  known  as  Mattatuck.  The  annex  includes  exhibition  hall 
and  museum.  In  addition  to  objects  of  historic  interest,  the  Museum  contains 
minerals,  birds,  invertebrates,  etc.,  but  is  especially  noted  for  its  archaeological 
collections,  which  include  Babylonian  and  Egyptian  specimens,  rare  artifacts 
from  Europe  and  from  many  localities  in  the  United  States. 

WESTPORT 

MORRIS  K.  JESUP  MEMORIAL  LIBRARY 
Mrs.  Edith  Very  Sherwood,  Librarian 
Occasional  exhibitions. 

DELAWARE 

WILMINGTON 

SAMUEL  BANCROFT,  JR.,  COLLECTION 
"Rockford,"  Wilmington 
The  private  collection  of  the  late   Samuel   Bancroft,  Jr.,   which   is   rich   in 
works   by  the   English   Pre-Raphaelite   painters,   may   be   seen   by  appointment 
through  writing  to  Mrs.  Samuel  Bancroft,  Jr. 

►^WILMINGTON  SOCIETY  OF  THE  FINE  ARTS 

Mrs.  Charles  Copeland President      George  P.  Bissel Treasurer 

H.  R.  Sharp Vice-President      Constance  Moore Secretary 

Pro  tern.,  Gilpin  Ave.,  Wilmington 
Organized  1912.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

DISTRICT  OF  COLUMBIA 

WASHINGTON 

►^ARCH^LOGICAL  SOCIETY  OF  WASHINGTON 
1741  New  York  Avenue,  Washington 

Robert   Lansing President      John  B.  Earner Treasurer 

R.  M.  Thompson.  .1st  Vice-President      Mitchell   Carroll Secretary 

Henry  White 2d  Vice-President 

For  details  of  zvork  see  Vol.  XV 11,  p.  120. 
Organized  1913. 

^ARTS  CLUB  OF  WASHINGTON 
2017  I  Street,  N.  W.,  Washington 

George  Julian  Zolnay.  ..  .President      W.  E.  S afford Cor. -Secretary 

Mitchell  Carroll Vice-Pres.      G.  H.  Dawson Rec- Secretary 

R.  L.  Neuhauser Treasurer 

Founded  1916  to  bring  into  association  those  devoted  to  painting,  sculpture, 
architecture,  music,  literature  and  the  drama.  Exhibitions,  musicales,  lectures 
and  weekly  dinners. 


108  DISTRICT  OF  COLUMBIA 

WASHINGTON 

►^PUBLIC   SCHOOL  ART   LEAGUE  OF   THE  DISTRICT 
OF  COLUMBIA 

Grace  Lincoln  Temple President      Charles  J.  Bell Treasurer 

Mrs.  F.  a.  Delano 1st  Vice-Pres.      Myra  M.  Hendley Secretary 

Leila  Mechlin 2d  Vice-Pres.  1216  L  St.,  N.  W.,  Washington 

For  details  of  work  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  74. 
Organized  1908. 

LIBRARY  OF  CONGRESS 

DIVISION    OF    PRINTS 

Richard  A.  Rice,  Acting  Chief 
For  foundation  and  details  see  Vol.  XI,  pp.  74-75. 

Open,  free,  week  days  9  a.m.  to  4.30  p.m.  ;  Sundays  and  holidays  (except 
Christmas  and  Fourth  of  July)  2  to  10  p.m. 

PUBLIC  LIBRARY  OF  DISTRICT  OF  COLUMBIA 
Washington 
George  F.  Bowerman,  Librarian 
Founded  1896.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

^SOCIETY  OF  WASHINGTON  ARTISTS 

William  H.  Holmes President      Annie  D.  Kelly Treasurer 

Sarah    Munroe Vice-President      A.  H.  O.  Rolle Secretary 

134  Quincy  PI.,  Washington 
Organized  1890.     Exhibitions  are  held  in  the  Corcoran  Gallery. 

WASHINGTON  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

P.  C.  Adams President      T.  A.  Mullett Treasurer 

R.  B.  Atkinson 1st  Vice-Pres.      L,  P.  Wheat,  Jr Secretary 

Louis  A.  Simon 2d  Vice-Pres.  808  17th  St.,  N.  W.,  Washington 

Organized  1887. 

WASHINGTON  CHAPTER 

NATIONAL  ASSOCIATION  OF  WOMEN  PAINTERS  AND 

SCULPTORS 

Bertha  Noyes,  Secretary 

614  19th  St.,  N.  W.,  Washington 

►^WASHINGTON  SOCIETY  OF  THE  FINE  ARTS 

William  Bruce  King President      Leila    Mechlin. Secretary 

Edson  B.  Olds Treasurer  1741  New  York  Ave.,  Washington 

Organized  1905.  Membership,  1,290.  Courses  of  lectures  on  art,  literature, 
and  music,  also  concerts  and  lecture  recitals  for  members  and  the  public ;  exhi- 
bitions are  held,  other  organizations  assisted  in  holding  exhibitions  and  civic 
improvement  actively  promoted.  The  American  Magazine  of  Arts  is  sent  to 
all  members. 

4-WASHINGTON  WATER  COLOR  CLUB 

William  H.  Holmes President      A.  Elizabeth  Sawtelle Secretary 

Mary  K.  Porter Treasurer  2102  O  St.,  N.  W.,  Washington 

Organized  1896.     Annual  exhibitions  are  held  at  the  Corcoran  Gallery. 


FLORIDA— GEORGIA— ILLINOIS  109 

PLORIDA 

TAMPA 

STUDENTS'  ART  CLUB 
Plant  Park  Club  House,  Tampa 

Mrs.  G.  F.  O'Brien President      Ena    Sherrill Treasurer 

Mrs.  L.  L.  Buchanan.. 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  J.  D.  Clark,  Jr .Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.  Oscar  Windhorst..  .2d  Vice-P.      Mrs.  Jack  Knight Cor.-Sec. 

Organized  1902.    Annual  exhibition  in  December. 


GEORGIA 

GEORGIA  CHAPTER,  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

William  J.  J.  Chase President      Arthur  N.  Robinson Sec.-Treas. 

Candler  Building,  Atlanta 
Organized  1906. 

ATHENS 

i^ATHENS  ART  ASSOCIATION 
University  of  Georgia,  Athens 

Laura  Blackshear „  President      Nina    Scudder Treasurer 

John   Morris Vice-President      Mary    Morris Secretary 

Organized  1919.    Exhibitions  are  held,  and  lectures  are  given. 

ATLANTA 

►^ATLANTA  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Cable  Piano  Building,  Atlanta 

C  B.  BiDWELL President      Mrs.  E.  W.  More Treasurer 

A.  Ten  Eyck  Brown Vice-Pres.      Janet  Evins Secretary 

38  East  14th  St.,  Atlanta 
Organized  1917. 

MACON 

.^MACON  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Lutie  Westcott President      Mrs.  L.  P.  Hillyer 2d  Vice-Pres. 

Mrs.  T.  E.  Blackshear.  ..1st  Vice-P.       Emma    Smith Treasurer 

Mrs.  J.  E.  Wright Secretary 

Mrs.  M.  B.  Hammond,  Corresponding  Secretary 
514  Napier  Avenue,  Macon 
Organized  1918. 


ILLINOIS 

ILLINOIS  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN   INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Henry  K.  Holsman President       Richard  E.  Schmidt Treasurer 

F.  W.  Puckey 1st  Vice-Pres.       John  A.  Armstrong Secretary 

E.  H.  Clark 2d  Vice-Pres.  11  South  La  Salle  St.,  Chicago 

Organized  1869  as  Chicago  Chapter;  incorporated  1890  as  Illinois  Chapter 
The  Illinois  Chapter  co-operates  with  the  Chicago  Architectural  Club  in  holding 
an  annual  exhibit  of  works  of  architecture,  when  a  gold  medal  of  merit  is 
awarded. 


110  ILLINOIS 


AURORA 

ART  LEAGUE 
303  Traction  Terminal  Building,  Aurora 

James  M.  Cowan President      J.  Frank  Harral Treasurer 

Mrs.  D.  B.  Pierson 1st  Vice-Pres.      Gladys  Trantman Secretary 

L.  J.  Mead 2d  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  W.  S.  Frazier Cor.-Sec. 

Organized  1919.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

CHARLESTON 

^CHARLESTON  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Public  Library,  Charleston 

Mrs.  L.  M.  Jones President      Mrs.  H.  H.  Blair Treasurer 

Mrs.  J.  H.  Marshall.  ..  .Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  E.  H.  Taylor Secretary 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  85. 
Organized  1912.     Occasional  exhibitions. 
CHICAGO 

ART  COMMISSION  OF  THE  CITY  OF  CHICAGO 

L.  C.  Kuhnert President      Emil  R.  Zettler Secretary 

4  East  Ohio  St.,  Chicago 
Established  1899;  amended  by  Illinois  Legislature   1915;   first  appointments 
made  in  December,  1917.     Six  members  appointed  by  Mayor,  who  is  also  an 
ex-officio  member.     (No  report  1921.) 

ANTIQUARIAN  SOCIETY 
OF  THE  ART  INSTITUTE  OF  CHICAGO 

Mrs.  Potter  Palmer President      Mrs.  A.  A.  Carpenter Sec.-Treas. 

Mrs.  Benjamin  F.  Ayer.  .Vice-Pres.  1130  Lake  Shore  Dr.,  Chicago 

Organized  1878  as  the  Decorative  Art  Society ;  re-organized  1894  as  the  Anti- 
quarians ;  known  by  its  present  name  since  1908.  An  organization  of  ladies, 
which  maintains  permanent  exhibition  galleries  in  the  Art  Institute  for  which 
it  purchases  antique  objects  of  industrial  art,  including  textiles,  carvings  and 
furniture. 

ART  INSTITUTE  ALUMNI  ASSOCIATION 

Adams  and  Michigan  Boulevard,  Chicago 

Oliver  Dennett  Grover,  Honorary  President 

Thomas   E.    Talmadge President      Gertrude  T.  Williams Treasurer 

Jessie  P.  Lacey 1st  Vice-Pres.       Genevieve   Sissing Rec.-Secretary 

James  H.  Winn 2d  Vice-Pres.      Elizabeth  T.  Holsman Cor.-Sec. 

Organized  1912.  Membership  consists  of  former  students  of  the  Chicago  Art 
Institute  School.    Exhibitions  held. 

ART  SERVICE  LEAGUE 

Fine  Arts  Building,  Chicago 

Oliver  D.  Grover President      James  H.  Kehler Treasurer 

Carleton  Hackett Vice-President      F.  W.  Perkins Secretary 

Founded  1918.     Occasional  exhibitions.     (No  report  1921.) 

ART  STUDENTS'  LEAGUE 
Art  Institute,  Chicago 

Thelma    Paddock President      Y.  Edward  Sodenburg Treasurer 

Walter  H.  Gage Vice-President      Jerome  G.  Rosen.  ..Business  Manager 

and  Secretary 

Organized  1894.    Exhibitions  held. 


ILLINOIS  111 


CHICAGO 

ARTISTS'  GUILD 
Fine  Arts  Building,  410  South  Michigan  Boulevard,  Chicago 

F.  J.  Reichmann President      Ruth  L.  Brooks Secretary 

Charles  A.  Herbert,  Treasurer 

Galleries  open  daily  8  :30  a.m  to  5  :30  p.m. 

Organized  1910;  incorporated  1911.  Maintains  permanent  exhibition  and 
salesrooms  for  work  of  members,  approved  by  the  committee;  bureau  of  infor- 
mation ;  lecturers  furnished.  Fine  Arts  Building  prizes  $100  at  each  of  5 
exhibitions. 

ARTS  CLUB  OF  CHICAGO 
610  South  Michigan  Avenue,  Chicago 

Mrs.  J.  A.  Carpenter President      C.  S.  Dewey Treasurer 

F.  J.  Reichmann Vice-President      Fames    MacVeagh Secretary 

Organized  1916.  Clubrooms  and  exhibition  galleries  maintained.  Numerous 
exhibitions. 

BUSINESS  MEN'S  ART  CLUB 
133  West  Washington  Street,  Chicago 

E.  G.  Drew President      H.  B.   Colby Secretary-Treasurer 

Walter  Sargent Vice-President  6111  Langley  Ave.,  Chicago 

Organized  1920.     Exhibitions  held. 

CHICAGO  ARCHITECTURAL  CLUB 
40  South  Clark  Street,  Chicago 

Elmer  J.  Fox President       Charles  H.  Markel Treasurer 

Curt  A.  Esser Vice-President       Joseph  B.  Lindquist Secretary 

Organized  1885.  Lecture  courses,  competitions  and  criticisms.  Special  Home 
Traveling  Scholarship,  $325,  for  study  of  Colonial  architecture.  Annual  ex- 
hibition at  the  Art  Institute  with  co-operation  of  Illinois  Chapter  of  the 
American  Institute  of  Architects,  Illinois  Society  of  Architects,  and  the  Art 
Institute  (see  Institute  exhibitions). 

CHICAGO  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Washington   Street  and  Michigan  Avenue,   Chicago,   111. 
Carl  B.  Roden^  Librarian 
The  Arts  and  Crafts  Division  contains  books  on  art,  portfolios  of  engravings, 
and  rare  or  unusually  beautiful  books.     Several  thousand  volumes  on  fine  and 
applied   arts,   periodicals   and   pamphlets    on   art ;    mounted   pictures   of   birds, 
animals,  Indians,  costumes,  etc. ;  newspaper  and  magazine  clippings  filed  alpha- 
betically. 

^CHICAGO  PUBLIC  SCHOOL  ART  SOCIETY 
Mrs.  John  Buckingham,  Honorary  President 

Samuella  Crosby President      Frances  L.  Walshe Treasurer 

Mrs.  W.  S.  North Vice-President      AIrs.  Theodore  Tieken Secretary 

2944  Washington  Blvd.,  Chicago 
For  foundation  and  zvork  see  Vol.  VI,  p.  150,  and  Vol.  XI,  p,  95. 
Organized  1894;  incorporated  1900.     Pictures,  casts  and  decorations  lent  to 
schools.     Exhibitions  held. 


112  ILLINOIS 


CHICAGO 

CHICAGO  SOCIETY  OF  ARTISTS 
Art  Institute  of  Chicago 

Rudolph  F.  Ingerle President       Charles  W.  Dahlgreen.  .  .Treasurer 

Carl  R.  Krafft Vice-President      Marie  E.  Blanke Sec. -Treasurer 

418  Deming  PL,  Chicago 
Organized    1901.     During   the  Annual    Exhibition   of   works   by    Artists   of 
Chicago  and  vicinity,  held  at  the  Art  Institute,  the  Chicago  Society  of  Artists 
awards  its   Silver  Medal   for   the   most  artistic  exhibit.      (See  institute  exhi- 
bitions.) 

CHICAGO  SOCIETY  OF  ETCHERS 

Otto  J.  Schneider President      Lee    Sturges Vice-President 

Mrs  Bertha  E.  Jaques,  Secretary  and  Treasurer 
4316  Greenwood  Avenue,  Chicago,  111. 
Organized  1910.     Purchases  etchings  for  the  Chicago  Art  Institute. 

CHICAGO  SOCIETY  OF  MINIATURE  PAINTERS 
Art  Institute,  Chicago 

Anna  Lynch President      Eda  N.  Casterton Treasurer 

Magda  Heuermann Vice-Pres.      Carolyn   D.   Tyler Secretary 

1401  East  53d  St.,  Chicago 
Organized   1912,     Holds   annual   exhibition  and   sends  occasional  traveling 
exhibitions. 

COMMISSION   FOR  THE  ENCOURAGEMENT   OF  LOCAL  ART 

Carter  H.  Harrison President      Frank  A.  Werner 

Victor  Higgins  Robert  H.  McCormick 

Wilson  Irvine  Frank  G.  Logan Secretary 

William  O.  Goodman  C.  H.  Burkholder Asst.  Secretary 

Chicago  Art  Institute. 

Established  by  City  ordinance  November  9,  1914.  Consists  of  seven  members 
appointed  for  terms  of  four  years.  It  is  empowered  to  select  and  purchase 
paintings,  sculpture,  and  other  works  of  art  produced  by  residents  of  Chicago, 
and  to  place  them  in  City  buildings. 

CORS  ARDENS 

C.  Raymond  Jonson President      H.  Leon  Roecker Asst.  Treasurer 

Rudolph    Weisenborn Vice-Pres.      Carl  Hoeckner Secretary 

Ramon  Shiva Treasurer  63  West  Ontario  St.,  Chicago 

Agnes  Squire  Potter,  Assistant  Secretary 
Organized  1921.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

ENGLEWOOD  WOMAN'S  CLUB 

6734  Wentworth  Avenue,  Chicago 

ART  DEPARTMENT 

Mrs.  Howard  B.  Chappel,  Chairman 

Lectures  are  given ;  prize  awarded  to  a  young  artist  during  annual  exhibition 

of  Chicago  artists. 

B.  F.  FERGUSON.  MONUMENT  FUND 
Art  Institute  of  Chicago 
For  work  accomplished  see  Volume  XI,  p.  99,  and  subsequent  issues. 
Established  by  bequest  of  Benjamin  Franklin  Ferguson  of  Chicago,  who  died 
in  1905.    The  principal  is  $1,100,000,  the  net  income  from  which,  after  deduct- 
ing all  charges,  is  expended  by  the  Art  Institute  of  Chicago  in  the  erection  and 
maintenance  of  statuary  and  monuments  in  the  parks  and  other  public  places 
of  Chicago. 


ILLINOIS  113 


CHICAGO 

FRIENDS  OF  AMERICAN  ART 

Art  Institute,  Chicago 

William  O.  Goodman President       Ernest  A.  Hamill Treasurer 

Frank  G.  Logan Vice-President      Arthur  T.  Aldis Secretary 

C.  H.  Burkholder,  Assistant  Secretary,  Chicago  Institute  of  Art 
For  previous  purchases  see  Vol.  IX,  p.  131  and  subsequent  issues. 
Incorporated  1910.    Works  by  American  artists  purchased  each  year  for  the 
Art  Institute. 

MUNICIPAL  ART  COMMISSION  OF  CHICAGO 

City  Hall,  Chicago 
William  H.  Thompson,  Mayor,  President  ex-officio 

Louis  C.  Kuhnert President      Jarvis  Hunt 

Carter  H.  Harrison  Frank  M.  Morris 

Victor  Higgins  Emil  R.  Zettler Secretary 

4  East  Ohio  St.,  Chicago 
Established  1899  by  General  Assembly,  giving  veto  power  only;  1917  act  of 
Legislature  gave  increased  scope  and  power.     Composed  of  Mayor  of  Chicago 
and  six  other  members. 

i^MUNICIPAL  ART  LEAGUE  OF  CHICAGO 
Art  Institute,  Chicago 

Everett  L.  Millard President      Mrs.  W.  F.  Young Secretary 

Charles  L.  Hutchinson.  .Treasurer  5319  Kenmore  Ave.,  Chicago 

Organized  1900.     Exhibitions  held. 

PALETTE  AND  CHISEL  CLUB 
59  East  Van  Buren  Street,  Chicago,  111. 

David  L.  Adam President      Fred  T.  Larsen Treasurer 

Glen  C.  Steffer..  .1st  Vice-President      C.  Lynn  Coy Rec.-Secret'ary 

C.  E.  Selleck 2d  Vice-Pres. 

Organized  1895.     Permanent  free  exhibitions ;   studio  where  members  work 
from  model  three  times  a  week;  summer  camp  at  Fox  Lake,  111. 

RENAISSANCE  SOCIETY  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY  OF  CHICAGO 

Edgar  J.  Goodspeed President      James  A.  Field Treasurer 

Mrs.  W.  A.  Nitze 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  Charles  H.  Beesony.  Secretary 

Elizabeth  Wallace.  ...2d  Vice-Pres.  University  of  Chicago 

Organized  1916.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

SVENSKA  KLUBBEN 
1258  N.  LaSalle  Street,  Chicago 

C.  S.  Peterson President      Herbert  Hedm an Treasurer 

Edwin   Olson Vice-President      William    Larson Secretary 

E.  W.  Benson,  Librarian 
Organized  1870.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

TECHNIC  ARTS  LEAGUE 

Mrs.  E.  W.  Rice President       Edna  D.  Smith Treasurer 

Mrs.  Anne  T.  Brown Vice-Pres.       Mrs.  M.  K.  Bush Rec.  Sec. 

Mrs.  J.  Harlen  Bretz,  Corresponding  Secretary,  Homewood 
Organized  1893  as  the  Chicago  Ceramic  Art  Association.     Course  of  lessons 
in  design  under  Hermann  Rosse. 


114  ILLINOIS 


CHICAGO 

TUESDAY  ART  AND  TRAVEL  CLUB 

Mrs.  G.  a.  Neafus President      Mrs.  B.  B.  Pierson Treasurer 

Mrs.  John  Goebel 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  Ernest  Kendall Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.  J.  B.  Schoninger Cor.-Sec. 

Organized  1907.     Awards  scholarships  to  the  Chicago  Art  Institute.     Gives 
$100  annually  for  the  distribution  of  pictures  to  the  public  schools. 

KEWANEE 

KEWANEE  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Harriet  P.  Turner,  Librarian 
Founded  1875.     Art  gallery  open  9  a.m  to  9  p.m.,  contains  the  Pierce  Art 
Collection. 

MATTOON 

MATTOON  ART  CLUB 

Minnie  Bresee President      Mrs.  Lizzie  McNair Treasurer 

Katherine  Morgan  . .  .Vice-President      Carrie   Riddle Secretary 

Organized  1912. 

MOLINE 

TRI-CITY  ART  LEAGUE 
(See  report  under  Davenport,  Iowa) 

OREGON 

OREGON  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 

Emily   H.   Cartwright Librarian       Lorado  Taft Chairman  Art  Com. 

Gallery  open  free  2  to  6  and  7  to  9  p.m.,  daily  except  Friday  and  Sunday. 
Collection  includes  paintings  and  sculpture.     (No  report  1921.) 

PEORIA 

.^PEORIA  SOCIETY  OF  ALLIED  ARTS 
Lehmann  Building,  Peoria 

Mrs.  Jacques  Bloom President      Mrs.  Charles  Lung Treasurer 

Frank  N.  Emerson.  ...  1st  Vice  Pres.      Charles  A.  Bennett Curator 

Nina  Alice  Dodge.  .2d  Vice  President      Mark  H.  Whitmeyer Secretary 

For  foundation  and  other  data  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  104. 
Incorporated  1913.    Exhibitions  and  lectures  given. 

ROCKFORD 

ROCKFORD  ART  GUILD 
400  Studio  Lane,  Rockford 

Mrs.  George  D.  Roper President       Olive  M.  Ebrich Treasurer 

Mrs.  D.  M.  Keith 1st  Vice  Pres.      Mrs.  M.  R.  Harned Secretary 

Mrs.  John  S.  Barnes.. 2d  Vice-Pres.  415  Whitman  St.,  Rockford 

Dudley  Crafts  Watson,  Art  Director 
Organized  1913  by  the  Union  of  the  Rockford  Art  Association  and  Rockford 
Arts  and  Crafts  Society.     Salesroom  and  studio  maintained ;  lectures  and  ex- 
hibitions held. 


ROCK    ISLAND 


TRI-CITY  ART  LEAGUE 
(See  report  under  Davenport,  Iowa) 


Torn  Lingerie.    By  Frederick  C.  Frieseke,  N.A. 

Potter   Palmer  Gold  Medal  and  $1,000  Prize,  also  the  W.  M.   R.   French 
Gold  Medal,  Art   Institute  of  Chicago,   1921 


C 

o 


ILLINOIS— INDIANA  115 

SPRINGFIELD 

BOARD  OF  ART  ADVISORS 
Springfield,   111. 
Martin  Roche,  President 
Martin  A.  Ryerson  Frederick  C.  Bartlett,  Painter 

Irving  K.  Pond,  Architect  Nellie  V.  Walker,  Sculptor 

LoRADo  Taft,  Sculptor  Hugh  S.  Magill,  Jr.,  Secretary 

Ralph  Clarkson,  Painter  Leland  Office  Bldg.,  Springfield 

Howard  Shaw 

Created  by  Act  of  Legislature,  1917.     The  board  consists  of  eight  members. 
It  is  connected  with  the  Department  of  Public  Works  and  Buildings,  and  its 
duties  are  to  advise  relative  to  the  artistic  merit  of  all  public  works. 
No  report  1920. 

.^SPRINGFIELD   ART   ASSOCIATION 
Edwards  Place,  801  N.  Fifth  Street,  Springfield 

Mrs.  Howard  T.  Willson.  .President      Mrs.  A.  L.  Bowen Treasurer 

Mrs.  Latham  Smith.  .1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  E.  E.  Staley Secretary 

Etta  Ackerman 2d  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  A.  D.  Mackie Cor.-Secretary 

710  South  Second  St.,  Springfield 
For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  106. 

Organized  1909;  gallery  opened  1914  as  Art  Club  of  Edwards  Place.     Fre- 
quent lectures  and  exhibitions. 

INDIANA 

INDIANA  CIRCUIT  EXHIBIT 
Mrs.  Melville  F.  Johnston,  103  North  Tenth  Street,  Richmond,  Ind.,  sends 
out  traveling  exhibitions  to  the  principal  cities  in  Indiana. 

INDIANA   SOCIETY  OF  ARCHITECTS 
500  Board  of  Trade  Bldg.,  Indianapolis 

F.  S.  Cannon President      Herman   Scherrer Treasurer 

Herbert  Foltz 1st  Vice-Pres.      Merritt  Harrison Secretary 

H.  M.  Griffin 2d  Vice-Pres. 

Organized  1917. 

INDIANA  SOCIETY  OF  SCULPTORS 

Francis  M.  Goodwin   President      Mrs.  Rena  T.  Kohlmann.. Treasurer 

Newcastle,  Ind.  Indianapolis 

John  G.  Prasuhn Vice-President      Anna  E.  Turrell Secretary 

Indianapolis  Herron   Art    Institute,    Indianapolis 

Organized  1916.    Annual  exhibition  held  in  conjunction  with  Indiana  Artists 
at  Herron  Art  Institute. 

INDIANA  STATE  FAIR  ART  GALLERY 
art  department 
John  Isenberger,  Director,  Indianapolis 
Annual   exhibition  of  oil   paintings,  water   colors,   sculpture  and   handicraft 
at  State  Fair, 

INDIANA  STATE  LIBRARY 

State  House,  Indianapolis 
Demarchus  C.  Brown,  Librarian 
Founded  1826.    Collection  of  portraits  of  governors  of  the  state. 


116  INDIANA 


STATE  TEACHERS'  ASSOCIATION 

ALLIED    ART    SECTION 

Alice  E,  Hall President      Elizabeth  Searle Secretary 

Chelsea  Stewart Vice-President  169  West  Hill  St.,  Wabash 

Organized  1915.    Annual  exhibition  at  Herron  Art  Institute. 
ANDERSON 

ANDERSON  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Mrs.  a.  W.  Brady President      Lucia  M.  Manning Treasurer 

Mrs.  W.  A.  Denny 1st  Vice-Pres.       Mrs.  W.  H.  Forse Secretary 

303  West  12th  St.,  Anderson 
Organized  1911.     Permanent  collection.    Exhibitions  held  and  lectures  given. 

ANDERSON  ART  CLUB 

Mrs.  E.  R.  Prather President      Mrs.  Charles  Vernon Secretary 

12  Delaware  St.,  Anderson 
Organized  1918. 

BEDFORD 

LADIES  OF  THE  ROUND  TABLE 

Mrs.  Miranda  R.  Avery.  .  .President      Mrs.  Homer  Franklin Treasurer 

Mrs.  Blanche  Bornff.  1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  P.  C.  Furst Secretary 

Ottilia  Scherschill.  .2d  Vice-Pres. 

Organized  1895.    Art  program  fortnightly. 
BLOOMINGTON 

INDIANA  LIBRARY  ART  CLUB 
W.  S.  Bittner,  Secretary,  Extension  Division 
Indiana  University,  Bloomington 
Organized  1914.     Circulates  exhibitions  throughout  State. 
CRAWFORDSVILLE 

ART  LEAGUE 

Florence  Schultz President      Mrs.  Emma  Riley Treasurer 

Mrs.  Elizabeth  Linn Vice-Pres.      Agnes  Miller Secretary 

Organized  1896. 

FORT   WAYNE 

FORT  WAYNE  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Mrs.  Max  B.  Fisher President      Catherine   Hamilton Secretary 

Clinton    and    Lewis    Streets,    Fort 
Wayne 
Organized  1888.     Maintains  art  school  (see  school  section), 
FRANKFORT 

FRANKFORT  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Mrs.  W.  S.  Morris President      Mrs.  Iva  Boynton Secretary 

Organized  1914,    Lectures  given. 
GREENCASTLE 

ART  CLUB 

Mrs.  Louise  E.  Zaring,  Leader 
9  Poplar  St.,  Greencastle 
Organized  1893.     Study  class  maintained. 


INDIANA  117 


INDIANAPOLIS 

ARCHITECTS'  ASSOCIATION  OF  INDIANAPOLIS 
320  Indiana  Pythian  Bldg.,  Indianapolis 

Wilson  B.  Parker President      Wilbur  B.  Shook Sec.-Treasurpj- 

Herbert  Foltz Vice-President 

Organized  1908. 

ARCHITECTURAL  LEAGUE  OF  INDIANAPOLIS 

Robert  F.  Daggett President      F.  S.  Cannon Treasurer 

H.  H.  Brown 1st  Vice-President      C.  T.  Meyers : . . .  Secretary 

Myra  Richards 2d  Vice-President  500  Board  of  Trade  Bldg.,  Indian- 

apolis. 
Organized  1920. 

FRIENDS  OF  AMERICAN  ART 

Thomas  C.  Howe President       Edwin  A.  Hendrickson.  .  .Treasurer 

Mrs.  James  W.  Fesler Vice-Pres.      Grace  A.  Speer Secretary 

Herron  Art  Institute,  Indianapolis 
Organized  1919.     Presents  paintings  to  the  Art  Association  of  Indianapolis. 

INDIANA  ARTISTS'  CLUB 
Sixteenth  and  Pennsylvania  Streets,  Indianapolis 

Frederic  Polley President       Mrs.  Emma  Sangernebo.  .Treasurer 

Clifton  A.  Wheeler..  1st  Vice-Pres.      Chelsea    Stewart Rec. -Secretary 

Mrs.  M.  K.  Eggemeyer.  .  .2d  Vice-P.      Elizabeth  E.  Heuser Cor. -Sec. 

1301  N.  Alabama  St.,  Indianapolis 
Organized  1917.     Lectures  given  and  exhibitions  held. 

INDIANA  KERAMIC  CLUB 

Mrs.  W.  T.  Fugate President      Mrs.  E.  H.  Meyers Treasurer 

Mrs.  G.  L.  Stayman..  .1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  W.  H.  W^elch Secretary 

2339  Broadway,  Indianapolis 
Organized  1897.     Occasional  exhibitions. 

INDIANAPOLIS  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
St.  Clair  and  Meridian  Streets,  Indianapolis 
Charles  E.  Rush,  Librarian 
Opened  to  the  public  in  1873.     Occasional  exhibitions. 

MEMORIAL  ART  COMMISSION 
Members 
Evans  Woollen  Ernest  W.  Young 

1635  Talbott  St.,  Indianapolis  Charles  A.  Spanley 

Myra  R.  Richards  Gardner   C.  Johnston 

Mrs.  M.  F.  Johnston 

Established  1919,  by  an  Act  of  Legislature,   for  the  purpose  of  passing  on 
the  plans  and  artistic  qualities  of  proposed  memorials  of  the  Great  War. 

PORTFOLIO   CLUB 
The  Propylaeum,  Indianapolis 

Charles    W.    Moores President      Kurt  Vonnegut Treasurer 

Margaret   Donnan Vice-Pres.      Mrs.    Kurt    Vonnegut.  ...  Secretary 

Organized  1890. 


118  INDIANA 


INDIANAPOLIS 

SKETCHING  CLUB 

Julia    Walk President       Mrs.  Frank  Brandt Treasurer 

Mrs.   S.   H.   Keeney,   Secretary,  2752  Ashland  Ave.,   Indianapolis 
Organized  1885. 

STUDY  CLUB 
1011  North  Pennsylvania  St.,  Indianapolis 

Mrs.  S.  E.  Perkins President      Mrs.  A.  L.  Lockridge Secretary 

1409  N.   Pennsylvania   St.,   Indian- 
:  apolis. 

Organized  1895. 

WOMAN'S  DEPARTMENT  CLUB 

ART  DEPARTMENT 
1702  North  Meridian  St.,  Indianapolis 
Mrs.  O.  C.  Wilcox,  Chairman 
Organized  1912.    Exhibitions  and  lectures  given. 

KOKOMO 

WOMAN'S  DEPARTMENT  CLUB 

ART  DEPARTMENT 

Mrs.   C.   C.   McFann President      Mrs.    E.    E.    Russell Secy-Treas. 

Mrs.    G.   E.   Bruner Vice-Pres.  402  East  Walnut  St.,  Kokomo 

Organized  1920. 

LA    FAYETTE 

LA  FAYETTE  ART  CLUB 

Alice    Brown    President      Mrs.  I.  C.  Hoffman Treasurer 

Stella   Fox    Vice-Pres.      Mrs.   O.  D.  Johnson Secretary 

LA  FAYETTE  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Henry   H.   Vinton President      Foster    Hight    Treasurer 

Mrs.  John  Morrison,  Secretary,  422  North  Seventh  St.,  La  Fayette 
Organized  1910.     Exhibitions  are  held.     (No  report  1921.) 
LEBANON 

FLORENTINE  CLUB 

Grace  Etchison President      Nannie    Miller Treasurer 

Nora    Damall Vice-Pres.      Helen  Caldwell Secretary 

Organized  1898.     (No  report  1921.) 

LOGANSPORT 

►I-LOGANSPORT   ART   ASSOCIATION 

Mrs.   J.   W.    Ballard President       Etha   Massena Treasurer 

Mrs.  Carl  Wise 1st  Vice-Pres.      Jennie    B.    Mackintosh.  .  .Secretary 

Flora   Uhl 2nd  Vice-Pres.  1107   Broadway,   Logansport 

MARION 

MARION  DEPARTMENT  CLUB 

ART   DEPARTMENT 
Mrs.  Alva  Ketner,   Secretary-Treasurer 
Organized  1918. 

MARION  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Daisy  Springer,  Librarian 
Open  9  A.M   to  9   p.m.     Permanent   collection   of   paintings,    sculpture   and 
other  objects. 


INDIANA  119 


MARTINSVILLE 

MONDAY  AFTERNOON  CLUB 

Mrs.  J.  E.  Bryce President      Mrs.  Frank  Finney Treasurer 

Mrs.  E.  I,  PosTON Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  R.  H.  Egbert Secretary 

Organized  1901.     (No  report  1921.) 

MUNCIE 

ART  STUDENTS'  LEAGUE 

Mrs.  George  A.  Ball President      Mrs.  Philip  McAbee Secretary 

Mrs.  W.  p.  Stevens Vice-Pres.  416   East   Washington    St.,    Muncie 

Mrs.  F.  D.  Rose Treasurer 

Organized  1892.     Study  class  maintained. 

PENDLETON 

PENDLETON  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Box  345,  Pendleton 

Mrs.  L.  V.  Mays President      J.  P.  Amick Vice-President 

Jeanette  Lewis,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Organized  1920. 

PERU 

.^PERU  ART  CLUB 

Mrs.  F.  M.  Stutesman President      Mrs.  Max  Kraus Treasurer 

Mrs.  J.  W.  Connaty.  .Vice-President      Mrs.  Eugene  Ensel Secretary 

Organized  1900. 

RICHMOND 

ART  ASSOCIATION  OF  RICHMOND 
High  School,  Richmond 

William  Dudley  Foulke.  .President      Francis   Edmunds Treasurer 

Mrs.  Paul  Comstock Vice-Pres.      W.  G.   Bate Secretary 

Mrs.  M.  F.  Johnston,  Director 
103  North  Tenth  St.,  Richmond 
Organized  1897.     The  galleries  in  the  high  school  building  are  in  constant 
use  by  the  school  children,  clubs,  art  study  committee  and  the  public.     Holds 
annual  exhibition  of  paintings  by  American  artists. 

SEYMOUR 

SEYMOUR  ART  LEAGUE 

T.  A.  MoTT President      Mrs.  Agnes  Blish Treasurer 

Adelaide   Miller Vice-President      R.  A.  Cox Secretary 

Organized  1913.    Art  collection  started.     Occasional  exhibitions. 

SHELBYVILLE 

CARNEGIE  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 

Shelbyville 
Bertha  Bowlby,  Librarian 
Nucleus  of  an  art  gallery.     Murals  by  Richard  B.  Gruelle. 

SOUTH    BEND 

PROGRESS  CLUB 

ART  DEPARTMENT 
Mrs.  William  M.  Shirley,  President 
828  West  Colfax  Avenue,  South  Bend 
Organized  1895.     Exhibitions  and  lectures  held.     (No  report  1921.) 


120  INDIANA—IOWA 


SOUTH    WHITNEY 

FINE  ARTS  CLUB 

Mrs.  George  Domer President      Mrs.  J.  M,  Richer Secretary 

Organized  1920. 

TERRE    HAUTE 

TERRE  HAUTE  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Emeline  Fairbanks  Memorial  Library,  Terre  Haute 

F.  M.  Stalker President      Fannie  A.  Blake Treasurer 

Mrs.  John  White 1st  Vice-Pres.      Helen  Benbridge Secretary 

W.  T.  TuRMAN. . .  .2d  Vice-President  213  North  7th  St.,  Terre  Haute 

Organized  1910.    Exhibitions  are  held  in  the  Public  Library. 

►I^TERRE  HAUTE  DEPARTMENTAL  CLUB 

ART   SECTION 

Zayda  Scovell President      Mrs.  Frank  Wagner Treasurer 

Mrs.  Walker  Schell Vice-Pres.      Junia  Rynerson Secretary 

Organized  1908. 

TIPTON 

TIPTON  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Public   Library,   Tipton 

Mrs.  J.  A.  Gleason President      Mrs.  J.  C.  Hogue Vice-President 

.Eleanor  Clark,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Organized  1911.    Lectures  and  occasional  exhibitions. 

VALPARAISO 

WOMAN'S  CLUB  OF  VALPARAISO 

ART  DEPARTMENT 
Mrs.  L.  S.  Dowdell,  Chairman 
823  Laporte  Ave.,  Valparaiso 
Organized  1902.  Studies  art  and  holds  exhibitions.     (No  report  1921). 

VINCENNES 

VINCENNES  FORTNIGHTLY  CLUB 

ART  DEPARTMENT 
Mrs.  H.  T.  Watts,  Chairman 
Organized  1894.     Actively  interested  in  work  of  Indiana  artists. 

WASHINGTON 

SCHOOL  ART  LEAGUE 

Mrs.  J.  Britman President      Mrs.  Cameron  Hyatt Treasurer 

Mrs.  L.  H.  O'Donnell Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  Mary  W.  Kennedy.  ..Secretary 

Organized  1917.    Exhibitions  held. 

IOWA 

IOWA  CHAPTER  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Charles  A.  Diem  an President      Eugene  H.  Taylor..  .  .Sec-Treasurer 

Mortimer  B.   Cleveland.  .Vice-Pres.  617    Cedar    Rapids    Savings    Bank 

Bldg.,  Cedar  Rapids 
Organized  1903.     Exhibition  of  designs  at  annual  meeting. 


IOWA  121 


CEDAR    RAPIDS 

►J^CEDAR  RAPIDS  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Mrs.  F.  J.  Lazell President      Anna  Smouse Treasurer 

William    KREBS..lst    Vice-President      Mrs.  Bert  Rugh Secretary 

Mrs.  E.  M.  Sefton 2d  Vice-Pres.  2900  First  Ave.,  East  Cedar  Rapids 

Organized  1905.     Lectures  and  exhibitions  held. 

DAVENPORT 

►^DAVENPORT  ACADEMY  OF  SCIENCES 
Edward  K.  Putnam,  Acting  Director 
J.  H.  Paarmann,  Curator 
Organized  1867.     The  institution  maintains  a  free  public,  scientific,  archaeo- 
logical, historical  and  art  museum. 

DAVENPORT  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Grace  Shellenberger,  Librarian 
Mrs.  C.  a.  Ficke,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Open  9  a.m.  to  9  p.m.     The  library  has  large  collection  of  books  on  art, 
and  arranges  numerous  exhibits  of  plates  from  these  books  and  other  sources. 
The  library  art  gallery  is  also  used  by  the  Tri-City  Art  League  for  its  ex- 
hibits.    Sales  made  at  the  latter.     Exhibitions  held. 

►|<TRI-CITY  ART  LEAGUE 

Davenport,  Rock  Island,  Moline 

Studio  222^  Main  Street,  Davenport,  Iowa 

Mrs.  Arthur  Ficke President      Fred  Hendrickson Treasurer 

William  Butterworth.  ..1st  Vice-P.      Mrs,  C.  N.  Chubb Secretary 

Mrs.  C.  p.  Skinner 2d  Vice-Pres. 

Organized  1915  as  the  Art  League  Students,  re-organized  1916.  Exhibitions 
are  held  in  three  cities. 

The  studio  is  used  by  the  Art  League  Students  (see  school  section),  the 
Tri-City,  Architectural  and  Camera  Clubs,  and  for  classes  of  folk  dances. 
Smaller  studios  are  rented  to  painters,  designers  and  musicians.  Conducts 
out-of-door  sketch  club.     Exhibitions  at  Public  Libraries. 

DES    MOINES 

DES  MOINES  ASSOCIATION  OF  FINE  ARTS 
City  Library  Gallery,  Des  Moines 

J.  S.  Carpenter President      Henry  S.  Nollen Treasurer 

F.  C.  Waterbury Vice-President      Grace  Rose Secretary 

Louise  Orwig,  Assistant  Secretary  and  Treasurer 
Organized   1916.     Exhibitions  held. 

DES  MOINES  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
First  and  Locust  Streets,  Des  Moines 

Grace  Rose Librarian      Louise  Orwig Art  Librarian 

J.  S.  Carpenter,  President  Art  Committee 
Founded  1916.     Open  to  the  public,  week  days,  9  a.m.  to  6  p.m.;  Sundays, 
3  to  6  P.M.     Collection  includes  several  works  by  contemporary  artists.     The 
exhibitions   of   the   Des    Moines   Association   of   Fine   Arts   are   held   in    the 
Library. 


122  IOWA— KANSAS 


DUBUQUE 

CARNEGIE-STOUT    PUBLIC   LIBRARY 
Dubuque 

May  M,  Clark Librarian      D.  D.  Burrell.  .  .Chairman  Art  Com. 

Art  gallery  and  exhibition  room  open,  free,  9  a.m.  to  9  p.m.  About  500  art 
books  and  1,100  photographs.  Lectures  and  exhibitions  given  under  the  auspices 
of  the  Dubuque  Art  Association.      (No  report  1921.) 

4-DUBUQUE  ART  ASSOCIATION 

D.  D.  Burrell President      Kate  K.  Van  Duzee Secretary 

Eugene  Adams Vice-President  1471  Main  St.,  Dubuque 

Charles   Beach Treasurer 

Organized  1910.     Lectures  given  and  exhibitions  held. 

IOWA    CITY 

4<I0WA  CITY  FINE  ARTS  ASSOCIATION 

Mary  E.  Moon President      Mrs.  J.  White  Brown Secretary 

Edward  H.  Lauer Vice-President  6  East  Court,  Iowa  City 

Mrs.  Hardin  Craig Treasurer 

Organized  1913.    Exhibitions  held. 


KANSAS 

LAWRENCE 

KANSAS  ART  ASSOCIATION 
University  of  Kansas,  Lawrence 
Organized  1907.     Exhibitions  are  held  in  the  Art  gallery  of  the  University. 
Sends  exhibits  to  several  Kansas  towns. 

LINDSBORG 

SMOKY  HILL  ART  CLUB 
Bethany  College,  Lindsborg 

Birger   Sandzen President      Jessie  B.  Severtson Treasurer 

G.  A.  Peterson Vice-President      Amanda   Maznuson Secretary 

Organized  1913.     Works  bought  by  the  Society  are  given  to  the  permanent 
collection  of  Bethany  College.     Exhibitions  held. 

Mcpherson 

Mcpherson  high  school 

ART  DEPARTMENT 

Ross  W.  Potwin Superintendent      Lydia  Prosser Art  Supervisor 

Exhibitions    first    organized    in    1911.      Permanent    collection    of    paintings, 
drawings  and  lithographs.     Occasional  exhibitions. 

TOPEKA 

.^TOPEKA  ART  GUILD 

Mrs.  Frank  D.  Merriam.  .  .President      L.  Cady  Hodge Treasurer 

David   Obermeyer Vice-President      Marie   Witmer Secretary 

Organized  1916.     Lectures  given  and  exhibitions  held. 


KANSAS— KENTUCKY  123 

WICHITA 

TWENTIETH  CENTURY  CLUB 

Wichita,  Kan. 

ART   DEPARTMENT 

Mrs.  Charles  Higginson.  .President      Mrs.  Harry  Brasted Treasurer 

Mrs.  Cooper  King Vice-President      Ella  Lahey Secretary 

Mrs.  a.  F.  Styles,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Organized  1899  for  the  study  of  the  history  of  art.    Exhibitions  and  lectures 
held.     (No  report  1921.) 

WICHITA  ART  GALLERY 
The  City  of  Wichita  will  receive  the  income  from  $150,000,  after  the  death 
of  the  beneficiaries  of  the  will  of  Mrs.  R.  P.  Murdock,  if  the  city  provides  a 
suitable  housing  for  the  pictures  bought  with  this  bequest. 

KENTUCKY 

KENTUCKY  CHAPTER,  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

E.  T.  HuTCHiNGS President      Val  P.  Collins Sec. -Treasurer 

J.   J.   Gaffney Vice-President  622  Marion  E.  Taylor  Bldg.,  Louis- 

ville 
Organized  1908  as  the  Louisville  Chapter,  American  Institute  of  Architects. 

HENDERSON 

ART  LEAGUE 
Woman's  Club,  Henderson 

LiDA    Williams President      Salem   Starling Secretary 

Main  St.,  Henderson 
Organized  1919.     Occasional  lectures  and  exhibitions. 

LEXINGTON 

WOMAN'S  CLUB  OF  CENTRAL  KENTUCKY 

ART  DEPARTMENT 
Mrs.  W.  W.  Anderson,  Chairman 

LOUISVILLE 

^LOUISVILLE  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Free  Public  Library,  Louisville 

Lafon   Allen President      Joshua  F.  Speed Treasurer 

CusHMAN  Quarrier.  ..Vice-President      Caroline  Q.  Fuller Secretary 

Organized  1909. 

LOUISVILLE  HANDICRAFT  GUILD 
Fourth  and  Ormsby  Avenues,  Louisville 

Miss  Keith  Sperry President      Alice  Cane Treasurer 

Mrs.  Ira  Sayre  Barnett.  .Vice-Pres.      Dorothea  Kurk Secretary 

Organized  1914.     Exhibitions  held,  also  class  in  design. 

PADUCAH 

PADUCAH  WOMAN'S  CLUB 

608  Kentucky  Avenue,  Paducah 

ART   DEPARTMENT 

Mrs.  a.  G.  Edwards,  Chairman,  1722  Jefferson  St.,  Paducah 
Study  courses  and  exhibitions  are  held. 


124  KENTUCKY— LOUISIANA 

PARIS 

BOURBON  COUNTY  WOMAN'S  CLUB 

ART  DEPARTMENT 
Mrs.    Harry   Kerslake,   Chairman,    Second    St.,    Paris 

LOUISIANA 

LOUISIANA  ART  TEACHERS'  ASSOCIATION 
Newcomb  College,  New  Orleans 

Ida    Barrow President      Amelie  Roman Treasurer 

Miss  Rodney  Kemp,  Secretary 
Organized  1899.    Conferences  are  held  for  members ;  lectures  for  the  public ; 
and  school  art  works  exhibit  circulated  in  the  country  parishes. 

LOUISIANA  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Victor  Wogan President      Richard   Koch Treasurer 

Nathaniel  C.  Curtis Vice-Pres.      Solis    Seiferth Secretary 

Maison    Blanche    Bldg.,    New    Or- 
leans 
Organized  1910. 

NEW    ORLEANS 

•i-ART  ASSOCIATION  OF  NEW  ORLEANS 

Hunt  Henderson President      George  H.  Penn Treasurer 

Ellsworth  Woodward 1st  Vice-P.      Lydia  M.  Brown Secretary 

J.  J.  McLouGHLiN 2d  Vice-Pres.  2103  Chestnut  St.,  New  Orleans 

Mrs.  I.  M.  Wands,  Chairman  Friends  of  Art 

Organized  1900.  Association  has  permanent  exhibits,  which  are  held  in  the 
Delgado  Museum.  Under  the  auspices  of  the  Association  there  is  held  an- 
nually an  exhibition  of  works  by  local  artists  (see  Delgado  Museum  exhibits). 

Members  who  buy  annually  a  work  by  a  local  artist  constitute  a  body 
called  "Friends  of  Art,"  who  elect  every  year  an  artist  to  be  brought  forward 
in  a  special  exhibition  and  dinner. 

ARTS  AND  CRAFTS  CLUB 
913  St.  Charles  St.,  New  Orleans 

Mrs.  p.  J.  Ford President      George  G.  Westfeldt Treasurer 

C.  A.  Favrot Vice-President      George  N.  Gallup Secretary 

Organized  1920. 

FINE  ARTS  CLUB  OF  NEW  ORLEANS 

Mrs.  Frank  L.  Nairne President      Mrs.  H.  G.  Warren. Treasurer 

Mrs.  L.  C.  Reed.. .1st  Vice-President      Mrs.  H.  B.  Gessner.  .  .Rec.-Secretary 
Mrs.  T.  C.  Hills.. 2d  Vice-President 

Jennie  Gilbert,  Corresponding  Secretary 
1238  Broadway,  New  Orleans 
Organized  1906.    Lectures  and  occasional  exhibitions. 

NEWCOMB  COLLEGE  ART  SCHOOL 
Audubon  Place,  New  Orleans 
Ellsworth  Woodward,  Director 
For  details  see  Vol.  I,  p.  314. 

Galleries  open,  free,  daily  9  a.  m.  to  4  p.  m.     Permanent  collection  and  fre- 


LOUISIANA— MAINE  125 

NEW    ORLEANS 

Newcomb  College — Continued 
quent   special   exhibitions ;   lecture   hall,   library  with   600  volumes  and    1,000 
lantern  slides. 

Founded  1886.  Besides  the  school  courses  there  are  a  practical  pottery,  a 
book-bindery,  and  needle-work  and  jewelry  studios.  The  Alumnae  of  the 
school  maintains  a  permanent  exhibition  and  sales  room  in  the  pottery  build- 
ing.    (See  also  school  section.) 

The  picture  gallery,  open  free  to  the  public,  contains  paintings  in  oil  and 
in  water  colors  by  American  and  modern  foreign  artists.  There  are  also 
numerous  etchings,  engravings  and  photographs  and  a  good  working  library; 
enlarged  photographs  of  the  historic  iron  balconies  of  old  New  Orleans;  and 
antique  embroideries  and  brocades. 

NEW  ORLEANS  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Lee  Circle  and  St.  Charles  Avenue,  New  Orleans 
Henry  M.  Gill,  Librarian 
Loans  art  books. 

QUARTIER  CLUB 
Pontalba  Building,  St.  Ann  and  Chartres  Sts.,  New  Orleans 

Mrs.  Philip  Werbein,  3d. . .  President      James  Dickens Treasurer 

Mrs  Lelia  Kennard,  Secretary,  1621  Second  St.,  New  Orleans 
Re-organized  1921.    Established  to  house  a  meeting  place  for  those  interested 
in  the  allied  arts,  and  to  entertain  all  artists  and  distinguished  visitors  arriving 
in  the  city,  and  to  revive  the  spirit  of  the  famous  old  French  Quarter. 

MAINE 

MAINE  TEACHERS'  ASSOCIATION 

DRAWING  DEPARTMENT 
Katherine  Abbott,  Chairman,  Farmington,  Me. 

BANGOR 

BANGOR  SOCIETY  OF  ART 
25  Broad  Street,  Bangor 

Orman  B.  Humphrey. .Chairman  of      Louise  Sawyer Secretary 

Board  of  Trustees  64  Forest  Ave.,  Bangor 

George  I.  Mausur Treasurer      Alice  P.  Walker 

Walter  Hardy,  Trustees 
Founded    1913.      Lectures,    exhibitions    and    demonstrations    given.      School 
maintained  (see  school  section). 

BAR    HARBOR 

MORRIS  K.  JESUP  MEMORIAL  LIBRARY 
Bar  Harbor 
A.  E.  Gallatin,  Curator  of  Prints 
Founded   1915.     Open  9  a.m.  to  9  p.m.     Collection  of  prints  presented  by 
A.  E.  Gallatin.    Books  on  art  including  many  on  prints;  photographs  of  paint- 
ings and  objects  of  art.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

BOOTHBAY    HARBOR 

COMMONWEALTH  ART  COLONY 
Boothbay  Harbor 

A.  G.  Randall President      John  W.  Brackett Secretary 

(Winter)    498  Broadway,  Providence 

Founded  1904,  and  re-organized  1914.  A  co-operative  summer  colony  with 
property  valued  at  $25,000.  A  summer  school  of  art,  music  and  languages; 
exhijbitions  held  and  lectures  given.     (See  school  section.) 


126  MAINE— MARYLAND 

EASTPORT 

EASTPORT  ART  ASSOCIATION 

L.  H.  Newcomb President       Charles  Wilson Treasurer 

WiLBOR  A.  Shea 1st  Vice-Pres.       W.  C.  Beale Secretary 

W.  H.  Col  well 2d  Vice-President  Eastport 

PORTLAND 

COLUMBIAN  ARTS  AND  CRAFTS  LEAGUE 
647  Congress  Street,  Portland 

Mrs,  W.  H.  Stevens President      Caroline  B.  Stahl Treasurer 

Mrs.  H.  a.  Russell.  .  .1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  J.  O.  Burke Secretary 

Mrs.  Charles  Le  Grow.  .  .2d  Vice-P. 
Organized  1921. 

►^PORTLAND  SOCIETY  OF  ARTS  AND  CRAFTS 
664  Congress  Street,  Portland 

Mrs.  Grace  E.  Allyn President      Mrs.  Arthur  N.  Smith Treasurer 

Mrs.  M.  D.  Kidder 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  E.  M.  Stephens Secretary 

Mrs.  Carroll  S,  Chaplin..  .2d  V.-P.  34  Codman  St.,  Portland 

Founded  1898.  Salesroom  at  664  Congress  St.,  Portland ;  open  during  sum- 
mer months.  Special  sales  at  Christmas  and  Easter,  and  summer  exhibition 
of  work  by  members. 

SOUTH    POLAND 

POLAND  SPRING  ART  EXHIBITION 

Maine  State  Building,  Poland  Spring,  South  Poland 
Nettie  M.  Ricker,  Director 
For  foundation,  see  Vol.  I,  p.  368. 

Gallery  open  week  days  9  a.m.  to  9  p.m.;  Sundays,  10  a.m.  to  8.30  p.m. 
Permanent  collection  contains  about  fifty  works.     Occasional  exhibitions. 

MARYLAND 

BALTIMORE 

ART  CLUB  OF  THE  BALTIMORE  CITY  COLLEGE 
Walter  R.  Gale,  Director 
Organized  1913,  for  the  purpose  of  bringing  together  the  students  and  fac- 
ulty members  who  are  interested  in  the  fine  and  applied  arts.     Sketching  class 
exhibits  and  addresses;  visits  galleries. 

ART  COMMISSION  OF  THE  CITY  OF  BALTIMORE 
City  Hall,  Baltimore 
Mayor  William  F.  Broening..  .Pres.      William   W.  Emmart 
Joseph  Evans  Sperry  J.  Cookman  Boyd 

JosiAS  Pennington  J.  Appleton  Wilson 

W.  Hall  Harris  Lemuel  T.  Appold 

Otis  C.  Brownley,  Acting  Secretary 
For  details  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  127. 

Organized  October  23,  1895.  The  Commission  is  composed  of  the  Mayor 
of  the  City  of  Baltimore  and  seven  others.    Approves  works  of  art  for  the  city. 

ARUNDEL  CLUB 

ART  SECTION 
1004  North  Charles  Street,  Baltimore 
Lilian  Giffen,  Chairman 
Organized  1920.    Lectures  given  and  exhibitions  held. 


MARYLAND  127 


BALTIMORE 

BALTIMORE  CHAPTER 

AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

347  North  Charles  Street,  Baltimore 

Howard   Sill President      W.  H.  Emory,  Jr Treasurer 

Howard   Mottu Vice-President       Lawrence  H.  Fowler Secretary 

Organized  1870. 

►^BALTIMORE  FRIENDS  OF  ART 
1022  North  Calvert  Street,  Baltimore 

W.  S.  Thayer President       Anne  G.  Turnbull Treasurer 

J.  H.  Pleasants 1st  Vice-Pres.       Adaline  D.  Piper Secretary 

R.  E,  L.  Taylor 2d  Vice-Pres. 

Organized  1920,  for  the  purpose  of  stimulating  interest  in  art,  encouraging 
Baltimore  to  raise  funds  to  purchase  modern  pictures  and  to  procure  exhibi- 
tions, loans  and  donations  of  paintings,  sculpture  and  other  forms  of  art. 

BALTIMORE  WATER  COLOR  CLUB 
Care  of  Peabody  Institute,  Baltimore 

Lillian  Giffen President      Mary  Crummer Treasurer 

Mrs.  H.  T.  Beacham  . .  1st  Vice-Pres.      Dora  Murdoch Secretary 

Everett  L.  Bryant.... 2d  Vice-Pres.  245  West  Biddle  St.,  Baltimore 

Organized  1888.    Annual  exhibition  held  at  Peabody  Institute. 

^CHARCOAL  CLUB 

1230  St.  Paul   Street,  Corner  Preston  Street,  Baltimore 

Henry  H.  Wiegand President      F,  E.  Hecklinger Treasurer 

Edward    Berge Vice-President      Tolly  A.  Biays Secretary 

Organized  1883.  Aims  to  educate  by  placing  good  art  in  public  places ;  has 
large  exhibition  at  City  Club  which  is  changed  from  time  to  time;  conducts 
children  through  galleries  and  exhibitions.  Exhibitions  in  club  studos,  at 
County  Fair  and  other  public  places.  Lectures  given.  Owns  club  house  and 
school  building;  Architectudal  Section  conducts  day  and  night  art  classes  (see 
school  section). 

4-HANDICRAFT  CLUB  OF  BALTIMORE 
243  West  Biddle  Street 

Theodore  H.  Pond President      Lillian  S.  Grief Treasurer 

L,  H.  Fowler 1st  Vice-President      Eliza  Ingle Secretary 

Walter  R.  Gale.  .  .2d  Vice-President  1710  Park  Ave.,  Baltimore 

Organized  1908.    Exhibitions  are  held. 

MARYLAND  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 
201  West  Monument  Street,  Baltimore 

W.  Hall  Harris President      H.  E.  Boyce Treasurer 

Henry  Stockbridge.  .  .Vice-President      J.  A.  Wilson Cor.-Secretary 

George  L.  Radcliffe,  Recording  Secretary 
Gallery  open  free  on  special  occasions. 

Organized  1844.  The  Society's  work  is  chiefly  along  historical  lines,  but  the 
gallery  contains  a  valuable  collection  of  historical  paintings  and  portrait 
sculpture. 


128  MARYLAND 


BALTIMORE 

MARYLAND  INSTITUTE  ALUMNI  ASSOCIATION 

W.  T.  Brewer President      Nina  Irvin.  .  Corresponding-Secretary 

Mrs.  B.  G.  Buck Treasurer  707  North  Calvert  St.,  Baltimore 

Helen  Jones.  . .  .Recording-Secretary 

Organized  1895.    Lectures  and  social  meetings,  occasional  gifts  to  Institute. 

►^MUNICIPAL  ART  SOCIETY  OF  BALTIMORE 

Henry  D.  Harlan 1st  Vice-Pres.      S.  Davies  Warfield Treasurer 

Theodore  Marburg 2d  Vice-Pres.      Josias   Pennington Secretary 

R,  Brent  Keyser 3d  Vice-Pres.  Professional  Bldg.,  Baltimore 

Organized  1899.  The  work  is  carried  on  through  sixteen  committees.  Lec- 
tures given  and  exhibitions  held.  Appropriations  given  to  the  Maryland  Insti- 
tute for  prizes  and  exhibitions,  to  Home  Gardens'  Committee  for  prizes,  to 
Committee  to  Abate  Smoke  Nuisance,  to  School  Art  League,  etc.  The  Society 
has  been  instrumental  in  decorating  a  number  of  public  school  buildings  by 
suitable  coloring  for  the  walls  and  providing  photographs,  engravings  and 
plaster  casts  throughout  the  buildings. 

RINEHART  SCULPTURE  FUND  OF  THE  PEABODY  INSTITUTE 
W.  Hall  Harris,  Vice-Chairman 

See  Vol  XI,  p.  132. 

Established  1874  by  the  will  of  the  sculptor,  William  H.  Rinehart.  The 
Fund  is  managed  by  the  Peabody  Institute  and  maintains  the  Rinehart  School 
of  Sculpture  at  the  Maryland  Institute  (see  school  section),  and  two  traveling 
scholarships  of  $1,000  a  year.  The  scholarships  are  open  to  men,  American 
citizens,  unmarried  and  not  over  2)7  years  of  age. 

SCHOOL  ART  LEAGUE 
Baltimore  City  College,  Baltimore 

Walter  R.  Gale President      Mary  R.  Corse Treasurer 

Olivia  F.  KEECH..lst  Vice-President      Elizabeth  M.  Makibbin Cor.-Sec. 

Margaret  M.  Law 2d  Vice-Pres.  920  N.  Fremont  Ave.,  Baltimore 

Founded  1913.  The  League's  purpose  is  mutual  help  in  art  matters,  particu- 
larly through  the  public  schools.    Lectures  given  and  exhibitions  held. 

THE  SIX  OF  BALTIMORE 
Alice  Worthington  Ball,  Chairman 
213  West  Monument  Street,  Baltimore 
Organized    1913.      Membership    consists    of    the    following    painters :     Alice 
Worthington  Ball,  Camelia  Whitehurst,  Maude  D.  Bryant,  Josephine  G.  Coch- 
rane, Mary  Kremelberg  and  Ruth  Anderson.    An  exhibition  is  held  every  year 
at  the  Peabody  Institute. 

FREDERICK 

FREDERICK  ART  CLUB 

344  North  Market  Street,  Frederick 

Florence  W.  Doub President      Mrs.  Katherine  Keefer.  .  ..Cor.-Sec. 

Kate  Ramsburgh Treasurer  West  Second  St.,  Frederick 

Mrs.  Blanche  Rose.  ..Rec.-Secretary 

Organized  1897. 


MASSACHUSETTS  129 


MASSACHUSETTS 

ART  COMMISSION  OF  THE  COMMONWEALTH  OF 
MASSACHUSETTS 
State  House,  Boston 

Walter  Oilman  Page Chairman      Frederick  W.  Coburn 

H.  Dudley  Murphy  Cyrus  Dallin 

Charles  R.  Greco,  Secretary 
8  Beacon  Street,  Boston 
Organized    1910.     Above   commissioners,   appointed   in    1915    for   five  years, 
pass  upon  all  works  of  art  to  be  installed  on  property  of  the  commonwealth. 

LIBRARY  ART  CLUB 

Alice  G.  Chandler President      Joseph   L.   Harrison Treasurer 

Lancaster,  Mass.  Northampton,  Mass. 

Beatrice  E.  Kelliher.  Secretary,  Springfield,  Mass. 
Organized  1898 ;  incorporated  1900.     Sends  out  circulating  exhibitions. 

.^MASSACHUSETTS  NORMAL  ART  SCHOOL 

STATE  BOARD   OF  EDUCATION,  ART    EDUCATION   DEPARTMENT 
Royal  Bailey  Farnum,  Director,  Exeter  and  Newbury  Streets,  Boston 
For  foundation  and  development  see  Vol.  XI,  pp.  134,  135. 
(For  instruction  see  school  section.) 

ALUMNI  ASSOCIATION 
Newbury  and  Exeter  Streets,  Boston 

Harold  S.  Graves President      Blanche  A.  Russell Secretary 

Amy  a.  Whittier.  ..  .Vice-President  Dorchester  High  Schol,  Boston 

Arthur  ^  Ray Treasurer 

Organized  1888.    Lectures,  musicials  and  other  entertainments  given. 

ATTLEBORO 

PUBLIC  LIBRARY 

North  Main  Street,  Attleboro 
Mrs.  Lucinda  Spofford,  Librarian 
'   Exhibitions  sent  to  schools  and  clubs. 

BOSTON 

ART  COMMISSION  OF  THE  CITY  OF  BOSTON 
1001  City  Hall  Annex,  Boston 
Thomas  Allen,  Chairman  Charles  D.  Maginnis 

A.  W.  Longfellow  William  V.  Kellen 

J.  Templeton  Coolidge,  Secretary 
106  Beacon  Street.  Boston 
Organized  1898.  Five  members  appointed  by  the  Mayor ;  one  member  ap- 
pointed on  or  before  May  1st  of  each  year  for  a  term  of  five  years.  No  work 
of  art  can  become  the  property  of  the  city  without  the  approval  of  the  Art 
Commission.  A  local  registry  of  art  prepared  with  the  co-operation  of  the 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts.     Various  art  lists  have  been  published. 

BOSTON  ARCHITECTURAL  CLUB 
16  Somerset  Street,  Boston 

W.  R.  Greeley President      F.  V.  Little Executive  Sec. 

Louis  C.  Newhall. Treasurer  16  Somerset  St,  Boston 

A.  Francis  Law Secretary 

Organized    1889.     Atelier   maintained.      Exhibition    every   two    weeks    from 
October  to  June. 


130  MASSACHUSETTS 


BOSTON 

^BOSTON  ART  CLUB 
150  Newbury  Street,  Boston 

S.  Parker  Bremer President      J.  S.  Hathaway Treasurer 

C.  H.  Bayley 1st  Vice-President      James   Fortescue Secretary 

C.  H.  Pepper 2d  Vice-President 

Organized  1854;  incorporated  1871.  Tlie  Club  House  contains  permanent 
collection  and  galleries  for  temporary  exhibits;  annual  attendance  at  exhibi- 
tions about  20,000;  weekly  entertainments. 

►I-BOSTON  SOCIETY  OF  ARCHITECTS 

BOSTON   CHAPTER,   AMERICAN   INSTITUTE   OF   ARCHITECTS 

Charles  A.  Coolidge President      Walter  A.  Kilham Treasurer 

Edward  H.  Hoyt,  Secretary,  220  Devonshire  St.,  Boston 
Organized    1867 ;   became   Chapter  American    Institute  of   Architects,    1870. 
Prizes   are   awarded  at  the   Institute   of   Technology,   at   Harvard,   at   Boston 
Architectural    Club,    and    to    competitors    taking    second   place    at    the    Rotch 
Scholarship  competitions. 

BOSTON  SOCIETY  OF  LANDSCAPE  ARCHITECTS 

Percival  Gallagher President      Raymond  W.  Aldrich Sec.-Treas. 

Carl  R.  Parker Vice-President  89  State  St.,  Boston 

Organized  1913.     Chapter  of  American  Society  of  Landscape  Architects. 

BOSTON  SOCIETY  OF  WATER  COLOR  PAINTERS 

Thomas  Allen President      Albert  P.  Button.  . .  .Sec-Treasurer 

Harold  B.  Warren.  .  .Vice-President  44  Boylston  St.,  Boston 

Organized  1892. 

BOSTON  WATER  COLOR  CLUB 

Charles  H.  Woodbury President      William  J.  Kaula Treasurer 

Margaret  Patterson,  Secretary,  Trinity  Court,  Boston 
Organized  1887.     Exhibitions  are  held  occasionally. 

^COPLEY  SOCIETY  OF  BOSTON 
491   Boylston  Street,  Boston 

Holker  Abbott President      D.  Blakeley  Hoar Treasurer 

H.  W.  Peirce 1st  Vice-President      F.  W.   Coburn Secretary 

Thomas  Allen.... 2d  Vice-President  Cambridge,  Mass. 

Organized  1879;  incorporated  1888.  Drawing  and  modeling  classes  main- 
tained and  rooms  open  daily,  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  There  is  a  library;  a  collection 
of  over  1,000  photographs,  which  are  lent  for  public  school  use.  Monthly 
meetings  with  lectures,  musical  or  dramatic  entertainments.  Exhibitions  are 
given. 

THE  GROUP 
Margaret  Patterson,  Secretary,  Trinity  Court,  Boston 
Organized  1917.    The  Group  consists  of  Laura  C.  Hills,  Margaret  Patterson, 
Jane    Peterson,    Elizabeth    Wentworth    Roberts    and    Mary    Bradish    Titcomb. 
Exhibits  held  at  Doll  and  Richards  gallery  in  Boston. 


Pilgrim  Maiden.     By  Henry  S.  Kitson 

Erected  in  Plymouth,  Mass..  by  the  National  Society  of  New 
England  Women 


Allegresse.    By  Bessie  Potter  Vonnoh 
Elizabeth  N.  Watrons  Gold  Medal,  National  Academy  of  Design,   1921 


MASSACHUSETTS  131 


BOSTON 

•i^GUILD.PF  BOSTON  ARTISTS 
162  Newbury  Street,  Boston 

Frank  W.  Benson President      William  W.  Churchill.  .  .Treasurer 

LiLLA  Cabot  Perry  (Mrs.  T.  S.  Perry),  Secretary 
312  Marlborough  St.,  Boston 
For  further  information  see  Vol.  XVII,  p.  150. 

Incorporated  1914.  A  co-operative  organization.  The  Guild  owns  its  build- 
ing. There  are  two  galleries ;  one  with  a  continuous  exhibition  in  which  each 
member  is  entitled  to  show  one  work  all  the  time ;  the  second  gallery  devoted 
to  "one  man  shows"  of  two  weeks  by  each  member  in  turn ;  May  to  October 
general  exhibition  by  entire  Guild;  attendance  from  300  to  1,000  daily. 

MASSACHUSETTS  CHAPTER 

NATIONAL  ASSOCIATION  OF  WOMEN  PAINTERS  AND 

SCULPTORS 

Amy  Pleadwell,  Secretary,  82  Chestnut  Street,  Boston 

MASSACHUSETTS  INSTITUTE  OF  TECHNOLOGY,        ^ 
ARCHITECTURAL  SOCIETY 
491  Boylston  Street,  Boston 

G.  S.  Holderness President      David  R.  Shotwell Treasurer 

W.  T.  Ferguson Vice-President      Bertram  A.  Weber Secretary 

Monthly  smokers  with  addresses  by  prominent  architects ;  visits  to  studios  of 
artists  and  craftsmen.  Class  in  clay  modeling  under  auspices  of  the  Society. 
Exhibitions  held. 

PUBLIC  LIBRARY  OF  THE  CITY  OF  BOSTON 

Copley  Square,  Boston 

Charles  F.  D.  Belden,  Librarian 

WiNTHROP  Holt  Chenery,  Chief  of  Special  Libraries  Department,  including 

divisions  of  Fine  and  Industrial  Arts 

For  further  information  see  Vol.  XVII,  p.  150. 

Three  exhibition  rooms  open  on  week  days,  9  a.m.  to  10  p.m.;  Sundays,  12 
to  10  P.M.,  except  from  June  15  to  September  15,  when  the  Library  closes  at 
9  P.M.     Frequent  special  exhibitions. 

The  Fine  Arts  Department  was  opened  1895.  A  special  custodian  is  in  charge. 
There  are  over  20,000  books  on  art ;  50,000  photographs  and  process  prints ; 
over  7,000  lantern  slides.  Circulation  of  mounted  pictures  for  school  use,  about 
30,000  a  year.  Exhibitions  are  held  continuously  through  the  season,  chiefly 
of  photographic  material ;  collections  of  similar  material  are  lent  to  the  schools, 
and  provided  for  the  use  of  art  classes.  The  Library  contains  mural  decora- 
tions by  Puvis  de  Chavannes,  John  S.  Sargent,  Edwin  A.  Abbey,  John  Elliott, 
and  Joseph  Linden  Smith. 

ROTCH  TRAVELING  SCHOLARSHIP,  INCORPORATED 

Mrs.  Annie  Lawrence  Lamb  . . .  Pres.      C.  H.  Blackall Secretary 

William    Rotch Treasurer  20  Beacon  St.,  Boston 

Founded  1883,  by  the  children  of  Benjamin  S.  Rotch;  incorporated  1911. 
The  scholarship  provides  $1,000  a  year  for  two  years  to  be  spent  in  foreign 
travel  and  study.  The  candidate  must  be  under  thirty  years  of  age  and  must 
have  worked  during  two  years  in  the  employ  of  an  architect  resident  in  Massa- 
chusetts.    The  preliminary  examinations  are  held  early  in  April  of  each  year. 


132  MASSACHUSETTS 


BOSTON 

SOCIETY  FOR  THE  PRESERVATION  OF 
NEW  ENGLAND  ANl/QUITIES 
Otis  House,  2  Lynde  Street,  Boston 

Charles  Knowles  Bolton Pres.      William  C.  Endicott Treasurer 

George  P.  Winship Librarian      Albert  Thorndike Rec-Secretary 

P.  L.  Spaulding Dir.  of  Museum       Wm.  Sumner  Appleton Cor. -Sec. 

For  further  information  see  Vol.  XVII,  p.  15L 

ST.  BOTOLPH  CLUB 
4  Newbury  Street,  Boston 

Henry  Parkman President      Hazen  Clement Treasurer 

Robert  G.  Dodge.. 1st  Vice-President      Thomas  A.  Fox Secretary 

Charles  M.  LoEFFLER..2d  Vice-Pres. 
Organized  1880.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

^SOCIETY  OF  ARTS  AND  CRAFTS 
9  Park  Street,  Boston 

President      H.  Percy  Macomber.  . .  Secretary  and 

Mary  Crease  Sears...  1st  Vice-Pres.  Treasurer 

Howard  L.  Rogers 2d  Vice-Pres. 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  146. 

Salesroom  open  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  Saturdays,  9  a.m.  to  1  p.m.,  April  to  No- 
vember. 

Organized  and  incorporated  1897. 

STUART   CLUB 
102  Fenway,  Boston 

Katherine  B.  Child President      Miss   Turner Secretary-Treasurer 

For  further  information  see  Vol.  XVII,  p.  151. 

Organized  1906.     It  is  a  home  for  women  students,  chiefly  of  art  and  music, 
but  other  professions  are  represented. 

BOURNE 

.^OLD  COLONY  UNION 
Bourne  (P.  O.  Buzzards  Bay,  Mass.) 

Mrs.  Marie  T.  Garland President      Mrs.   Maude  Myhre Secretary 

Mrs.  Mercy  McDermott.  .Vice-Pres.  Sagamore,  Mass. 

Mrs.  Amy  Tudor Treasurer 

For  further  data  see  Vol.  XVII,  p.  152. 

Organized  1911.     Lectures  given.     Frequent  special  exhibitions. 

BROCKTON 

MUNICIPAL  GALLERY 

►J.BROCKTON'  PUBLIC   LIBRARY 
Frank  H.  Whitmore,  Librarian 
Edward  A.  Rosendahl,  Chairman  Art  Committee  ' 
Open  9  A.M.  to  9  p.m.     A  special  room  is  used  for  art  exhibitions  and  the 
m.onthly  exhibits  of  the  Library.     The  Library  has  a  collection  of  mounted 
photographs;  there  are  about  1,200  books  on  the  fine  and  applied  arts. 

WOMAN'S  CLUB  OF  BROCKTON 
Mrs.  E.  H.  Tindale,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
64  North  Ash  Street,  Brockton 
Annual  exhibition  in  Public  Library;  lectures  given. 


MASSACHUSETTS  133 


BROOKLINE 

BROOKLINE  CIVIC  SOCIETY 

Desmond  FitzGerald,  President,  410  Washington  Street,  Brookline 

ART  DEPARTMENT 

Mrs.  Walter  H.  Kilham,  Chairman  Art  Committee 

33  Edge  Hill  Road,  Brookline 

Annual  exhibition  held  in  Public  Library. 

BROOKLINE  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Louisa  M.  Hooper,  Librarian 
Founded  1857.     Occasional  exhibitions. 

CAMBRIDGE 

TOPIARIAN  CLUB  OF  HARVARD  UNIVERSITY 
Robinson  Hall,  Harvard  University,  Cambridge 

Prentis    French President      Leon  Henry  Zach Treasurer 

R.  N.  Cram Vice-President      Richard  D.  Sias. Secretary 

Organized    1900  to   promote   the   interests  of   landscape  architecture   in  the 
University.    Field  trips  and  series  of  lectures  given, 

CONCORD 

^CONCORD  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Daniel  C.   French President      Grace  B.  Keyes Treasurer 

George  S.  Keyes Vice-Pres.      Elizabeth  W.  Roberts Secretary 

Estabrook  Rd.,  Concord 
Organized  1917.    Annual  exhibition  held. 

DEERFIELD 

SOCIETY  OF  DEERFIELD  INDUSTRIES 

Mrs.  Gertrude  P.  Ashley Pres.      Susan  B.  Hawks Treasurer 

Mrs.  L.  Emma  Henry.. 1st  Vice-Pres.      Eleanor  M.  Arms Secretary 

Mrs.  Eleanor  Flower.  .2d  Vice-Pres. 
Organized  1899. 

DUXBURY 

DUXBURY  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Charles  Bittinger President       Marjorie  Conant Sec.-Treas. 

Waldo  Kennard Vice-President       Margaret  F.  Browne, 

Asst.  Sec.-Treas. 
Organized  1916.    Annual  exhibition;  lectures  given. 

EAST    GLOUCESTER 

GALLERY  ON  THE  MOORS 
East  Gloucester 
For  further  information  see   Vol.  XVII,  p.  154. 

Opened  August,  1916.    It  provides  exhibition  galleries  for  the  summer  colony 
of  artists ;  at  one  end  is  a  stage,  fully  equipped.    Annual  exhibition  held. 

FALL    RIVER 

.^FALL  RIVER  ART  CLUB 
First  Congregational  Church,   Fall   River 

Hannah  R.  Davis President      Alice  D.  Alm y Sec-Treasurer 

Mrs.  Randall  N.  Durfee.. Vice-Pres.  579  North  Main  St.,  Fall  River 


134  MASSACHUSETTS 


FITCHBURG 

FITCHBURG  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 

610  Main  Street,  Fitchburg 

George  E.  Nutting,  Librarian 

H.  I.  Wallace,  Chairman  Art  Committee 

Gallery  open   free,  9  a.m.  to  sunset.     800  volumes  on  the  fine  arts ;   about 

1,000  photographs;  collection  of  engravings  and  prints.     Historical  and  natural 

history  collections ;  oil  paintings  and  statuary. 

HAVERHILL 

HAVERHILL  SOCIETY  OF  ARTS  AND  CRAFTS 

Stanley  D.  Gray President      Henrietta  M.  Dresser Treasurer 

Lillian  B.  Edwards,  Secretary,  6  Florence  Avenue,  Haverhill 
Organized  1910.    Classes  in  v^eaving,  wood-carving,  basketry  and  rug  making. 
(No  report  1921.) 

HINGHAM 

HINGHAM  SOCIETY  OF  ARTS  AND  CRAFTS 

Mrs.  Arthur  Hersey President      Miss  M.  E.  Nye Treasurer 

Samuel  Spalding Vice-President      Susan   B.  Willard Secretary 

Organized  1901.  Classes  maintained ;  baskets  and  toy  furniture  are  special- 
ties ;  teachers  are  sent  to  other  towns.  Occasional  lectures.  Sales  are  held  at 
Christmas  and  Easter ;  annual  exhibition  and  sale. 

LYNN 

LYNN  ART  CLUB 

Paul  W.  Rowell President      Walter  Springer Treasurer 

Harry  W.  Powers Vice-President      Carrie  W.   Putnam Secretary 

Lawrence  Rainford.  ..Cor.-Secretary 

12  Webster  St.,  Lynn 

Organized  1909.    Annual  exhibition. 

LYNN  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
50  North  Common  Street,  Lynn 
Clarence  E.  Sherman,  Librarian 
Open  9  A.M.  to  9.30  p.m.     Occasional  exhibitions. 
MALDEN 

MALDEN  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Herbert  W.  Fison,  Librarian 
Francis  A.  Shore,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Gallery  open  10  a.m.  to  9  p.m.  ;  Sundays,  2  p.m.  to  6  p.m.     Frequent  exhibi- 
tions.    There  are  over  2,500  mounted  prints  in  the  Library. 

METHUEN 

NEVINS  MEMORIAL  HALL  AND  LIBRARY 
Methuen 
Beatrice  N.  Weibel,  Librarian 
Collection  of  paintings. 
MILTON 

MILTON  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Canton  Avenue,  Milton 
Carrie  S.  Allen,  Librarian 
Open  Sundays,  Nov.  to  May,  2  p.m.  to  6  p.m.;  Saturdays,  9  a.m.  to  9  p.m.; 
other  week  days,  9  a.m.  to  6  p.m.    Exhibitions  are  held. 


MASSACHUSETTS  135 


NEW    BEDFORD 

NEW  BEDFORD  SOCIETY  OF  FINE  ARTS 

Herbert  P.  Bryant President      John  H.  Clifford Treasurer 

Edward  M.  Stetson,  Secretary,  47  Ash  Street,  New  Bedford 
Organized  1907.    Annual  exhibition. 

►J*FREE  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
New  Bedford 

George  H.  Tripp Librarian      Jane  E.  Gardner Art  Librarian 

Open  daily  9  a.m.  to  9  p.m.     Founded  1853.     Permanent  art  collection  and 
frequent  exhibitions.     Pictures  lent  to  neighboring  towns. 

.^SWAIN  FREE  SCHOOL  OF  DESIGN 
391  County  Street,  New  Bedford 

William  W.  Crapo President      John  H.  Clifford Sec. -Treasurer 

Charles  W.  Clifford Vice-Pres.      H.  A.  Neyland Director 

Founded    1881 ;   re-organized  as   school   of   art,    1902.      Monthly   exhibitions 
and  lectures.     A  free  school  (see  school  section). 

SWAIN   ART   CLUB 
A  social,  educational  and  business  organization  for  the  students.    To  qualify 
for  membership,  work  must  pass  the   jury,   composed  of   club   members   and 
instructors.     A  sales  shop  is  maintained  where  orders  are  also  taken. 

NORTHAMPTON 

FORBES  LIBRARY 

West  Street,  Northampton 
Joseph  LeRoy  Harrison,  Librarian 
For  further  information  see  Vol.  XVII,  p.  156. 
Opened  to  the  public  in  1894.     Occasional  special  exhibitions. 

NORWELL 

NORWELL  ART  AND  CRAFT  SOCIETY 

Mrs.  Nellie  Sparrel President      Mrs.  Bertha  Henderson Treas. 

Mrs.  Florence  B.  PiNSON. .  ..Vice-P.      Mrs.   Jennie    Pinson Secretary 

Organized  1906.     (No  report  1921.) 

PROVINCETOWN 

BEACHCOMBERS'  CLUB 

George  Elmer  Browne President      H.  N.  Campbell Sec-Treasurer 

Max  Bohm Vice-President 

Organized   1915.     Annual  meeting  in  August.     Annual   dues,  $5 ;   member- 
ship, 75. 

•^PROVINCETOWN  ART  ASSOCIATION 

W.  H.  Young President      Nina  S.  Williams Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.  Eugene  Watson.  .Acting  V.-P.      H.  N.  Campbell Cor.-Secretary 

Mrs.  W.  H.  Young Treasurer 

Organized  1914.    Owns  etching  press  for  use  of  members.    Sends  out  travel- 
ing exhibition  of  work  by  members,  and  holds  annual  exhibition. 

SAIL  LOFT  CLUB 
Provincetown,  Mass. 

Mps.  M.  M.  Chaffee President      Ellen  Ravenscroft Treasurer 

Sarah  Munroe.  .,  .1st  Vice-President      Mrs.  Otto  Kirschner Secretary 

Mrs.  Henry  Mottet 2d  Vice-Pres. 

Organized  1917.     Holds  annual  exhibition. 


136  MASSACHUSETTS 


SPRINGFIELD 

CITY  LIBRARY  ASSOCIATION 
State  Street,  Springfield 

HiLLER  C,  Wellman Librarian      Effalene  H.  King Art  Librarian 

The  art  room  is  open,  free,  week  days  (except  Christmas  and  Fourth  of 
July),  9  A.M.  to  9  P.M. 

Founded  1857 ;  art  room  opened  1905.  Holds  exhibitions  and  circulates  books 
on  fine  arts  and  pictures. 

SPRINGFIELD  ART  CLUB 
55  Beaumont  Street,  Springfield 

Ector   I.   Rosati President      Andrew  A.  Phillips Sec.-Treas. 

Organized  1912.  Weekly  lectures.  Maintains  an  outdoor  sketching  class. 
(No  report  1921.) 

.^SPRINGFIELD  ART  LEAGUE 

George  C.  Gardner President       Harold  M.  Vanderbilt.  . . .  Secretary 

John  H.  Miller Vice-President  88  Biltmore  St.,  Springfield 

Mrs.  E.  a.  Appleton Treasurer 

Organized  1919.  Monthly  meetings  with  discussions.  Lectures  and  exhibi- 
tions held. 

SPRINGFIELD  COIN  CLUB 
Chamber  of  Commerce,  Springfield,  Mass. 

W.  C.  Stone President      W.  E.  Morse Vice-President 

A.  W.  Morris,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Organized    1914.      Affiliated    with    the    American    Numismatic    Association. 
Exhibitions  are  held.     (No  report  1921.) 

STOCKBRIDGE 

LAUREL  HILL  ASSOCIATION 
Stockbridge 

Alexander   Sedgwick President      Ralph  E.  Heath Treasurer 

Richard  R.  BowKER...lst  Vice-Pres.      Agnes  W.  Canning Secretary 

H.  W.  Farnum 2d  Vice-Pres. 

Organized  1853.  Does  village  improvement  work,  cares  for  parks,  sidewalks, 
trees,  etc.     Occasional  exhibitions. 

STOCKBRIDGE  EXHIBITION 

The  Casino,  Stockbridge 

Walter  Nettleton,  Chairman  Art  Committee 

J.  H.  Seymour Treasurer      Mrs.  G.  R.  Hall Secretary 

Since  1909  exhibitions  of  painting  and  sculpture  have  been  held  in  September 
for  two  weeks,  open  to  all  artists  who  have  at  any  time  worked  in  the  Berk- 
shires.     Attendance  averages  1,500  and  sales  about  $5,000. 

WOBURN 

WOBURN  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
William  N.  Seaver,  Librarian 
William  F.  Davis,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Open,  free,  Mondays,  Wednesdays  and  Fridays,  9  a.m.  to  6  p.m.;  Tuesdays 
and  Thursdays,  9  a.m.  to  8  p.m.;  Saturdays,  9  a.m.  to  9  p.m. 

The  art  gallery  contains  68  paintings  and  12  original  pieces  of  sculpture,  in- 
cluding two  Delia  Robbia  portrait  medallions,  all  from  the  James  Jackson 
Jarves  collection,  the  greater  part  of  which  belongs  to  Yale  University.  About 
3,000  books  on  art.     Occasional  exhibitions. 


MASSACHUSETTS— MICHIGAN  137 

WORCESTER 

AMERICAN   ANTIQUARIAN   SOCIETY 
Salisbury  Street,  corner  of  Park  Avenue,  Worcester 

Waldo  Lincoln President      Samuel  B.  Woodward Treasurer 

Charles  L.  Nichols Secretary      Clarence  S.  Brigham Librarian 

Incorporated  1912.  A  national  institution  which  is  particularly  rich  in  books, 
newspapers  and  manuscripts  dating  before  1820.  The  Museum  contains  a 
number  of  pieces  of  colonial  furniture,  a  small  collection  of  early  portraits, 
some  historical  china,  and  a  large  loan  collection  of  early  English  and  American 
portraits. 

FREE  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
12  Elm  Street,  Worcester 

Rorert  K.  Shaw ; .  .Librarian      Grace  W,  Wood,  Reference  Librarian 

in  charge  of  Art  Collection 
Open  9  A.M.  to  9.30  p.m.  Large  collection  of  carbon  photographs  illustrating 
the  history  of  painting,  and  many  colored  reproductions ;  photographs  of  archi- 
tecture, sculpture,  etc. ;  reproductions  of  the  works  by  American  artists.  Good 
collection  of  art  books.  Plates  are  lent.  Art  classes  hold  regular  meetings 
in  the  art  rooms.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

SAINT  WULSTAN  SOCIETY 
Waldo   Lincoln President      Frank  H.  Dewey Treasurer 

A.  George  Bullock.  .  .Vice-President 

Charles  L.  Nichols,  Secretary,  38  Cedar  Street,  Worcester 
Charles  G.  Washburn,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Organized  1890.     Administrates  the  Lucius  J.  Knowles  Art  Fund   for  the 
promotion  of  art  in  Worcester. 

WORCESTER  PUBLIC  SCHOOL  ART  LEAGUE 

John  E.  Lynch ...President      Carrie  A.  Hildreth Secretary 

Frank  J.  Darrah Vice-President  769  Main  St.,  Worcester 

Robert  K.  Shaw Treasurer 

Organized  1895.     The  work  is  largely  advisory. 

MICHIGAN 
^MICHIGAN  CHAPTER  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

.,D.  J.  V.  Snyder President      A.  G.  Donaldson Secretary 

J.  B.  Nettleton Vice-President  1314  Penobscot  Bldg.,  Detroit 

Walter   Lentz Treasurer 

Organized  1887 

ANN    ARBOR 

>^ANN  ARBOR  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Louis  H.  BoYNTON  President       Herbert  Slauson    Treasurer 

W.  W.  Bishop 1st  Vice-Pres.      Louise   Douglas Secretary 

B.  M.  Donaldson 2d  Vice-Pres.  502  Huron  St.,  Ann  Arbor 

Organized    1909.     Exhibitions   held. 

DETROIT 

DETROIT  SOCIETY  OF  WOMEN  PAINTERS 

Mrs.  T.  a.  McGraw,  Jr President       Mariam    Candler Treasurer 

Eleanor  S.  Candler.  . .  1st  Vice-Pres.      Helen  E.  Keep Secretary 

Katherine  McEwen.  .  .2d  Vice-Pres.  2247  Jefferson  Ave.,  East,  Detroit 

Organized  1903.     Exhibitions  held. 


138  MICHIGAN 


DETROIT 

.^SCARAB  CLUB 

2306  Woodward  Avenue,  Detroit 

Frank  S.  Clark President      Horace  S.  Boutell Treasurer 

Harry  Woodhouse Vice-President      Clyde  H.  Burroughs Secretary 

Organized  1910.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

►J-SOCIETY  OF  ARTS  AND  CRAFTS 
47  Watson  Street,  Detroit 

George  G.  Booth President      William  B.  Stratton Treasurer 

Alexandrine  McEwen  .  1st  Vice-Pres.      Helen   Plumb Secretary 

H.  J.  M.  Grylls 2d  Vice-Pres. 

For  further  data  see  Vol.  XVII,  p.  160. 

Permanent  exhibition  and  salesroom  open  to  the  public,   daily  9  a.m.  to  5 
p.  M.,  except  Saturdays,  when  it  closes  at  1 :30  p.  m.    Exhibitions  are  held. 

Organized  1906;  Incorporated  1915;  building  erected  1916.     Exhibitions  are 
held. 

GRAND    RAPIDS 

i^GRAND  RAPIDS  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Monument  Square  Bldg.,  Monroe  Avenue,  N.E.,  Grand  Rapids 

Mrs.  F.  W.  Powers President      Mabel  H.  Perkins Secretary 

Maude  Collins 1st  Vice-Pres.        327   Washington    St.,    S.    E.,   Grand 

Mrs.  W.  B.  WiLLARD...2d  Vice-Pres.  Rapids 

Annette  Richards Treasurer 

Organized   1910.     Monthly  exhibitions,  lectures,  studio  teas,  informal  talks, 
work  with  children, 

GRAND  RAPIDS  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Ryerson   Public   Library  Building 
Samuel  H.  Ranck,  Librarian 
Open  week  days  8:30  a.m.  to  9  p.m.;  Sundays  and  holidays  2  to  6  p.m.     Col- 
lection of  over  5,000  books  on  art,  and  many  prints.    Exhibitions  are  held. 

JACKSON 

^JACKSON  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Public  Library,  Jackson 

Mrs.  C.  E.  Markham President      Martha  C.  Walcott Treasurer 

Leonard  H.  Field,  Jr Vice-Pres.      Earl  W.  Browning Secretary 

Organized  1909.    Lectures  and  exhibitions  are  held  at  the  Public  Library. 

JACKSON  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Earl  W.  Browning,  Librarian 
Gallery  open  9  a.m.  to  9  p.m.     Contains  the  nucleus  of  a  permanent  art  col- 
lection.    About  2,000  books  on  fine  and  applied  arts.     The  exhibitions  of  the 
Jackson  Art  Society  are  held  in  the  Library. 

LANSING 

HhMICHIGAN  STATE  LIBRARY 
Lansing 
Mrs.  Mary  C.  Spencer,  Librarian 
Open  8  A.M  to  4  p.m.     Founded  1828. 
For  further  data  see  Vol.  XVII,  p.  161. 


MINNESOTA  139 


MINNESOTA 

MINNESOTA  CHAPTER  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

MINNEAPOLIS    SOCIETY    OF'    ARCHITECTS 
1200  Second  Avenue,  South,  Minneapolis 

Harry  T.  Downs President      F.  G.  Gorman Vice-President 

J.  P.  Jackson,  Secretary-Treasurer,  2309  First  Ave.,  South,  MinneapoHs 
Organized  1892. 

MINNESOTA  CHAPTER  AMERICAN 
SOCIETY  OF  LANDSCAPE  ARCHITECTS 

Arthur  R.  Nichols President      George  L.  Nason Sec-Treasurer 

641   Endicott  Bldg.,  St.  Paul 
Organized  1914. 

MINNESOTA  STATE  ART  COMMISSION 

MINNESOTA    STATE   ART    SOCIETY 
504  Essex  Building,  Minneapolis 
Governing  Board 
Hon.  J.  A.  O.  Prens 
Hon.  L.  D.  Coffman,  ex-officio 
Mrs.  J.  Howard  Palmer  H.  W.  Rubins 

Ian  B.  Stoughton  T.  G.  Holyoke 

Mrs.  Foster  Hannaford  Gertrude  Gary 

Maurice  I.  Flagg 
For  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  173. 
Inactive. 

MINNEAPOLIS 

ATTIC  CLUB  OF  MINNEAPOLIS 

Carl  W.  Rawson President      Jesse  W.  Betlach Treasurer 

699  Kenwood  Parkway,  Minneapolis      Clarence  Conaughby Secretary 

Organized  1910.     Club  rooms  maintained ;  classes  work  from  the  model  two 

nights  a  week;  outdoor  sketching  during  summer.     (No  report  1921.) 

MINNEAPOLIS  KERAMIC  ART  CLUB 

Frances  Ellen  Newman  . .  President      Helen  DeWanz Secretary 

Mrs.  E.  D.  Lacy Vice-President  2018  Dupont  Ave.,  N.,  Minneapolis 

Nell  L.  Saunders Treasurer 

Organized  1912. 

MINNEAPOLIS  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 

Corner  Hennepin  Avenue  and  10th  Street,  Minneapolis 

Gratia  A.  Countryman,  Librarian 

Marie  A.  Todd,  Art  Reference  Librarian 

Open  9  a.m  to  5.30  p.m.     Founded  1889.     There  are  about  7,000  books  on 

the    fine   arts,    1,500    large    photographs    and    color    prints    for    reference    use. 

16,500    prints    mounted    for    circulation,    with    a    reserve    collection    of    40,000 

clippings  ready  for  mounting,  5,350  post  cards  for  use  with  radiopticon. 

art  gallery 

R.  H.  Adams Curator      Lucy    Gilbert Attendant 

Open,  tree,  daily,  except  Sunday,  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.,  Saturday  evening  and 
Sunday  afternoon.  With  the  exception  of  5  paintings  the  entire  collection  is 
owned  and  lent  by  T.  W.  Walker  of  Minneapolis.  Eighty-five  artists  are 
represented  by  about  100  characteristic  paintings.  There  are  also  photo- 
graphs, art  glass,  oriental  porcelain,  etc.    Attendance  averages  about  50,000. 


140  MINNESOTA 


MINNEAPOLIS 

MINNESOTA  COLLEGE  ART  SOCIETY 
Harvard  and  Delaware  Streets,  S.  E.,  Minneapolis 

John  A.  Holmen President      Roy  Elmburg Treasurer 

Frank  Nelson,  Secretary 
Organized  1909.    Frequent  lectures  given. 

SCANDINAVIAN  ART  SOCIETY  OF  AMERICA 
Institute  of  Arts,  Minneapolis 

Lauritz  S.   Swenson President      Andreas   Neland Vice-President 

SoREN  P.  Rees,  Sec.-Treas. 
Organized  1914.    The  Society  acquires  works  by  Scandinavian  artists  to  be 
placed  in  the  Minneapolis  Institute  of  Arts  in  rooms  set  apart  for  this  purpose. 
Lectures  given. 

VETERANS 

ALUMNI   ASSOCIATION    OF   THE    MINNEAPOLIS    SCHOOL    OF   ART 
Minneapolis  Institute  of  Arts 
Mary  Moulton  Cheney 
Organized  1911. 

WOMAN'S  CLUB  OF  MINNEAPOLIS 
1526  Harmon  Place,  Minneapolis 

Mrs.  a.  E.  Zonne President      Mrs.  Chapin  R.  Brackett.  . .  .Treas. 

Mrs.  H.  V.  Mercer 1st  Vice-Pres.      Edna  M.  Candler Secretary 

Mrs.  Charles  Silverson 2d  V.-P. 

Organized  1907. 

DEPARTMENT  OF  ARTS  AND   LETTERS 

Mrs.  J.  B.  Pike Chairman      Mrs.  F.  M.  Crosby Director 

This  work  of  the  Art  Department  includes  exhibitions  of  work  by  local 
artists;  an  exhibit  and  sale  of  industrial  art;  co-operation  with  the  State 
Art  Society ;  co-operation  with  the  Fine  Arts  Society ;  two  art  scholarships 
for  students  in  local  schools;  a  course  of  lectures  on  art.     (No  report  1921.) 

ST.    PAUL 

ARTISTS'  SOCIETY  OF  SAINT   PAUL 

Charles  H.  Goodrich President      Hilma  Berglund Cor. -Secretary 

S.  Lydia  Tread  well Treasurer  1820  Feronia  Ave.,  St.  Paul 

Alice  E.  Hugy Rec.-Secretary 

Organized  1908.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

PUBLIC  LIBRARY 

Fourth  Street,  St.  Paul 

W.  Dawson  Johnston,  Librarian 

Edah  Burnett,  Assistant  in  charge  of  Fine  Arts  Room 

Gallery  open  10  a.m.  to  8  p.m.     This  collection  includes  10,278pictures  and 

4,800  lantern  slides.     Exhibitions  held. 

^ST.  PAUL  INSTITUTE 
Auditorium  Building,  St.  Paul 

Arthur  Sweeney President      W.  C.  Koch Secretary 

Benjamin    Sommers.  .Vice-President      Mrs.  M.  M.  Rasmessen.  .Educational 

Otto  M.  Nelson Treasurer  Director 

Caryl  Spiller,  Director 
For  foundation  and  details  see  Vol.  XI,  pp.  179,  180  and  Vol.  XVII,  p.  163, 
164. 

The  art  gallery  is  open  free,  daily,  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays  2  to  5  p.m. 
Incorporated  1908.     Exhibitions  and  lectures  are  given. 


MISSISSIPPI— MISSOURI  141 

MISSISSIPPI 

JACKSON 

MISSISSIPPI  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Mrs.  W.  Q.  Sharp President      Bessie  C.  Lemly Treasurer 

Mrs.  L.  M.  Russel.  .  .Vice-President      Geral    Knowles Secretary 

Marie  Ascher,  Chairman  Junior  Art  League  Committee 
Organized   1911.     Holds  annual   exhibition  at   State   Fair  and  offers  three 
distinctions,  gold  medal,  silver  and  bronze  ribbons.    Work  admitted  is  original 
work  in  fine  arts  and  crafts. 

MISSOURI 

KANSAS    CITY 

.^KANSAS  CITY  ART  INSTITUTE 
Armour  and  Warwick  Boulevards,  Kansas  City 

J.  C.  Nichols President      John  F.  Downing Treasury 

John  F.  Huckel . .  .1  st  Vice-President  Secretary 

Albert  R.  Jones.  .  .2d  Vice-President      H.   M.    Kurtzworth Director 

Museum  open,  week  days  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays,  3  p.m.  to  5  p.m.; 
Monday  and  Thursday  evenings  7  to  9  :30  p.m. 

Incorporated  1907.  Art  School  maintained  (see  school  section).  Frequent 
lectures  and  exhibitions. 

KANSAS  CITY  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

H.   F.   HoiT President      John  Van  Brunt Treasurer 

C.  H.  Payson,  Seci-etary,  Reliance  Bldg.,  Kansas  City 
Organized  1890.     Annual  exhibition  in  autumn.      (No  report   1921.) 

ST.    JOSEPH 

SAINT  JOSEPH  ART  LEAGUE 

Mrs.  J.  C.  Story President      Mrs.  L.  B.  Vanalta Treasurer 

Mrs  a.  a.  Myers Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  Glen  McMichael Rec.-Sec. 

Mary  S.  McNeil,  Cor.-Sec,  1022  North  19th  St.,  St.  Joseph 
Organized  1914.    A  regular  program  is  given  every  two  weeks.     (No  report 
1921.) 

ST.    LOUIS 

ART  ALLIANCE  OF  SAINT  LOUIS 
707  Fullerton  Building,  St.  Louis 

A.  Blair  Ridington President      Ida  G.  Heltzell Secretary 

Mrs.  C.  M.  Hoyt Vice-President  5325  Bartmer  Ave.,  St.  Louis 

Mrs.  R.  L.  Sanford Treasurer 

Formerly  Society  for  the  Promotion  of  Arts,  Crafts  and  Design.  Devotes 
itself  exclusively  to  the  needs  of  the  art  student  obtaining  scholarships,  prizes, 
etc.,  and  by  co-operation  on  the  part  of  business  men,  opportunities  for  the 
sale  of  work  and  the  securing  of  positions,  is  intimately  associated  with  the 
St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts,  Washington  University. 

ART  STUDENTb'  ASSOCIATION  OF  THE 

SAINT  LOUIS  SCHOOL  OF  FINE  ARTS 

Washington  University,  St.  Louis 

Robert  Wright President      Helen   Williams Treasurer 

Emanuel    Essmann  . .  Vice-President      Gladys  Alexander Secretary 

Organized  1884.  Awards  two  scholarships  yearly  to  needy  students.  Annual 
exhibition  in  December. 


142  MISSOURI 


ST,    LOUIS 

CITY  CLUB   OF  ST.  LOUIS 
911  Locust  St.,  St.  Louis 

Nelson  Cunliff President      S.  Roy  Culbertson Treasurer 

Glen  W.  Hutchinson,  ,.  .Vice-Pres.      W.  A.  Sommers Secretary 

Exhibitions  of  paintings  are  held  monthly. 

CIVIC  LEAGUE  OF  ST.  LOUIS 
415  Locust  Street,  St.  Louis 

Flint  Garrison President      Charles    Rippin Treasurer 

J.  H.  Gundlach Vice-President      J,  K.  Glasgow Acting  Secretary 

Organized  1901.    Work  along  art  lines  is  centered  in  city  planning. 

FRIENDS  OF  THE  LOCAL  ARTISTS 
Union  and  Enright  Avenues,  St.  Louis 

Percy   Werner Chairman      Grace  Gooding,  ..Secretary-Treasurer 

Organized  1919, 

MUNICIPAL  ART  COMMISSION,  CITY  OF  ST,  LOUIS 
234  Municipal  Courts  Bldg.,  St.  Louis 

Wilbur  T.  Trueblood President      F.  E.  A.  Curley Vice-President 

Anita  Moore,  Secretary,  715  Railway  Exchange,  St.  Louis 
For  organization  see  Vol.  XIV,  p.  163. 

Organized  1915  by  Municipal  Ordinance.  Members  serve  three-year  terms 
without  compensation ;  nine  members.  Work  is  advisory  in  connection  with 
municipal  buildings,  public  works  and  park  improvements.     (No  report  1921.) 

SAINT  LOUIS  ARCHITECTURAL  CLUB 
514  Culver  Way,  St.  Louis 

H.  H.  H,  Lynch President      Herbert  Reinhardt Treasurer 

Fred  Hammond Vice-President      F,  Ray  Leimkeuhler Secretary 

Organized  1894.  Lectures  at  regular  meetings.  A  club  atelier  is  maintained 
(see  school  section).     Frequent  exhibitions  of  architectural  subjects. 

SAINT  LOUIS  ARTISTS'  GUILD 
812  North  Union  Boulevard,  St,  Louis 

Clark    McAdams President      Grace  F,  Gooding Secretary 

T.  P.  Bostwick Vice-President  812  North  Union  Blvd,,  St.  Louis 

T.  Kajiwara Treasurer 

Gallery,  open,  free,  daily,  1  to  5  p.m.;  Sunday  3  to  5  p.m. 

Organized  1905 ;  building  erected  1906.  The  club  house  contains  galleries, 
social  rooms  and  crypt.  There  is  a  Little  Theatre  in  connection  with  the  gal- 
lery, and  plays,  under  the  direction  of  members  of  the  organization,  are  given 
at  various  times  during  the  season.  Holds  annual  open  comparative  ex- 
hibitions. 

.^SAINT  LOUIS  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCFIITECTS 

Walter  L.  Rathmann President      W.  O,  Mullgardt Secretary 

Harry  G.  Clymer Vice-President  Chemical  Bldg.,  St.  Louis. 

L.  B.   Pendleton Treasurer 

Organized  1890.  Give  scholarship  known  as  the  John  Beverly  Robinson 
Scholarship  for  post-graduate  work  in  architecture  at  Washington  University. 


MISSOURI— MONTANA  143 

ST.    LOUIS 

^SAINT  LOUIS  ART  LEAGUE 
Planters'  Hotel,  St.   Louis 

Breckenridge  Long President      H.  M.  E.  Pasmezoglu Treasurer 

Arthur  E.  Bostwick.  .1st'  Vice-Pres.      F.  E.  A.  Curley Secretary 

M.  A.  Goldstein 2d  Vice-Pres. 

For  further  data  see  Vol.  XVII,  p.  167. 
Organized  1913. 

SAINT  LUKE  ART  SOCIETY 

3650  Lindell  Boulevard,  St.  Louis 

Marie  R.   Garesche President      Julia    Dussuchal Treasurer 

Mrs.  Paul  Robyn 1st  Vice-Pres.      Clara  Colman Rec.Sec. 

Mrs.  J.  A.  Goodwin.. 2nd  Vice-Pres.      Anne  Waney Cor. -Sec. 

Arranges  art  lectures,  and  assembles  exhibitions  of  reproductions  of  paint- 
ings for  distribution  in  parochial  schools. 

.^SAINT  LOUIS  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Olive,  Thirteenth  and  Fourteenth  Streets 

Arthur  E.  Bostwick,  Librarian 
Mary  Powell,  in  charge  Art  Department 
Open,  daily,  9  a.m.  to  10  p.m  ;  Sundays  2  p.m.  to  9  p.m. 

About  8,000  volumes  on  fine  and  applied  arts ;  art  and  architectural  peri- 
odicals and  a  circulating  collection  of  pictures  and  slides.  Special  exhibitions 
are  constantly  being  held. 

TWO-BY-FOUR  SOCIETY 

Takuma  Kajiwara,  President 
St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts,  Skinker  Road  and  Lindell  Blvd.,  St.  Louis 
Organized  1905.    An  annual  exhibition  is  held  at  the  St.  Louis  Public  Library. 

WASHINGTON  UNIVERSITY  ARCHITECTURAL  SOCIETY 
Washington  University,  St.  Louis 

G.    W.    Wolf President      Gabriel    Dubuque Vice-Pres. 

Louis  Trautwein,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Organized  1907.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

SEDALIA 

SEDALIA  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 

Margaret  Hodges,  Acting  Librarian 
Art  Gallery  open  9  a.m  to  8:30  p.m.     There  are  about  140  photographs  of 
works  of  art,  30O  books  on  art,  and  2,000  prints. 

MONTANA 

GREAT    FALLS 

CITY  PLANNING  COMMISSION 

H.  O.  Chowen,  Chairman 

Organized  1917.  Seven  members.  Tentative  plans  made  for  a  city  plan. 
(No  report  1921.) 


144  NEBRASKA— NEW  HAMPSHIRE 

NEBRASKA 

NEBRASKA  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Harry  W.  Meginnis President      J.    D.    Sandham Sec.-Treas. 

Charles   W.   Steinbaugh. Vice-Pres.  836  World-Herald  Bldg.,  Omaha 

Organized  1918. 

LINCOLN 

^NEBRASKA  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Station  A.,  Lincoln 

Frank    M.    Hall President      Katherine  Woods Treasurer 

Don    M.    Love Vice-Pres, 

Paul  H.  Grummann,  Secretary  and  Chairman  of  Exhibitions 
Organized    1893 ;    incorporated    1902,     Permanent   collection    at   University, 
Exhibitions  held, 

OMAHA 

OMAHA  ART  GUILD 

DoANE    Powell President      Cordelia    Johnson Secretary 

George    Barker,   Jr Treasurer  2346  South  34th  Street,  Omaha 

J.  Laurie  Wallace,  Chairman  Exhibition  Committee 
Organized  1912.     Occasional  exhibitions, 

.^OMAHA  SOCIETY  OF  FINE  ARTS 
Omaha  Public  Library 

Mrs.  W,  M.  Burgess President      Mrs.   C.  C.  George Treasurer 

Mrs,  Luther  Drake..  1st  Vice-Pres,      Mrs.  William  E,  Martin,  ,  Secretary 

Mrs,   C.   O.   Rich 2nd  Vice-Pres.      Maurice   Block Director 

Organized  1906;  incorporated  1911.     Lectures  and  exhibitions  are  given. 

PERU 

FORTNIGHTLY  ART  CLUB 
Peru 

Mattie    C.    Ellis President      Mrs,  E.  E.  Good Treasurer 

Mrs.   E.  L.  Rouse Vice-Pres,      Louise    Neal Secretary 

Organized  1900.    Exhibitions  are  held,    (No  report  1921.) 

NEW  HAMPSHIRE 

NEW  HAMPSHIRE  PRACTICAL  ARTS  CLUB 

Roland  G.  Hartwell President       Mary  A,  Jones Vice-President 

Concord  Penacook 

Josephine  Emery,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Box  310,  Tilton,  N.  H. 
Organized  1913,  as  New  Hampshire  Manual  Training  Club,    Lectures  given. 

MANCHESTER 

CITY  LIBRARY 
Pine  Street,  Manchester 
F.  Mabel  Winchell,  Librarian 
Art  department  was  opened  in  1914,  and  contains  collection  of  2,702  books; 
15.343  mounted  and  about  155,000  unmounted  pictures,  all  of  which  are  classi- 
fied.    About  60,000  pictures  are  on  art  subjects.     Pictures  are  lent  to  schools, 
clubs   and   individuals    in  the  city,  and   by   the   inter-library   loan   system  are 
sent  to  other  cities  and  towns  when  requested.    Exhibitions  are  held. 


NEW  HAMPSHIRE— NEW  JERSEY  145 

MANCHESTER 

►^INSTITUTE  OF  ARTS  AND  SCIENCES 
Concord  and  Pine  Streets,  Manchester 

Albert  L.  Clough  .  • President      Norwin    S.    Bean Treasurer 

Charles  J.   Abbott Librarian      Harrie    M.    Young Clerk 

William    H.    Huse Curator      George    L.    Kibbee Secretary 

Sarah    C.    Holton Custodian  514  Hanover  St.,  Manchester 

Organized  1898.  School  maintained  (see  school  section).  Numerous_jexhi- 
bitions  are  held. 

PETERBOROUGH 

EDWARD  MACDOWELL  MEMORIAL  ASSOCIATION 

Howard    C.    Smith President       Mrs.  Edward  MacDowell.  .Cor.-Sec. 

Benjamin    Prince Treasurer  Peterborough 

Howard    Mansfield Secretary 

Organized  1907 ;  incorporated  1909.  A  summer  colony  of  creative  artists — 
painters,  sculptors,  musicians  and  writers.  Nearly  500  acres  of  land  with  16 
secluded  studios,  separate  living  quarters,  out-door  stage  where  pageants  and 
festivals  are  given. 

HANDICRAFT  WORKERS  OF  PETERBOROUGH 

Mary    Adams President      Mrs.    Charles   Arnold Treasurer 

Mrs.  Perkins  Bass 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  Helen  L.  Paquet Secretary 

Mrs.  Horace  Morison  2nd  Vice-Pres. 

Organized  1905.  Workers  specialize  in  Italian  cut-work  baskets,  or  fine 
sewing;  tea-room  maintained.    Exhibitions  held. 

NEW  JERSEY 

HhNEW  JERSEY  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Harry    T,    Stevens     President      John  F.   Capen Treasurer 

E.  F.  Fougner 1st  Vice-Pres.       Hugh  Roberts Secretary 

C.  W.  Fairweather.  .2nd  Vice-Pres.  1  Exchange  Place,  Jersey  City 

Organized  1900. 

BAYONNE 

BAYONNE  WOMAN'S  CLUB 
Mrs.    Ralph    Templeton.  ..President      Mrs.  H.  S.  Germond,  Jr.  .  .Secretary 

ART   DEPARTMENT 

Mrs.  H.  F.  J.  Knobloch,  Chairman 

42  East  39th  St.,  Bayonne 

Organized  1915.   Holds  annual  competition  among  school  children  of  Bayonne 

for  most  original  architectural  drawings,  title  pages,  posters,  interior  designs, 

and  designs  of  costumes  and  costume  accessories.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

JERSEY    CITY 

FREE  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Jersey  Avenue,  Montgomery  and  Mercer  Streets,  Jersey  City 
Edmund  W.  Miller,  Secretary  and  Librarian 
Open  daily,  3  p.m.  to  5  p.m.,  and  on  request. 

Exhibition  room  open  free  every  afternoon  during  exhibition.  About  1,000 
books  on  art  and  several  thousand  prints  used  in  the  Reference  and  School 
Department. 


146        NEW  JERSEY— NEW  MEXICO— NEW  YORK  CITY 

JERSEY   CITY 

JERSEY  CITY  ARTS  CLUB 

Joseph  H.  Hunter Acting  Pres.       Cyril    Sayers Treasurer 

Mrs.  George  Elterich Vice-Pres.      Sarah    Welsh Secretary 

Dr.    Henry    S.    Drayton,    Chairman  34  Monticello  Ave.,  Jersey  City 

Board  of  Managers 

Organized  1904.     Inactive. 

JERSEY  CITY  KERAMIC  ART  CLUB 

Mrs.  E.  F.  Manning President      Mrs.    E.    Mount Treasurer 

Mrs.    J.    Allan Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  F.  E.  Price Secretary 

Organized  1895. 

NUTLEY 

NUTLEY  FREE  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Irene  C.  Phillips,  Librarian 
For  further  data  see  Vol.  XVII,  p.  171. 
TRENTON 

SCHOOL  OF  INDUSTRIAL  ARTS 
Kelsey  Memorial  Building,  Trenton 
Frank  Forrest  Frederick,  Director 
Gallery  open  2  to  4  p.m.  and  7.30  to  9.30  p.m. 

Building    erected    1910.      Valuable    collections    of    ceramics.      Current    ex- 
hibitions of  paintings  and  handicrafts.     (See  school  section.) 

NEW    MEXICO 

TAOS 

TAOS  SOCIETY  OF  ARTISTS 

Ernest  L.  Blumenschein  . .  President       Walter    Ufer Sec.-Treas. 

Organized  1914.    The  Society  is  composed  of  artists  who  spend  their  summers 
in  that  part  of  the  country.     Sends  out  traveling  exhibition. 

NEW  YORK 

NEW    YORK    CITY 

ALLIED  ARTISTS  OF  AMERICA 
215  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

G.    Glenn    Newell President      Edmund   Greacen Rec.-Sec. 

Elliot  Clark Vice-Pres.      Ernest    L.  .  Ipsen Cor.-Sec. 

Orlando   Rouland Treasurer  119  East  19th  St. 

Annual  exhibition  held  April  11  to  May  1,  1921,  at  American  Fine  Arts  Build- 
ing.    No  jury,  each  artist  selecting  his  own  exhibit.    Membership,  123. 

ALLIED  ARTS  ASSOCIATION  OF  BROOKLYN 

Eugene  V.  Brewster President       L.  D.  Broughton Treasurer 

W.  G.  Bowdoin,  Secretary,  1057  East  39th  St.,  Borough  of  Brooklyn. 
Inactive. 

►^AMERICAN  FINE  ARTS  SOCIETY 
215   West   57th   Street,   Borough   of   Manhattan,   New   York 

William  A.  Coffin.  .Pres.  and  Treas.      Charles  J.   Miller Secretary 

Incorporated  1889.    Maintains  galleries  that  are  rented  to  the  art  societies. 


Pictorial  Map  of  the  South  Seas.     By  Barry  Faulkner 
Cunard  Building,  New  York  City 


Fleet  of  Columbus.    By  Ezra  Winter 
Cunard  Building,  New  York  City 


NEW  YORK  CITY  147 


AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  GRAPHIC  ARTS 
Art  Center,  65  East  56th  St.,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Walter  Gilliss Hon.  President      George    A.    Nelson Secretary 

Frederick   W.   Goudy President  109  East  31st  St.,  Borough  of  Man- 

Henry  L.  Sparks Treasurer  hattan,   New  York 

Exhibition  of  old  prints  held  in  April,  1921,  at  National  Arts  Club. 

4^AMERICAN  SOCIETY  OF  MINIATURE  PAINTERS 

Alice   Beckington President      William    J.    Baer Treasurer 

Helen  Winslow  Durkee,  Secretary 
124  West  72d  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan 
Twenty-second  annual  exhibition,  Nov.   1  to   Nov.   15,   1920,  at  the  Arden 
Galleries. 

►^AMERICAN  WATER  COLOR  SOCIETY 

215  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Eliot   Clark President      Roy    Brown Treasurer 

Harry  L.  Hoffman,  Secretary 
50  West  67th  St.,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
For  foundation  sec  Vol.  I,  p.  242;  recipients  Evans  prize,  Vol.  XI,  p.  204. 
Feb.  2  to  Feb.  24,  1921— 54th  annual  exhibition,  held  at  National  Arts  Club ; 
Hudnut  prize  of  $200  awarded  to  Francis  McComas  for  "Storm  Clouds." 

.^ARCHITECTURAL  LEAGUE  OF  NEW  YORK 
215  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Howard  Greenley President      Leon    V.    Solon Treasurer 

John   Gregory 1st   Vice-Pres.      Russell  F.  Whitehead Secretary 

April  1  to  May  5,  1921— Thirty-sixth  annual  exhibition  held  in  the  un- 
finished south  wing  of  the  Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art.  Opened  with  a 
pageant  "The  Den  of  Lions."  Medal  for  architecture  awarded  to  Charles 
Z.  Klauder ;  for  decorative  painting  to  Eugene  F.  Savage ;  for  sculpture  to 
John  Gregory ;  for  landscape  architecture  to  James  L.  Greenleaf ;  for  industrial 
design  and  craftsmanship  to  Cheney  Brothers  for  their  silks. 

•^ART  ALLIANCE  OF  AMERICA 
Art  Center,  65  East  56th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

W.   Frank   Purdy President      Charles  H.  Sabin Treasurer 

Mrs.  Ripley  Hitchcock..  1st  V.-Pres..      Elizabeth  B.  Grimball Secretary 

The  Placement  Section  secures  positions  for  designers,  decorators  and 
teachers. 

.^ART  CENTER 
65-67  East  56th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Mrs.  Ripley  Hitchcock President      Wade  H.   Hayes Treasurer 

Charles   Dana   Gibson.  .  .Vice-Pres.      Heyworth    Campbell Secretary 

Richard  L.  Marwede,  Assistant  Secretary 
William  Laurel  Harris,  Managing  Director 
Building  dedicated  October  31,  1921.  Holding  company  for  real  estate  in 
interest  of  the  following  co-operating  organizations :  Art  Alliance  of  America, 
Art  Directors'  Club,  American  Institute  of  Graphic  Arts,  New  York  Society 
of  Craftsmen,  Pictorial  Photographers  of  America,  Society  of  Illustrators,  and 
The  Stowaways. 


148  NEW  YORK  CITY 


ART  COMMISSION  OF  THE  CITY  OF  NEW  YORK 
City  Hall,  Borough  of  Manhattan,   New  York 

Robert  W.  de  Forest President      I.  N.  Phelps  Stokes,  Trustee  N.  Y. 

Pres.,  Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art  Public  Library,  Ex-officio 

Ex -officio  Harry  W.  Watrous,  1921 

John  F,  Hylan,  Mayor  of  the  City      Welles   Bosworth,  1922 
of  New  York,  Ex-officio  R.  T.  H.  Halsey,  1922 

Frank    L.    Babbott Vice-Pres.      Edward  C.  Blum,  1923 

Pres.    Brooklyn    Institute    of    Arts       Charles  Keck,  1923 
and  Sciences,  Ex-officio. 

LuciEN  OuDiN,  1921,  Secretary 
Henry  Rutgers  Marshall,  Executive  Secretary 
Passes   on   all   city   structures.     Reference   collection   of    books,   maps   and 
photographs  on  municipal  art. 

ART  COMMISSION  ASSOCIATES 

Robert  W.  de  Forest President      Daniel  C.  Fbench Vice-President 

Henry  Rutgers  Marshall,  Secretary  and  Treasurer 
City  Hall,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

ART  DIRECTORS'  CLUB 
Art  Center,  65  East  56th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Heyworth    Campbell President      James    Ethridge Secretary 

J.    H.    Chapin Vice-Pres.  23  East  26th  St.,  Borough  of  Man- 

Ralph    Shultz Treasurer  hattan,  New  York. 

Exhibition  of  paintings  and  drawings  used  in  American  Advertising,  March 
2  to  March  31,  1921,  at  National  Arts  Club. 

HhART-IN-TRADES   CLUB 
215  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Harry   Wearne President      Ja mes    P.    Rome Secretary 

Lewis  W.  Hyde Treasurer  381  Fourth  Ave.,  Bor.  of  Manhat- 

tan,  New  York 
Monthly  meetings  with  addresses  on  various  phases  of  industrial  art. 

ART  WORKERS'  CLUB  FOR  WOMEN 
224  West  58th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Constance  Curtis President      Caroline  T.  Foster 

Grace  Schuyler  de  Luze.  .Treasurer  Supf.  and  Exec.  Sec. 

Mrs.  Charles  M.  Connfelt Sec. 

Employment  bureau,  costume  bureau,  restaurant,  circulating  library,  classes 
in  French  and  drawing,  various  entertainments.  Open  daily,  except  Sunday, 
9  a.m  to  6  P.M. 

ARTISTS'  AID  SOCIETY 
215  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Joseph  Lauber President      Charles   J.    Hinton Secretary 

Jonas    Lie Vice-Pres.  Bronxville,   N.   Y. 

J.  Redding  Kelly Treasurer.  ;f.  || .  ,    |  ^        ^         i 

Controls  a  free  bed  in  the  Presbyterian  Hospital.  Deaths  1920-21 :  W.  H. 
Lippincott,  W.  T.  Smedley,  Thomas  Shields  Clarke. 


NEW  YORK  CITY  149 


ARTISTS'  FUND  SOCIETY  OF  THE  CITY  OF  NEW  YORK 

Alexander   C.    Morgan President      H.    Bolton    Jones Secretary 

William  H.  Howe Vice-Pres.  33  West  67  St.,  Borough  of  Man- 

W.    Merrttt    Post Treasurer  hattan,  New  York 

Gives  aid  to  members  in  distress,  and  assists  families  of  deceased  members ; 
also,  to  the  extent  of  its  resources  gives  temporary  assistance  to  any  needy  pro- 
fessional artist,  whether  member  or  not.  Deaths,  1920-21 :  Mathias  Sandor, 
Nov.  3,  1920;  F.  T.  Richards,  July  8,  1921. 

ASSOCIATION  FOR  CULTURE 

Dr.    Otto    Glogau Treasurer      Mrs.  Clara  Ruge Sec.  Art  Dept. 

8  East  85th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
Annual   exhibition   at   Municipal   Art   Gallery   in    Washington    Irving   High 
School,  Dec.  20,  1920,  to  Feb.  28,  1921. 

BROOKLYN  CHAPTER  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 
154  Montague  Street,  Borough  of  Brooklyn,  New  York 

John   B.    Slee President      T.  E.   Snook,  Jr Secretary 

Arthur  R.  Koch Vice-President  261    Broadway,    Borough    of    Man- 

William  J.  Dilthey Treasurer  hattan.  New  York 

BROOKLYN  SOCIETY  OF  ARTISTS 

Hamilton  Easter  Field.  ,  .President      W.  E.  Spader Treasurer 

Leon  Dabo 1st  Vice-Pres.       William  J.  Boylan Rec.-Sec. 

Edmond  Weill 2d  Vice-Pres. 

Robert  Laurent,  Corresponding  Secretary 
106  Columbia  Heights,  Borough  of  Brooklyn,  New  York 
Fourth  annual  exhibition,  December,  1920,  at  Pratt  Institute. 

BROOKLYN  SOCIETY  OF  ETCHERS 

Eugene  Higgins President      J.  T.  Arms Cor. -Sec. 

H.    B.    Shope Vice-Pres.  Greenfield  Hill,  Fairfield,  Conn. 

Fred.  Reynolds Treasurer 

Nov.  29  to  Dec.  17,  1920— Fifth  annual  exhibition  at  Brooklyn  Museum; 
three  prizes.  Feb.  1  to  Feb.  21,  1921,  exhibition  at  Brown-Robertson  Gallery, 
Manhattan.  Traveling  exhibit  under  auspices  of  American  Federation  of 
Arts. 

BROOKLYN  SOCIETY  OF  MINIATURE  PAINTERS 
191  Clinton  Street,  Borough  of  Brooklyn 

Nicholas    S.    Macsoud President       Alexandrina   R.   Harris.  .Treasurer 

Edith    Sawyer Vice-Pres.      Alice    T.    Searle Secretary 

241     Fenimore     St.,     Borough     of 
Brooklyn. 
March  1  to  March  28,  1921,  third  annual  exhibition  held  at  Hotel  Bossert. 

BROOKLYN   WATER   COLOR   CLUB 

Mary  Langtry President      Herbert    B.    Tschudv ....  Sec.-Treas. 

William   J.    Boylan Vice-Pres.  Brooklyn    Museum,    Eastern    Park- 

way. 
Second   annual    exhibition   held   at    Pratt    Institute   Art    Gallery,    Alarch    18 
to  April  2,  1921. 


150  NEW  YORK  CITY 


CAMERA  CLUB 
121  West  68th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

CENTURY  ASSOCIATION 
7  West  43rd  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Elihu   Root President      H.   deF.    Baldwin Treasurer 

E.  H.  Blashfield 1st  Vice-Pres.      A.   D.   Noyes Secretary 

Art  Committee 
Douglas  Volk  Kenneth  Frazier  Gifford  Beal 

Monthly  exhibition  of  paintings  by  members. 

CHALONER  PRIZE  FOUNDATION 
Trustees 
Charles  A.  Platt  Lawton  S.  Parker  William  Rand 

George  F.  Lewis,  Clerk,  Z7  Wall  Street,  Manhattan 
R.  George  Smith,  Sect.  Concours  Jury,  National  Academy  of  Design 
175  West  109th  Street 
Monthly  competitions  in  drawing,  painting  and  composition,  open  to  Amer- 
ican art  students  under  30  years  of  age.     American  scholarship,  consisting  of 
$400  and  one  year's  tuition   in  an  art   school  in  the  United   States,   awarded 
for  highest  standard  in  monthly  concours. 

Fourth  competition  for  Paris  Prize,  will  be  held  in  New  York  in  May,  1923. 
The  prize  consists  of  $900  a  year  for  five  years  of  study  in  Paris. 

CITY  CLUB  OF  NEW  YORK 
55  West  44th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
William  H.  Haskell,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Monthly  exhibitions, 

CIVIC  CLUB 
14  West  12th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
Gallery  open  to  artists  for  exhibitions  of  two  weeks'  duration. 

COLUMBIA  UNIVERSITY 

West  116th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

AVERY  ARCHITECTURAL  LIBRARY 

William  Bell  Dinsmoor,  Librarian 

Open  daily,  except  Sundays  and  holidays,  9  a.m.  to  6  p.m.,  and  7  to  10  p.m.; 

except   for  a  five  weeks'  closing  period  during  August  and  September.     The 

standard  library  of  the  architectural  profession  in  the  United  States. 

Exhibitions  1920-1921 :  Oct.— "A  Country  House  Problem"  by  students  of 
the  School  of  Architecture;  Jan. — Original  drawings  for  mural  decorations 
by  Blashfield  and  Mowbray ;  Feb. — Work  of  John  Milton  and  Andrew  Marvel ; 
Work  of  Serlio;  March — Designs  for  small  house  by  Ernest  Flagg;  April — 
Napoleon  Centenary  and  the  art  of  the  Empire;  June — Work  of  the  Alumni 
of  the  School  of  Architecture,  40th  Anniversary ;  July — Prints  and  Proc- 
esses; Aug.-Sept. — Dante  600th  Anniversary  Exhibition. 

ALUMNI    ASSOCIATION    OF    THE    SCHOOL    OF    ARCHITECTURE 
OF   COLUMBIA   UNIVERSITY 

Arthur   Lobo President      Edward  F.  Fanning Secretary 

Joseph  H.  Clark Treasurer  522    Fifth    Avenue,      Borough     of 

Manhattan 
Draftsmen's  and  Architect's  Exchange  maintained.     Medal   for  "Excellence 
in  Design"  awarded  annually  in  the   School  of  Architecture. 


NEW  YORK  CITY  151 


Columbia  University — Continued 
INSTITUTE    OF   ARTS    AND    SCIENCES 
Columbia  University 
James  C.  Egbert  Milton  J.  Davies 

Director  of  Extension  Teaching  Assistant    in   charge    Institute 

Numerous  lectures  on  art  topics.     Annual  dues,  $12.50. 

PULITZER  ART   SCHOLARSHIP 
Annual  scholarship  of  $1,500  for  the  art  student  in  America  who  shall  be 
certified  as  the  most  promising  and  deserving  by  the  National  Academy   of 
Design. 

FINE  ARTS  FEDERATION  OF  NEW  YORK 
215  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Arnold  W.   Brunner President      Wm.    Laurel   Harris Secretary 

Charles   Dana  Gibson.  .  .Vice-Pres.  120  West  59th  Street,  Borough  of 

Albert   S.  Bard Treasurer  Manhattan,    New    York 

The  object  is  to  secure  united  action  by  the  art  societies  of  New  York  in  all 
matters  affecting  their  common  interests. 

GROLIER  CLUB 
47  East  60th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Henry  W.   Kent President      Robert    J  affray Treasurer 

Walter  Gillis,  Secretary 
A  club  of  bibliophiles.    Frequent  exhibitions  open  free  to  the  public. 

GUILD  OF  AMERICAN   PAINTERS 
Executive   Council 

William  B.  Starkweather  Walter  Farndon Treasurer 

Arthur  R.  Freedlander 

George  Pearse  Ennis,  Secretary 
58  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
Exhibition,  December,  1920,  at  Babcock  Gallery,  New  York  City.    Traveling 
exhibit  shown  in  Baltimore,  Providence,  Elmira,  Indianapolis,  Chicago,  Mus- 
kegon, Grand  Rapids,  Minneapolis,  and  St.  Paul. 

GUILD  OF  BOOKWORKERS 
Mrs.  Helen  Haskell  Noyes,  Secretary-Treasurer 
77  Irving  Place,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
The  membership  is  divided  into  professionals  and  amateurs,  and  includes  il- 
luminators,  engrossers,   hand-press   printers,    bookbinders,   designers    of   book- 
plates and  designers  of  type.     A  year  book  is  published  with  classified  list  of 
members.    Annual  exhibition  held  April  5  to  April  9,  1921  at  the  Grolier  Club. 

GUILD  OF  FREE  LANCE  ARTISTS 

OF  THE  AUTHORS,  ARTISTS  AND   DRAMATISTS   OF  AMERICA 

22  East  17th  treet.  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

C.    B.   Falls President      F.  G.   Cooper Sec.-Treas. 

C.  E.  Chambers Vice-Pres.      Eric  Schuler Exec.  Sec. 

LuiSE  M.  SiLLCox,  Managing  Secretary 
Permanent  exhibition  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  daily;  Saturday  9  a.m.  to  1  p.m. 


152  NEW  YORK  CITY 


JUNIOR  ART  PATRONS  OF  AMERICA 
22  West  49th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Hon.  Warpen  G.  Harding  Alaric   Simpson Sec.-Treas. 

Hon.  President      Mrs.  Albert  Sterner Director 

Organized  1921.  Annual  dues  $25 ;  each  member  to  make  purchase  of 
works  by  American  artists  for  which  this  $25  stands  as  a  credit.  Retrospective 
exhibition  of  paintings,  May,  1921,  at  Fine  Arts  Building. 

.^KERAMIC  SOCIETY  OF  GREATER  NEW  YORK 

Mrs.  Nina  Hatfield President      Miss  C.  P.  Nelson Secretary 

Alice    M.    Hurd Vice-Pres.  32  Elk  Ave.,  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 

Mrs.  E.  E.  Smith Treasurer 

LEAGUE  OF  NEW  YORK  ARTISTS 
119  East  19th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Howard  Giles,  Chairman 
35  West  14th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
Robert  W.  Vonnoh,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Organized  1921.    Artists'  co-operative  society.    Annual  dues  $10. 

LES  ANCIENS  DE  L'ACADEMIE  JULIAN 

Nelson  N.  Bickford Hon.  Pres.      Leo   Mielziner Secretary 

J.  William  Fosdick President  52  W.  12th  St.,  Bor.  of  Man.,  N.  Y. 

LONG  ISLAND  PAINTERS 
Benjamin  Eggleston,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
164  East  22nd  St.,  Borough  of  Brooklyn,  New  York 
Occasional  exhibitions  at  Plymouth  Church  Institute,  Brooklyn. 

LOTOS  CLUB 

110  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
William  A.  Clark,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Exhibitions   held   during  the   season,   opening  the   third    Saturday   of   each 
month;  ladies'  day,  following  Monday  and  Tuesday. 

MacDQWELL  CLUB 
108  West  55th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Ernest    Peixotto President      Joseph   G.   Deane Treasurer 

Caroline  B.  Dow,  Secretary 
Galleries  open,  free,  10  a.m.  to  6  p.m.,  except  on  Mondays  and  Tuesdays. 

•^<MUNICIPAL  ART  SOCIETY  OF  NEW  YORK 

National  Arts  Club  Studio  Building,  119  East  19th  Street,  Borough  of 

Manhattan,  New   York 

Joseph   Howland  Hunt.  .  .President      Mrs.   H.   B.   Keen Secretary 

Carl  F.  Pilat 1st  Vice-Pres.  135  West  56th  Street,  Borough  of 

George  B.  de  Gersdorff Treasurer  Manhattan 

For  foundation  and  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  235. 

Permanent  exhibition  of  civic  art  installed  in  Lorillard  Mansion,  Bronx 
Park.  Annual  prizes  of  $50  and  %2S  awarded  in  the  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of 
Design  Architectural  competitions ;  bronze  trophy  and  medals  awarded  twice 
a  year  through  competitions  in  the  drawing  department  of  the  City  High 
Schools. 


NEW  YORK  CITY  153 


.^MURAL  PAINTERS 
215  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

J.  Monroe  Hewlett President      Ezra   Winter Secretary 

Charles  R.  Lamb        1st  Vice-Pres.  58   West   57th    Street,   Borough   of 

Charles    L.    Hinton Treasurer  Manhattan 

Course  of  atelier  instruction  maintained  in  conjunction  with  the  Beaux- 
Arts  Institute  of  Design  and  the  National  Sculpture  Society.  Lantern  slides 
and  a  lecture  by  Edwin  H.  Blashfield  and  also  photographs  of  mural  deco- 
rations owned  by  the  Society  were  circulated  through  The  American  Federa- 
tion of  Arts. 

MUSEUM   OF  FRENCH  ART 

ART  SECTION  OF  FRENCH  INSTITUTE  IN  THE  UNITED   STATES 
599  Fifth  Avenue,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

McDougall    Hawkes President      William  R.  Britton Treasurer 

Thomas  Hastings,  Secretary-General 
Reading  room  and  exhibition  gallery  open  free,  daily,  2  to  6  p.m.  Reference 
library  of  French  art,  science  and  literature ;  current  periodicals,  scrap  books 
of  use  to  architects  and  designers;  collections  of  engravings,  coins,  etc.  Makes 
a  specialty  of  documents  on  costume  design.  Courses  in  costume  design. 
Lectures  in  French  Tuesdays,  4  p.m.,  Thursdays  8  p.m.,  Saturdays  11  a.m., 
music,  Sundays,  3  :30  p.m. 

NATIONAL  ACADEMY  ASSOCIATION 
215  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Harry   W.    Watrous President      Bert    Hanson Secretary 

Donn    Barber Treasurer  42  Broadway,  Manhattan 

Objects :  To  develop  and  encourage  the  study  of  fine  arts,  to  aid  artists 
and  associations  of  artists,  to  disseminate  the  knowledge  and  to  stimulate  an 
interest  in  the  fine  arts ;  to  erect  a  building  or  buildings  provided  with  galleries, 
exhibition  spaces,  lecture  rooms,  and  accommodations  for  artists  and  associ- 
ations of  artists  devoted  to  work  in  the  various  departments  of  the  fine  arts. 

►^.NATIONAL  ACADEMY  OF  DESIGN 
175  West  109th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Edwin  H.  Blashfield President      Charles  C.  Curran Cor-.Sec. 

Harry   W.   Watrous Vice-Pres.  39  West  67th  St.,  Borough  of  Man- 

Francis    C,    Jones Treasurer  hattan 

Douglas  Volk Rec.-Sec. 

For  foundation  and  chronological  history  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  239;  membership 
1826  to  1913  see  Vol.  X,  p.  393. 

Two  exhibitions  each  season  at  the  American  Fine  Arts  Building,  215  West 
57th  Street;  open  daily  10'a.m  to  6  p.m.;  Sundays,  1:30  to  6  p.m.  Admission 
50  cents  (including  catalogue)  except  Mondays,  when  it  is  free,  day  and 
evening. 

School  (see  school  section)  and  gallery  of  portraits  of  artists  and  other 
works  at  the  109th  Street  building. 

No  winter,  1920,  exhibition  on  account  of  fire  in  American  Fine  Arts 
Building.  Mar.  5  to  Apr.  3,  1921 — Ninety-sixth  annual  exhibition  :  475  ex- 
hibits. Thomas  B.  Clarke  prize  to  Leon  Kroll ;  Hallgarten  prizes  to  Ross  E. 
Moffet,  Felicie  Waldo  Howell  and  Wm.  Auerbach-Levy ;  Carnegie  prize  to 
John  F.  Folinsbee;  Shaw  Memorial  prize  to  Katherine  S.  Lawson;  Isidor 
medal  to  Howard  E.  Smith ;  Saltus  medal  to  Charles  H.  Davis ;  Barnett  prize 
to  Malvina  Hoffman;  Maynard  prize  to  R.  Sloan  Bredin;  Altman  landscape 
prizes  to  Ernest  Lawson  and  Robert  Spencer;  Altman  figure  prizes  to  Walter 
Ufer  and  Helen  M.  Turner;  Watrous  gold  medal  to  Bessie  Potter  Vonnoh. 


154  NEW  YORK  CITY 


^NATIONAL  ARTS  CLUB 
14  and  15  Gramercy  Park  and  119  East  19th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan 

John   G.   Agar President      John    R.   Gregg Treasurer 

John  Clyde  Oswald^  Secretary 
Club    house    maintained;    galleries    with    monthly    exhibitions;    restaurant; 
studio  apartments.    The  galleries  are  open  to  the  public,  10  a.m.  to  6  p.m. 

Exhibitions 
Nov.  1920 — Books  of  the  year. 
Dec. — Work  of  Club  members. 
Jan.,  1921 — ^Members'  annual  prize  exhibit. 
Feb. — American  Water  Color  Society. 

Mar. — Art  Directors'   Club  exhibit  of  drawings  and  paintings  used  in  adver- 
tising. i_l 
Apr. — Old  prints,  under  auspices  of  American  Institute  of  Graphic  Arts. 
May-Oct. — Pictures  from  Club's  permanent  collection. 

^NATIONAL  ASSOCIATION  OF  PORTRAIT  PAINTERS 

Irving  R.   Wiles Chairman       DeWitt  M.  Lockman.  . Vice-Char'm 

Earl  Stetson  Crawford^  Secretary  and  Treasurer 
4  West  40th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
Exhibition  May  2  to  May  16,  1921,  at  Knoedler  Galleries. 

HhNATIONAL  ASSOCIATION  OF 

WOMEN  PAINTERS  AND  SCULPTORS 

215  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Mrs.  H.  Van  B.  Magonigle.  . .  .Pres.       Elizabeth  Hardenbergh . . . Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.  Elizabeth   S.  Theobald  Kate   Mann   Franklin.  ..  .Cor.-Sec. 

1st  Vice-Pres.      Josephine  W.  Barnard.  .  .Asst.  Sec. 

Olive  P.  Black Treasurer 

Exhibitions 
Jan.  20  to  Feb.  1,  1921 — Small  pictures  and  sketches  in  Architectural  League 

room,  American  Fine  Arts  Building. 
Feb.  23  to  Mar.  5. — Thirtieth  annual  exhibition,  Anderson  Galleries.     National 
Arts  Club  prize  to  Harriet  W.  Frishmuth ;  honorable  mention  to  Camelia 
Whitehurst  for  "Getting  Ready" ;  to  Elsie  Dodge  Pattee  for  a  miniature, 
"The  Builder" ;  to  Edith  Barretto  Parsons  for  sculpture,  "Founatin  Sketch." 

^NATIONAL  SCULPTURE  SOCIETY 
215  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Robert   Aitken President      I.  Wyman   Drum mond.  ..  .Treasurer 

Joseph  Rowland  Hunt.  .  1st  V.-Pres.      Charles  L.  Hinton Secretary 

Free  course  for  the  study  of  decorative  sculpture  given  in  co-operation  with 
the  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of  Design  (see  school  section).  Photographs  of 
sculpture  and  a  lecture  belonging  to  the  Society  were  circulated  through  The 
American  Federation  of  Arts. 

.^NEEDLE  AND  BOBBIN  CLUB 

Gertrude    Whiting President      Mrs.  S.  S.  Wheeler Treasurer 

Frances    Morris 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mary   Parsons Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.  W.  T.  Van  Alstyne,  Cor.-Sec, 

1  West  72d  St.,  Borough  of  Manhattan 

Founded  1920  with  the  co-operation  of  People's  Institute,  Guild  of  Needle 

and   Bobbin   Crafts   to   encourage   women   of    foreign   birth   to   continue   their 

native  crafts.     Published  "Antique  Laces  of  American  Collectors"  and  "Club 

Bulletin."    Frequent  meetings,  exhibitions  and  sales. 


NEW  YORK  CITY  155 


NEW  SOCIETY  OF  ARTISTS 

Gari   Melchers Chairman      Jerome    Myers Secretary 

GiFFORD  Beal Vice-Chair.  145   East   58th    Street,   Borough   of 

John   Flanagan Treasurer  Manhattan,   New   York 

Exhibition  at  the  Wildenstein  Gallery,  Nov.  8  to  Nov.  27,  1920. 

.^NEW  YORK  CHAPTER 

AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

215  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Charles  Butler President      Julian   Clarence  Levi Treasurer 

John   W.    Cross Vice-Pres.      Richmond   H.    Shreve Secretary 

LeBrun  Traveling  Scholarship  gives  $1,000  for  six  months'  travel  in  Europe 
to  any  architect  or  draughtsman,  a  citizen  of  the  United  States,  not  under  23 
nor  over  30  years  of  age,  recommended  by  a  member  and  successful  in  the 
competition.     It  is  awarded  every  second  year. 

NEW  YORK  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  SOCIETY  OF  LANDSCAPE  ARCHITECTS 

H.    A.    Caparn President      A.   F.  Brinckerhoff Vice-Pres. 

Richard  Schermerhorn,  Jr.,  Secretary-Treasurer 
363  Lexington  Avenue,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
Monthly  meetings  with  discussions  relative  to  the  profession. 

NEW  YORK  CHAPTER 
MASSACHUSETTS  NORMAL  ART  SCHOOL  ALUMNI 

Frank  L.  Allen President      Florence  L.   Coding Secretary 

Alice  G.  Locke 1st  Vice-Pres.  302^^    Clermont  Ave.,   Borough   of 

Della  p.  Mussey Treasurer  Brooklyn,  New  York 

.^NEW  YORK  SOCIETY  OF  CRAFTSMEN 
Art  Center,  65-67  East  56th  St.,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Charles    E.    Pellew President      Charles  B.  Upjohn.  .Vice-President 

Jane  Hoagland,   Sec.-Treas.,   206   Quincy   St.,   Borough  of   Brooklyn 
Monthly  meetings  at  museums. 

NEW  YORK  SOCIETY  OF  KERAMIC  ARTS 

Albert  W.  Heckman President      Anna    E.   Fitch Cor.-Sec. 

Maud  M.  Mason 1st  Vice-Pres.  196    Berkeley    Place,    Borough    of 

Mrs,  a.  F.   Sherman Treasurer  Brooklyn,  New  York 

G.  Marie  LePrince Rec.-Sec. 

Exhibit  and  lecture  three  times  a  year. 

NEW  YORK  SOCIETY  OF  PAINTERS 

Colin   Campbell   Cooper.  .  .President      Maria    Strean Rec.-Sec. 

CuLLEN  Yates Treasurer  939  Eighth  Avenue,  Bor.  of   Man- 

Alethea    H.    Platt Cor.-Sec.  hattan 

Exhibitions:  Jan.  14  to  Feb.  6,  1921,  in  Academy  Room,  215  West  57th 
Street;  June  6  to  Aug.  3,  1921,  at  Hotel  Majestic. 


156  NEW  YORK  CITY 


NEW  YORK  SOCIETY  LIBRARY 

109  University  Place,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
Frank  B.  Bigelow,  Librarian 

Open,  free,  9  a.m.  to  5  :30  p.m.;  daily,  except  Sunday ;  Saturdays,  till  12  dur- 
ing the  summer.  John  C.  Green  alcove,  established  and  endowed  in  1880,  by 
Mrs.  Sarah  H.  Green,  contains  costly  illustrated  reference  works  on  painting, 
costume,  decoration  and  ornament.  Shareholders  may  borrow;  study  facilities 
are  provided  for  students,  schools  and  clubs. 

^NEW  YORK  WATER  COLOR  CLUB 

215  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Henry   B.   Snell President      Alphaeus    P.    Cole Secretary 

Mrs.   E.   N.   Vanderpoel.  .Vice-Pres,  33  West  67th  St.,  Borough  of  Man- 

Kenneth    G.    How Treasurer  hattan 

Thirty-first  annual  exhibition  Jan.  15  to  Feb.  6,  1921,  at  American  Fine  Arts 
Building;  Hudnut  prize  to  Anna  Fisher  for  a  still  life. 

PAINTER-GRAVERS  OF  AMERICA 

Albert    Sterner Chairman      Leo    Mielziner Sec.-Treas. 

1  Lexington  Ave.,  Bor.  of  Man.  79  West  12th  St.,  Bor.  of  Man. 

Exhibitions  in  May,  1921,  at  Brown-Robertson  Gallery. 

PEN  AND  BRUSH 
134  East  19th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Ida  M.  Tarbell President      Mrs.   Marguerite  Y.   Earned 

Susan    Ricker    Knox Vice-Pres.  Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.   M.   E.   Martin Treasurer      Louise  Wallace  Hackney.  .Cor.-Sec. 

Reinette    Lovewell Rec.-Sec.      Mrs.  W.  S.  Perry,  ...Art  Chairman 

Monthly  exhibitions  of  painting  and  crafts  by  members. 

PEOPLE'S  ART  GUILD 
918  Cauldwell  Avenue,  Borough  of  Bronx,  New  York 
Organized  1915.     Conducts  art  classes,  study  groups,  exhibitions  and  work- 
rooms in  schools,  settlements  and  studios.    Annual  dues,  $1  and  up. 

SALMAGUNDI  CLUB 
47  Fifth  Avenue,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

J.  Massey  Rhind President      Francis  G.  Wickware Rec.-Sec. 

R.   F.    Kilpatrick Treasurer      Walter    Neumuller Cor.-Sec. 

Frank  DeHaven,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Members'  Exhibition 
Dec.  4  to  Dec.  18,  1920^ — Water  colors,  illustrations  and  etchings.    Shaw  prizes 
($100  each)    to  Harry  E.  Townsend  and  Frederick  K.  Detwiller;   Isidor 
prize   ($100)  to  John  E.  Costigan. 
Jan.,  1921 — Paintings  by  past  presidents  of  the  Club. 
Feb.  2  to  Feb.  11— Annual  auction  sale  of  small  pictures.     Prizes   ($200,  $100 

and  $100)  to    R.  Sloan  Bredin,  Hobart  Nichols,  and  Frederick  J.  Waugh. 
Mar.  5  to  Mar.   19 — Annual  oil  exhibition.     Shaw  purchase    ($1,000)   by  Ed- 
mund   W.    Greacen;    Members'    purchase    ($1,000)    by    Robert    Spencer; 
Isidor  prize   ($100)  by  Cullen  Yates. 


NEW  YORK  CITY  157 


Salmagundi  Club — Continued 

Mar.  21  to  Apr.  2 — Work  by  Albert,  Bower,  Giles,  Victor  Higgins,  Robert 

Vonnoh,  Ufer. 
Apr.  9   to  Apr.   23 — Annual   exhibition   of   Thumb-Box   Sketches.     Turnbull 

prize    ($100)    for  group  to  George  Elmer  Browne;  Vezin  purchase  prize 

($200)   to  Murray  P.  Bewley;  Porter  prize   ($50)   to  Frederick  J.  Mul- 

haupt. 

►fiSCHOOL  ART  LEAGUE  OF  NEW  YORK 

599  Fifth  Avenue,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

James  P.  Haney,  1st  Vice-President  and  Chairman  Executive  Committee 

Otto  H.   Kahn Treasurer      Florence  N.  Levy Secretary 

Fosters  the  interests  of  art  education  in  the  public  schools  of  New  York. 
Industrial  art  scholarships  (24  in  1921)  to  graduates  of  the  City  High  Schools; 
a  medal  awarded  in  each  class,  each  term,  in  each  of  the  27  high  schools ;  a 
medal  for  fine  craftsmanship  is  given  each  term  in  each  of  the  290  elemen- 
tary school  workshops.  Lectures  at  Metropolitan  Museum,  Brooklyn  Museum 
and  current  exhibitions  in  American  Fine  Arts  Building,  with  attendance  of 
over  20,000  during  1920-21. 

SCHOOL  CRAFTS  CLUB  OF  NEW  YORK 

Martin  Corcoran President      Frederick    C.    Arnold Secretary 

Philip    M.    Wagner Vice-Pres.  907  Faile  Street,  the  Bronx,   New 

Edwin    F.   Judd Treasurer  York 

SOCIETY  OF  AMERICAN  ANTIQUARIANS 
421  East  61st  St.,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Jane  Teller President      M.  Clyde  Crosby Sec.-Treas. 

Object  is  to  preserve  the  objects  used  and  made  by  early  American  craftsmen 
and  to  try  to  suppress  the  manufacture  and  sale  of  fake  antiques. 

SOCIETY  OF  AMERICAN  ARTISTS 
215  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Edwin  H.  Blashfield President      Charles    C.    Curran Secretary 

For  history  see  Vol.  /;  p.  288. 

Merged  into  the  National  Academy  of  Design  in  1906. 

►J-SOCIETE  DES  ARCHITECTS  DIPLOMES  PAR  LE 
GOUVERNEMENT  FRANCAIS 

John    M.   Howells  President      Edwin    H.    Denby Secretary 

Laurence    F.    Peck Vice-Pres.  333  Fourth  Ave.,  Borough  of  Man- 

Chester  H.  Aldrich Treasurer  hatfan 

Yearly  prize,  consisting  of  medal  and  $50 ;  also  awards  medals  for  meritorious 
work  in  architectural  competitions  at  universities. 

SOCIETY  OF  ANIMAL  PAINTERS  AND  SCULPTORS 
Henry  R.  Poore,  Secretary,  45  Ridge  St.,  Orange,  N.  J. 
Exhibition  March  1  to  March  21,  1921  at  Macbeth  Gallery. 


158  NEW  YORK  CITY 


SOCIETY  OF  AMERICAN  FAKIRS 
11  East  44th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

A,    F.   Bradley,  Jr President      John  P.  Davekn Treasurer 

George    D.    Dannenberg.  .  Vice-Pres,      Thomas    F.    Morris Secretary 

SOCIETY  OF  BEAUX-ARTS  ARCHITECTS 
126  East  75th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

James    Gamble    Rogers President      James   W.   O'Connor Secretary 

Joseph   Rowland   Hunt.  .Vice-Pres.  162   East  37th   Street,   Borough  of 

Lloyd    Warren Treasurer  Manhattan 

Maintains  the  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of  Design  (see  school  section). 

Paris  prize  open  to  all  citizens  of  the  United  States  under  27  years,  giving 
the  winner  the  privilege  of  the  "First  Class"  in  architecture  at  the  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts  in  Paris,  and  a  yearly  stipend  of  $1,000  during  his  two  and  one- 
half  years'  stay  abroad;  the  prize  was  awarded  in  1921  to  Fred  Morgan. 

SOCIETY  OF  ICONOPHILES 

Richard   H.    Lawrence  ....  President      Harris    D.    Colt Sec.-Treas. 

30  Broad  St.,  Bor.  of  Man.,  N.  Y. 
Publishes  engraved  views  and  portraits  relating  to  the  city  of  New  York. 

HhSOCIETY  OF  ILLUSTRATORS 
Art  Center,  65  East  56th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Charles  Dana  Gibson.  .  .Hon.  Pres.      Harry  L.   Sparks Treasurer 

Edward  Penfield President      F.    De    Sales    Casey Rec.-Sec. 

Orson    Lowell Vice-Pres. 

Ray   Greenleaf,   Cor. -Sec,   50  Union   Square,  Borough  of  Manhattan 
School  of  Illustration  for  disabled  soldiers  maintained  at  370  Seventh  Avenue. 
Work  of  members  circulated  by  The  American  Federation  of  Arts. 

SOCIETY  OF  INDEPENDENT  ARTISTS 
Room  601,  1947  Broadway,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

John  J.   Sloan President      George    F.    Of Treasurer 

Margaret  Zorach Vice-Pres.      A.  S.  Baylinson Secretary 

Exhibitions  conducted  on  the  principle  of  "no  jury  and  no  prizes."  Fifth 
annual  exhibition  held  Feb.  26  to  Mar.  24,  1921  at  Waldorf-Astoria;  group  of 
paintings  selected  from  this  exhibit  shown  in  May  at  Anderson  Galleries. 

SOCIETY  OF  MEN  WHO  PAINT  THE  FAR  WEST 
Executive  Committee 
Elliott  Daingerfield  Ben  Foster 

De  Witt  Parshall,  Secretary  and  Treasurer 
47  East  74th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
Inactive. 

STUDIO  CLUB  OF  NEW  YORK 
35-37  East  62d  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Mrs.    Stephen   Baker Chairman      Mrs.  Theodore  F.  Savage Treas. 

Mrs.  William   Payson.  .  .Vice-Chm.      Mrs.  John   Rousmaniere.  .Secretary 
Mrs.  Sheila  F.  Allen,  Director 
A   resident  centre   for  about   150  women  students  and  professionals  in  the 
various  arts.    Social  meetings,  lectures,  vesper  services,  recitals  and  concerts. 


NEW  YORK  CITY— NEW  YORK  STATE  159 

NEW   YORK    CITY 

THREE  ARTS  CLUB 
340  West  85th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 

Mrs.  John  Henry  Hammond.  .Pres.      Mrs.  Clinton  Gilbert,  Jr Treas. 

Mrs.    Alfred    Martin Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  Russell  Hoadley Secretary 

Anna  Seaborn,  Director 
A  home  for  students  of  music,  drama  and  the  visual  arts,  accommodating 
about    100  girls.     There  are  the  advantages  of  club  life  with  library  and   a 
"dramatic  wardrobe"  and  registry  bureau.     Room  and  board  averages  $10.50 
a  week. 

UNION  LEAGUE  CLUB 
1   East  39th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
Alexander  C.  Humphreys,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Monthly  exhibitions  during  the  season ;  usually  second  Thursday,  with  ladies' 
days  the  following  Friday  and  Saturday. 

WHITNEY  STUDIO 
8  West  8th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
Mrs.    Harry    Payne   Whitney,    the   sculptor,    has    exhibitions    in    her    studio 
which  are  open,  free,  daily,  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.,  and  Sundays  3  to  6  p.m. 

WHITNEY  STUDIO  CLUB 
147  West  4th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan,  New  York 
A  social  centre  for  the  artists  of  Greenwich  Village,  with  exhibition  gal- 
leries, reading  and  writing  rooms,  library,  billiards. 

CATHARINE  LORILLARD  WOLFE  ART  CLUB 
Grace  House,  802  Broadway,  Borough  of  Manhattan 

Everetta  Kernochan President      Mrs.  Royal  Whitman Treasurer 

Mary  N.  Hoffman Vice-Pres,      Mrs.   Lawrence  J.   Mead.  .Secretary 

Mrs.  L.  J.  Mead,  Chairman  Exhibition  Committee 
980  Madison  Ave.,  Borough  of  Manhattan 
Open   daily   and    Sunday    10  a.m.   to    10  p.m.;   tea   served   every   afternoon. 
Monthly  exhibitions  from  November  to  May  of  work  by  members. 

NEW  YORK  STATE 

NEW  YORK  STATE  TEACHERS'  ASSOCIATION 

FINE,    INDUSTRIAL,   AND    HOUSEHOLD    SECTIONS 

Francis  H.  Wing,  President 

Telephone  Bldg.,  Buffalo,  N.  Y, 

Fine  Arts  Department 

H.  W.  Jacobs 

Department  of  Education 

Industrial  Arts  Department 

W.  H.  Small 

Niagara  Falls,  N.  Y. 

Household  Arts  Department 

Marion  Van   Liew,  Chairman 

State  Department  of  Education,  Albany,  N.  Y. 

Annual    meeting   in    November.      Proceedings    of    conventions    published    in 

Journal  of  the  New  York  State  Teachers'  Association. 


160  NEW  YORK  STATE 


ALBANY 

UNIVERSITY  OF  THE  STATE  OF  NEW  YORK 
Educational  Building,  Albany,  N.  Y. 
Frank  B.  Gilbert,  Acting  President. 
Pliny  T.  Sexton,  Chancellor, 

Lewis  A.  Wilson,  Director,  Division  of  Agricultural  and  Industrial  Education. 
Leon  L.  Winslow,  Specialist  in  Drawing  and  Industrial  Training. 
Alfred  W.  Abrams,  Chief,  Division  of  Visual  Instruction. 
William  R.  Watson,  Chief,  Division  of  Educational  Extension. 
See  Vol.  XI,  p.  268,  Vol  XIV,  p.  216,  and  Vol  XIII,  p.  193. 

ALBANY  INSTITUTE  AND  HISTORICAL  AND  ART   SOCIETY 
125  Washington  Avenue,  Albany,  N.  Y. 

John  M.  Clarke     President      Led  yard   Cogswell,  Jr Treasurer 

D.   E.   AiNSWORTH 1st   Vice-Pres.      Henry  H.  Kohn Secretary 

Gallery  open  daily  9  to  11  a.m.  and  2  to  5  p.m.  Saturday  and  Sunday  after- 
noons free,  other  times  25  cents.     Over  150  paintings. 

Organized  1791 ;  incorporated  1793  as  the  Society  for  the  Promotion  of  Use- 
ful Arts ;  present  title,  incorporated  1900,  combines  six  corporations,  all  educa- 
tional ;  building  opened  1908.    Lectures  and  exhibitions. 

BINGHAMTON 

binghamton  public  library 

William  F.  Seward,  Librarian 
Gallery  open  10  a.m.  to  9  p.m. 

Founded  1904.  Collection  of  old  portraits,  Indian  relics,  etc.  Erequent  ex- 
hibitions ;  occasional  lectures  on  art. 

BINGHAMTON  SOCIETY  OF  ARTS  AND  CRAFTS 
Binghamton  Public  Library 

Mrs.  G.  W.  Topliff President      F.  M.  Bowers Secretary 

Charles  H.  Conrad  ....  1st  Vice-Pres.       Mary   Williams Treasurer 

Mrs.  Mary  K.  Grace.. 2d  Vice-Pres. 

Organized  1921.  Lectures  and  exhibitions  given.  A  sketch  club  has  been 
formed. 

BUFFALO 

ARTS  CLUB  OF  BUFFALO 
1020  Lafayette  Ave.,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

Arthur    Kowalski President      Arthur    O.    Schilling Treasurer 

Clement    Beuchat.  .  .1st    Vice-Pres.      Harold    Mann Secretary 

W.  J.  Schwannekamp.  .2nd  V.-Pres. 
Organized  1915 ;  incorporated  1917. 

Lectures  given  three  evenings  a  week,  also  life  and  costume  study  classes; 
out-of-door  sketching;  musical  entertainments  Saturday  evenings.  Regular 
Christmas,  Spring  and  commercial  art  exhibitions. 

►^BUFFALO  CHAPTER  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Charles   S.   Wood President      Harry   F.   Hudson Treasurer 

Paul    F.    Mann Vice-Pres.      Louis    Greenstein Secretary 

1334  Prudential  Bldg.,  Buffalo 
Organized  1890. 


NEW  YORK  STATE  161 


BUFFALO 

BUFFALO  SCHOOL  ARTS  ASSOCIATION 

H.  W.  Jacobs President      Helen    Horton Treasurer 

Mrs.  C.  B.  S.  Quinton . . .  Vice-Pres.      Alice    Roth Secretary- 
Organized  1911.    The  object  of  the  Association  is  to  advance  art  education  in 
the  pubhc  schools  by  means  of  lectures  and  exhibitions,  in  co-operation  with 
the  Fine  Arts  Academy  and  the  Albright  Art  School. 

BUFFALO  SOCIETY  OF  ARTISTS 
Albright  Art  Gallery,  Buffalo 

Bernard  V.   Carpenter President      John  Rummell Treasurer 

Evelyn  Rumsey Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  C.  K.  Horton Secretary 

Mrs.  Robert  Fulton,  Recording  Secretary 
Organized  1891.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

^GUILD  OF  ALLIED  ARTS 

John  F.  Graham President      Mrs.    E.    A.    Sharp Treasurer 

George  Gary 1st  Vice-Pres.      Priscilla    Pierce Secretary 

Elise  L.  Bradford 2nd  Vice-Pres.  269  Summer  St.,  Buffalo 

Organized  1911.     Exhibitions  are  held  and  lectures  given. 

GROSVENOR  LIBRARY 
Augustus  H.  Shearer,  Librarian 
Founded  1859.     Open  9  a.m.  to  10  p.m.     About  8,000  volumes  on  art  and 
architecture;   foreign  postal  card  collection,  mounted;   1,000  art  photographs; 
Edward  Michel  collection  of  war  posters.    Exhibitions  are  held. 

JAMESTOWN 

JAMES  PRENDERGAST  LIBRARY  ASSOCIATION 

Jamestown 

Lucia  T.  Henderson,  Librarian 

Gallery  open  daily,  except  Sunday,  10  a.m.  to  8.30  p.m.  ;  Saturdays,  to  9  p.m. 

Contains  modern  French,  American.  German  and  Italian  paintings  bequeathed 

by  Mary  Norton  Prendergast.     About  1,500  books  on  the  arts. 

NANUET 

NANUET  PAINTERS  AND  SCULPTORS 
Nanuet,  Rockland  Co.,  N.  Y. 
William  Howard  Donahue,  Director 
Organized  1920.     Composed  of  a  group  of  artists  working  in  Rockland  Co., 
N.  Y.,  and  vicinity.     Holds  exhibitions  and  sends  out  traveling  exhibits. 

NEW    ROCHELLE 

NEW  ROCHELLE  ART  ASSOCIATION 

F.  D.  Marsh President      E.   L.   Hanson Treasurer 

Orson  Lowell 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.   Elizabeth   Ayer Secretary 

1  Slocum  St.,  New  Rochelle 
Organized  1919.     Exhibitions  are  held  at  the  Public  Library. 

NEW  ROCHELLE  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Main  Street,  New  Rochelle 
Mary  E.  Huntington,  Librarian 
Founded  1893.    Open  9  a.m.  to  6  p.m.,  and  in  the  evenings  during  exhibitions. 
Occasional  exhibitions  are  held. 


162  NEW  YORK  STATE 


ROCHESTER 

PICTURE  PAINTERS'  CLUB 
Seth  C.  Jones,  President  and  Chairman,  435  East  Main  St.,  Rochester 
Organized  1900.     Exhibitions  held  with  Rochester  Art  Club. 

ROCHESTER  ART  CLUB 

Ladson  Butler President      A.  B.  Chamberlain Treasurer 

Frank  Von  der  LANCKEN.Vice-Pres.      A.  A.  Maurer Secretary 

341  Avenue  B,  Rochester 
Organized  1875 ;  incorporated  1882.    Sketching  trips  summer  and  fall ;  annual 
exhibition  held. 

►^ROCHESTER  INDUSTRIAL  EXPOSITION  ASSOCIATION 

FINE  ARTS   DEPARTMENT 

309  Powers  Block,  Rochester 

George  L.  Herdle,  Chairman 
See  also  Vol  XIV,  p.  222. 
Gallery  erected  1912.     Annual  exposition  in  September. 

ROCHESTER  SOCIETY  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Charles  C.  Evans President      Otto  Block Treasurer 

W.  G.  Kaelber Vice-President      J.  W.  Vickery Secretary 

125  Sibley  Block,  Rochester 
Organized  1919. 

SCHOOL  OF  FINE  AND  APPLIED  ART 
Bevier  Building,  Rochester 
Clifford  M.  Ulp,  Director 
Institute  chartered  1830,  School  of  Art  founded  1903,  building  dedicated  1913. 
A  Technical  Art  Museum  primarily  for  students,  but  open  to  the  public ;  ob- 
jects of  art  and  original  designs  are  purchased.     The  school  co-operates  with 
the  Memorial   Art   Gallery,  the  Library  of  the   University  of   Rochester  and 
the  Reynolds  Library.     Maintains  evening  and  day  schools,  including  School 
of  Fine  and  Applied  Arts   (see  school  section).     Monthly  exhibitions. 

UTICA 

UTICA  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
C.  M.  Underhill,  Librarian 
Gallery  open  9  a.m.  to  9  p.m.    A  collection  of  books  is  maintained,  and  inex- 
pensive pictures  are  mounted  and  circulated. 

WATERTOWN 

ROSWELL  p.  FLOWER  MEMORIAL  LIBRARY 
Washington  Street,  Watertown 
Samuel  A.  Hayt,  Librarian 
See  also  Vol.  XIV,  p.  226. 

Open  9  A.M.  to  9  p.m.  daily.  Founded  1905.  Library  contains  several  paint- 
ings by  contemporary  American  artists,  acquired  through  competitive  exhibi- 
tions held  under  the  auspices  of  the  Municipal  Improvement  League;  also 
owns  several  pieces  of  statuary.     About  1,000  books  on  art. 


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NEW  YORK— OHIO  163 


YONKERS 

PHILIPSE  MANOR  HALL 

Warburton  Avenue,  Yonkers,  N.  Y. 
S.  H.  Thayer,  Chairman  of  Committee  in  Charge 
18  South  Broadway,  Yonkers,  N.  Y. 
For  data  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  280,  and  Vol.  XVII,  p.  197. 
Open  free,  daily,  9  a.m.  to  12  m.,  and  2  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays,  2  to  6  p.m. 
PhiHpse  Manor  House,  erected  about  1682,  was  deeded  to  the  State  of  New 
York  by  the  City  of  Yonkers,  July  1,  1908,  and  is  in  charge  of  the  American 
Scenic  and  Historic  Preservation  Society. 

YONKERS  ART  ASSOCIATION 

S.   T.   Hubbard President      Wells  M.  Sawyer Treasurer 

Isidore  Konti 1st  Vice-President      James  Ross Secretary 

Charles  Vezin 2d  Vice-President  124  Morris  St.,  Yonkers 

Organized   1915.     Its  purpose  is  to  develop  a  taste  for  art  and  to  aid  the 
Municipal  Art  Commission  in  beautifying  Yonkers.     Exhibitions  are  held. 


NORTH    CAROLINA 

NORTH  CAROLINA  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

W.  C.  NoRTHRUP President      Erle  G.  Stillwell.  . .  .Sec-Treasurer 

R.   S.    Smith Vice-President  Hendersonville 

Organized  1913. 

NORTH  DAKOTA 

FARGO 

►J<FINE  ARTS  CLUB 

ART   DEPARTMENT 

Mrs.  Kent  Darrow President      Mrs.  Harold  Wilson. Vice-President 

Mrs.  a.  a.  Lorshbough,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Organized  1917. 

OHIO 

OHIO   STATE  ASSOCIATION   OF  ARCHITECTS 

Harry  J.   Williams President      G.  W.  Drach Vice-President 

C.  St.  J.  Chubb,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Ohio  State  University,  Columbus 
Organized  1915.     Association  is  comprised  of  chapters  of  the  American  In- 
stitute of  Architects  in  Cincinnati,  Cleveland,  Dayton,  Columbus  and  Toledo. 

CINCINNATI 

CINCINNATI  ARCHITECTURAL  CLUB 
Arian  Building,  4th  and  Sycamore  Streets,  Cincinnati 

Charles  F.  Cellarins President      W.  B.  Ward Treasurer 

Lawrence  Lefkin,  Secretary 
Care  Garber  &  Woodward,  Union  Central  Bldg.,  Cincinnati 
Organized  1912.  , 


164  OHIO 


CINCINNATI 

CINCINNATI  ART  CLUB 
Third  and  Plum  Streets,  Cincinnati 

George    Debereiner President      William    Traxel Treasurer 

Martin  G.  Dumler.  .  .Vice-President      Daniel  Cook Secretary 

Organized   1892.     A  life  class  is  maintained  which  meets  three  evenings  a 
week.    Occasional  exhibitions  are  held. 

CINCINNATI  CHAPTER  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

GusTAVE  W,  Drach President      J.  G.  Steinkamp Secretary 

A.  O.  Elzner Vice-President  Mercantile  Library  Bldg,  Cincinnati 

L.  W.  Fahnestock Treasurer 

Organized  1870. 

GRAFTERS  COMPANY 
Cincinnati  Museum,  Eden  Park,  Cincinnati 

Murray   Seasongood President       Mrs.  Herbert  G.  French... 3d  V.-P. 

Elizabeth  Kellogg 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  William  Biles Treasurer 

Mrs.  Ida  H.  Halloway.  .  .2d  Vice-P.       Helen  Sage Secretary 

Organized  1911.     Lectures  and  occasional  exhibitions. 

MacDOWELL  SOCIETY  OF  CINCINNATI 

Ernest  Bruce  Haswell President      A.  O.  Elzner Treasurer 

Mary  MacMillan,  Cor.  Sec,  1915  Bigelow  St.,  Mt.  Auburn,  Cincinnati 
Organized   1913.     Small  exhibitions   at  each  meeting;   program  consists  of 
original  work  by  members — music,  plays,  poetry,  etc.     (No  report  1921.) 

MUNICIPAL   ART    SOCIETY   OF    CINCINNATI 
Care  of  the  Rookwood  Pottery  Company,  Cincinnati 

John  Dee  Wareham President      Harry  M.  Levy Treasurer 

Lucien  Wulsin,  Secretary 
Organized  1894.    The  work  of  the  Society  includes  the  influencing  of  muni- 
cipal art  through  advice  and  guidance  in  the  decoration  of  schools  and  other 
public  buildings ;   appropriate  naming  of   streets ;   proper  design  and  location 
of  public  buildings  and  monuments. 

THREE  ARTS  CLUB 
2334  Ashland  Ave.,  Walnut  Hills,  Cincinnati 

Mrs.  Harris  Hancock President      Mrs.  Robert  Resar Treasurer 

Mrs.  a.  H.  Merrill 1st  Vice-Pres.       Mrs.  J.  C.  Pogue Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.  E.  M.  Galbraith 2d  Vice-P. 

Mrs.  Dawson  J.  Blackmore,  Cor.  Sec,  Elmhurst  Place,  East  Walnut  Hills, 

Cincinnati 
Organized  1911.  The  club  is  for  young  women  students  of  music,  painting, 
the  drama  and  kindred  arts.  It  looks  after  the  housing  of  non-resident  students 
and  accommodates  16  girls  at  the  club  house.  The  house  is  self-supporting,  the 
rate  for  room  and  board  being  $6  to  $8  a  week.  Bureau  for  obtaining  engage- 
ments for  drama,  art  and  music  students;  investigates  boarding  houses.  Lec- 
tures given. 

.^WOMAN'S  ART  CLUB  OF  CINCINNATI 

Emma  Mendenhall President      Henrietta    Wilson.  .  .Vice-President 

Mrs.  Grace  Cotton  Cone,  Treas.  and  Cor.  Sec. 
194  East  McMillan  St.,  Mt.  Auburn,  Cincinnati 
Organized  1892.    Exhibitions  held. 


OHIO  165 

CLEVELAND 

CITY  PLANNING  COMMISSION  OF  CLEVELAND 
City  Hall,  Cleveland 

Morris  A.  Black Vice-President 

Organized  1916.  Composed  of  six  members  of  the  Board  of  Control  of 
Cleveland,  ex-officio,  and  five  citizen  members.  Has  prepared  comprehensive 
thoroughfare,  zoning  and  building  group  plans. 

CLEVELAND  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Cleveland  School  of  Art,  Magnolia  Drive 

Mrs.  Harry  L.  Vail President      Dorothy  Williams Secretary 

Mrs.  Stevenson  Burke.  .  ..Vice-Pres.  2010  East  46th  St.,  Cleveland 

Imogens  T.  Fisher Treasurer 

Organized  1915.  Arts  and  crafts  gallery  conducted.  Lectures  and  exhi- 
bitions. 

CLEVELAND  CHAPTER  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

F.  R.  Walker President      A.  E.  Skeel Secretary 

C.  W.  Hopkinson Vice-President  4500  Euclid  Ave.,  Cleveland 

W.  W.  Sabin Treasurer 

Organized  1890. 

^CLEVELAND  SCHOOL  OF  ART 
11441  Juniper  Road,  Cleveland 

Mrs.  Stephenson  Burke.  .  .President      Herbert  R.  Drury Treasurer 

J.  Homer  Wade.  .  .1st  Vice-President      Whiting  Williams Secretary 

C.  F.  Brush 2d  Vice-President      Henry  Turner  Bailey Director 

Georgia  Leighton  Norton,  Acting  Secretary  and  Associate  Director 
For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  290. 

Gallery  open,  free,  week  days  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  Monday  and  Thursday 
evenings,  7  to  9;  Sundays,  2  to  6  p.m. 

Founded  1882 ;  building  erected  1905.     Exhibitions  held  and  lectures  given. 
(For  instruction,  see  school  section.) 

ALUMNI    ASSOCIATION    CLEVELAND    SCHOOL    OF    ART 
Juniper  Road,  Cleveland 
C.  E.  HoRTON,  President,  3044  Corydon  Road,  Euclid  Heights,  Cleveland 

CLEVELAND  SOCIETY  OF  ARTISTS 
4216  Prospect  Avenue,  Cleveland 

Louis  Rorimer President      Charles  M.  Lines Secretary 

W.  H.  KiNNicuTT Vice-President'  1827  Cadwell  Ave.,  Cleveland 

W.  L.  Oakes Treasurer 

Organized  1913.  Consists  of  painters,  sculptors,  musicians,  architects, 
writers  and  connoisseurs.  Collection  of  members'  paintings,  etchings  and 
sculpture  kept  on  exhibition  and  sale.  Lectures  given  by  members.  Life  class 
maintained  which  meets  weekly. 

PORTRAIT  ARTISTS  CLUB  OF  CLEVELAND 
746  Euclid  Avenue,  Cleveland 

E.  A.  McCaleb President      M.  H.  World Treasurer 

C.  L.  Benn Vice-President       P.  F.  Carmody Secretary 

1911  West  50th  St.,  Cleveland 
Organized  1912.     Monthly  private  exhibitions.     Annual   exhibitions  in  July 
and  December;  prizes  awarded. 


166  OHIO 


CLEVELAND 

PRINT  CLUB 
Museum  of  Art,  Cleveland 

Charles  T.  Brooks President      R.  M.  Coe Secretary 

Leonard  C.  Hanna,  Jr..  .  .Vice-Pres.  Care     Cleveland     City     Forge    and 

S.  P.  Halle Treasurer  Iron  Co. 

Organized  1920.  Members  lend  prints  for  exhibition.  Many  prints  given 
to  the  Print  Department  of  the  Cleveland  Museum. 

WOMAN'S  ART  CLUB  OF  CLEVELAND 
1272  Euclid  Avenue,  Cleveland 

Nina  V.  Waldeck President       Katherine  Chandler    Treasurer 

Mrs.  Thomas  Robinson.  ..Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  Stella  J.  Rausch Secretary 

9412  Hough  Ave.,  Cleveland 
Organized    1912.      Permanent    club    studio    and    salesroom    with    continuous 
exhibition. 

COLUMBUS 

ARCHITECTURAL  CLUB  OF  THE  OHIO  STATE  UNIVERSITY 
Brown  Hall,  Ohio  State  University,  Columbus 

Galen  F.  Oman President      Mary  L.  Church Secretary 

G.  H.  BuLFORD,  Jr Vice-Pres.  Brink  Haven,  Ohio 

Katherine  M.  Babbitt Treasurer 

Organized  1906.  Lectures  and  discussions  of  matters  pertaining  to  archi- 
tecture.    Monthly  exhibitions  of  competitive  design  problems. 

COLUMBUS  ART  ASSOCIATION 
492  East  Broad  Street,  Columbus 

Mrs.  H.  B.  Arnold President      Mrs.  Henry  C.  Werner Treasurer 

Mrs.  Karl  Webber 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  F.  Ewing  Martin Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.  Alfred  WiLLS0N..2d  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  William  Warner Cor. -Sec. 

The  Columbus  Gallery  of  Fine  Arts  and  the  Art  Association  work  in  co- 
operation. They  maintain  an  art  school,  founded  in  1879  (see  school  section)  ; 
give  a  series  of  lectures  in  the  Knights  of  Columbus  Hall,  and  hold  exhibitions 
in  the  Public  (Carnegie)  Library. 

COLUMBUS  ART  LEAGUE 
198  South  Third  Street,  Columbus 

Charles  F.  Kelley President       Mark  Russell 2nd  Vice-Pres. 

Josephine  Clippart 1st  Vice-Pres.       Clara    Blesch Sec.-Treas. 

Organized  1909  as  Art  Students'  League.    Lectures  and  exhibitions  are  given. 

►^COLUMBUS  GALLERY  OF  FINE  ARTS 
492  East  Broad  Street,  Columbus 

Frederick  W.  Schumacher Pres.      Edwin  R.  Sharp, 

Rutherford  H.  Platt Secretary  Vice-President  and  Treasurer 

Founded  1878.  Art  school  maintained,  lecture  course  and  exhibitions.  Co- 
operates with  Columbus  Art  Association. 

COLUMBUS  CHAPTER  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Orlando  Miller President      Charles  L,  Inscho Sec.-Treas. 

1209  Brunson  Bldg.,  Columbus 
Organized  1913.    Lectures  are  given. 


OHIO  167 

COLUMBUS 

COLUMBUS  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 

State  and  Grant  Avenues,  Columbus 
John  J.  Pugh,  Librarian  and  Secretary 
Thomas  S.  Brooks,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Art  exhibit  gallery  is  open  free,  daily,  November  to  May,   from  8.30  a.m. 
to  8.30  P.M.;  Sundays,  2  to  5  p.m. 

Building  opened  1907.  There  is  an  exhibition  room  60  by  40  feet,  with  con- 
tinuous exhibitions  frequently  changed.  Lectures  are  given  about  once  a  week 
during  special  exhibitions  and  on  alternate  days  after  school  hours  to  the 
pupils  of  the  schools  assembled  by  grades. 

PEN  AND  PENCIL  CLUB 
118^  North  Third  Street,  Columbus 

George  Arthur  Whisner.  .President      Fred  L.  Collins Sec. -Treasurer 

Charles  Irwin  Brobeck Vice-P.  66  Douglas  St.,  Columbus 

Organized  1897 ;   incorporated   1904. 

Club  rooms  with  meetings  every  Tuesday  evening.  Regular  sketch  classes ; 
summer  sketching  trips ;  competitions.     Occasional  exhibitions. 

DAYTON 

DAYTON  CHAPTER  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Louis  Lott Prsident      Harry  Williams Secretary 

George    Hermann Vice-President  904  Mutual  Home  Bldg.,  Dayton 

R.  E.  Gebhart Treasurer 

Organized  1900. 

OBERLIN 

^POBERLIN  ART  ASSOCIATION 
French  Hall,  Oberlin  College 

Clarence    Ward President      R.  H.  Stetson Vice-President 

Julia  G.  Severance,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Organized  1912.     Exhibitions  and  lectures  given. 

TOLEDO 

TOLEDO  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Harry  W.   Wachter President      Bernard   Becker Treasurer 

Lawrence  S.  Bellman Vice-Pres.       Charles  Langdon Secretary 

Nicholas  Bldg.,  Toledo 
Organized  1914. 

ARTKLAN 

401  Meredith  Building,  Jefferson  and  Michigan  Sts.,  Toledo 

Carlos   Ebert President      Frank    Sottek Sec-Treasurer 

H.J.  Schuler Vice-President      E.  W    Spring.  ...Recording-Secretary 

Organized  1913.  The  Society  was  founded  by  commercial  artists  engaged 
in  the  photo-engraving  houses  of  Toledo.  Three  meetings  a  week;  etching  and 
printing;  costume  pose;  life  class;  Saturday  afternoon  and  Sunday  sketching 
class,  out-of-doors  in  season.     Monthly  exhibitions  except  in  summer. 

ATHENA  SOCIETY 
Toledo  Museum  of  Art,  Toledo 

Louise   Kitchen President      Flora  Carpenter Treasurer 

Elizabeth  Caine,  Secretary,  Maplewood  Ave.,  Toledo 
Organized  1903.     Lectures  and  exhibitions  of  the  work  of  members  are  held 
in  the  Club  rooms  at  the  Museum.     (No  report  1921.) 


168  OHIO— OKLAHOMA— OREGON 

TOLEDO 

TOLEDO  FEDERATION  OF  ART  SOCIETIES 

Toledo  Museum  of  Art,  Toledo 

Mrs.  Kate  B.  Lamb President      George  B.    Colton Vice-President 

Frank  Sottek,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Organized,  1917,  to  encourage  local  art  in  Toledo.     The  Federation  consists 
of  the  Artklan,  Athena  Society  and  the  Toledo  Tile  Club.    Holds  annual  exhi- 
bition at  the  Toledo  Museum. 

TOLEDO  TILE  CLUB 
Bank  of  Commerce  Building,  Toledo 

R.  B.  Crane President      A.  B.  Tillinghast Sec-Treasurer 

Organized  1898.     Drawing  from  life  every  Tuesday  evening  from  October 
to  May. 

OKLAHOMA 

ENID  FINE  ARTS  CLUB 

Mrs.  R.  a.  Griffith President      Mrs.  D.  E.  Johnstone Treasurer 

Mrs.  H.  C.  Simons Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  R.  L.  Sanford Secretary 

Organized  1911.     Exhibitions  are  held. 
MUSKOGEE 

^.MUSKOGEE  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Mrs.  W.  M.  Brison President      Mrs.  Otis  Cureton Treasurer 

Mrs.  J.  G.  Allen Vice-President      Mrs.  C.  K.  Catlin Secretary 

921  Freemont  Ave.,  Muskogee 
Organized  1910. 

NORMAN 

•i-LES  BEAUX  ARTS 
University  of  Oklahoma,  Norman 

Oscar  B.  Jacobson President      Edith    Mahier Secretary 

Estelle  Manon Vice-President 

Organized  1915.     Holds  annual  exhibition. 

OKLAHOMA    CITY 

ASSOCIATION  OF  OKLAHOMA  ARTISTS 

Oscar  B.  Jacobson President      Mrs.  J.  W.  Shartel Treasurer 

Mrs.  E.  J.  MoLLER. ..  .Vice-President      Frederick  Becker Secretary 

511  East  7th  St.,  Oklahoma  City 

4-OKLAHOMA  ART  LEAGUE 

Carnegie  Library,  Oklahoma  City 
Mrs.  John  Shartel President      Mrs.  Charles  Hoops Treasurer 

Mrs.  Byron  D.  Shear,  Cor.-Sec. 
Organized    1910.     The   permanent   collection   consists   of    11   pictures.      (No 
report  1921.) 

OREGON 

OREGON  CHAPTER  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 
619  Railway  Exchange  Building,  Portland 

W.  G.  PuRCELL President      O.  R.  Bean Treasurer 

J.  V.  Bennes Vice-President      George  M.  Post Secretary 

Organized  1911.     Prize  of  $25  annually  to  the  Architectural  School  of  the 
University  of  Oregon  at  Eugene. 


OREGON— PENNSYLVANIA  169 


PORTLAND 

ARTS  AND  CRAFTS  SOCIETY  OF  PORTLAND 
618  Irving  Street,  Portland 

Mrs.  Lee  Hoffman President      Mrs.  M.  A.  M.  Ashley.  . .  .Treasurer 

Mks.  C.  H.  Carey Vice-Pres.      M.  L.  Linthicum Secretary 

634  Lovejoy  St.,  Portland 
Organized  1907.     A  permanent  salesroom  is  maintained.     Three  scholarships 
given  in  classes  of  Portland  Art  Association ;  prizes  awarded  in  design  classes. 
Exhibitions  held. 

LIBRARY  ASSOCIATION 
Tenth  and  Yamhill  Streets,  Portland 
Eleanor  Statter^  Head  of  Art  Library 
Has  2,300  volumes  dealing  exclusively  w^ith  art.     The  picture  collection  con- 
tains  5,500  mounted  plates   and  30,000  unmounted   pictures.     Exhibitions   are 
held. 


PENNSYLVANIA 

DELAWARE  COUNTY  ART  AND  MANUAL  TRAINING 
ASSOCIATES 

Florence  M.  Clegg President      Helen   E.   Taylor Sec. -Treasurer 

Edward  W.  Frost Vice-President  Lansdowne 

Organized  1914.    Local  exhibits  at  close  of  term  in  all  districts  and  large  one 
at  County  Institute  at  Media  in  November.     (No  report  1921.) 

DEPARTMENT   OF   PUBLIC   INSTRUCTION 

COMMONWEALTH  OF  PENNSYLVANIA 

Harrisburg 

C.  Valentine  Kirby,  State  Director  of  Art 

For  activities  of  Division  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  303. 

STATE  FEDERATION   OF  PENNSYLVANIA  WOAIEN 
Mrs.  a.  Duncan  Yocum,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Ridley  Park,  Pa. 
Movement  to  establish  an  art  commission  for  Pennsylvania ;   for  city  plan- 
ning, and  for  suitable  war  memorials. 

CHESTER 

ALFRED  O.  DESHONG  MEMORIAL  ART  GALLERY 

11th  and  Edgemont  Avenue,  Chester 

Trustees 

Clarence  Deshong  W.  B.  Broomall  J.  A.  G.  Campbell 

For  foundation  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  302. 

Open  free  on  Wednesdays  and  Saturdays,  2  p.m.  to  5  p.m.,  and  7  p.m.  to 
9  P.M.;  Sundays  and  holidays,  2  p.m.  to  5  p.m. 

Dedicated  1916.  The  collection  consists  of  the  donor's  painting  and  other 
works  of  art,  including  vases,  bijoutry  and  bric-a-brac.  The  building  connects 
with  his  dwelling,  and  the  whole  is  devoted  to  the  education,  entertainment 
and  recreation  of  the  public. 


170  PENNSYLVANIA 


DOYLESTOWN 

BUCKS  COUNTY  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 
Doylestown 

Henry  C.  Mercer President      H.  C.  Mercer Curator 

Warren  S.  Ely Librarian      H.  M.  Mann Assistant  Curator 

Henry  D.  Paxson Vice-President      B.  F.  Frackenthal.  ..Sec-Treasurer 

Organized  1880 ;  incorporated  1885. 

Large  concrete  building,  costing  approximately  $100,000,  presented  to  the 
Society  by  Dr.  Mercer  in  1916.  The  Society  owns  a  large  collection  of  stove- 
plates,  fire-backs,  pottery  and  other  industries  of  colonial  times. 

ERIE 

.^ART  CLUB  OF  ERIE 

Mrs.  Louisa  Card  Catlin.  .  President      Sarah  Woodruff Treasurer 

Mrs.  W.  L.  Speece,  Secretary,  Box  328,  Erie 
'  Organized  1898;  incorporated  1900.     The  Public  Library  contains  a  gallery, 
and  a  good  start  has  been  made  for  a  permanent  collection.     (No  report  1921.) 

MEADVILLE 

►I^MEADVILLE  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Mrs.  F.  C.  Southworth.  .  .President      C.  B.  Coleman  ...  .2d  Vice-President 

Mrs.  E.  C.  Whiting.  .  .1st  Vice-Pres.      T.  J.  Meek Secretary-Treasurer 

650  Arch  St.,  Meadville 
Organized  1907 ;  incorporated  1909.    Exhibitions  are  held. 

PHILADELPHIA 

►^ALUMN^  OF  THE  PHILADELPHIA  SCHOOL  OF  DESIGN 

FOR  WOMEN 

Broad  and  Master  Streets,  Philadelphia 

Florence  D.  Bradway President      Florence  Miller Treasurer 

Arrah  Lee  Gaul Vice-President      Clara  V.  Richardson Treasurer 

Organized  1886.     Annual  reunion  and  exhibition. 

^ART  CLUB  OF  PHILADELPHIA 
220  South  Broad  Street,  Philadelphia 

William  B.  Linn President      William  de  Krafft Treasurer 

Samuel  W.  Cooper,  Secretary 
Organized  1887.     Club  house  with  restaurant  and  galleries  maintained.     In- 
come from  Prize  Fund  devoted  to  medals  awarded  at  special  exhibition.     Art 
Fund  used  for  purchase  of  works  for  permanent  collection.     Library  contains 
over  7,000  volumes.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

ART  JURY 
Room  121,  City  Hall,  Philadelphia 

Joseph  E.  Widener President      John    Wanamaker.  .  .Vice-President 

Andrew  Wright  Crawford,  Secretary 
For  details  sec  Vol.  XI,  p.  305,  and  Vol.  XVII,  p.  206. 

Created  by  act  of  legislature  1907,  amended  1913,  and  consists  of  nine  mem- 
bers. 


PENNSYLVANIA  171 


PHILADELPHIA 

.^ARTS  AND  CRAFTS  GUILD  OF  PHILADELPHIA 
235-237  South  11th  Street,  Philadelphia 

Gilbert  McIlvaine President      Martha  K.  Schick Treasurer 

HuGER  Elliott 1st  Vice-Pres.       Margaret  A.  Neal Secretary 

Elma  H.  Schick 2d  Vice-Pres.       Huger  Elliott  ....  Chairman  of  Jury 

Organized  1905;  incorporated  1911.     Permanent  exhibition  in  the  salesrooms, 
augmented  by  special  exhibitions. 

ASSOCIATED  ARTISTS  OF  PHILADELPHIA 
1630  Sansom  Street,  Philadelphia 

W.  A.  Fox President      J.  B.  Mackenzie Sec. -Treasurer 

Organized  1914. 

►I<CITY  PARKS  ASSOCIATION 

Eli  Kirk  Price President      John  Cadwalader,  Jr Treasurer 

Andrew  Wright  Crawford,  Recording  Secretary 
701  Stephen  Girard  Building,  Philadelphia 
Organized  1888. 

DREXEL  INSTITUTE  OF  ART,  SCIENCE  AND  INDUSTRY 

Chestnut  and  Thirty-second  Streets,  Philadelphia 
MUSEUM 
Open,  free,  9  a.m.  to  6  p.m.  daily,  except  Sunday  and  holidays. 
The  collections  of  the   Museum   include   examples   in   every  department   of 
industrial  art.     The  decorative  arts  of  Egypt,  India,  China,  Japan,  and  Europe 
are  well  represented.     Special  gifts  include  the  collection  of  Egyptian  antiqui- 
ties, hand-printed  cottons  of  India,  European  textiles,  carved  ivories,   Sevres 
white  and  gold  ware,  and  others. 

PICTURE  GALLERY 
The  Picture  Gallery,  in  East  Hall,  is  open,  free,  to  the  public,  as  well  as  to 
the  students  of  the  Institute,  from  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.     It  contains  the  John  D. 
Lankenau  collection  and  the  Anthony  J.  Drexel  collection  of  paintings. 

LIBRARY 
The  Library  contains  2,000  volumes  on  the  fine  and  decorative  arts ;  about 
2,000  mounted  photographs;  series  of  etchings  of  ancient  Paris;  photographs 
of  old  London ;  Japanese  water  color  prints ;  about  3,000  lantern  slides. 

.^FAIRMOUNT  PARK  ART  ASSOCIATION 
320  South  Broad  Street,  Philadelphia 

Charles  J.  Cohen President      W.  Hinckle  Smith Treasurer 

Roland  L.  Taylor,  Secretary,  Morris  Building,  Philadelphia 
For  works  of  art  presented  see  Vol.  Ill,  p.  172,  mid  Vol.  XI,  p.  307. 
Organized    1871;    incorporated    1872;    charter  amended    1906;    Park   Branch 
established  1871 ;  City  Branch  established 


FREE  LIBRARY  OF  PHILADELPHIA 
Thirteenth  and  Locust  Streets,  Philadelphia 
John  Ashhurst,  Librarian 
Open  daily  from  9  a.m.  until  9  p.m.,  excepting  Sundays  and  legal  holidays. 
Art  Department  organized   1899.     Has  a  miscellaneous  collection  of  30,000 
volumes,  about  one-half  being  works  on  art,  architecture,  decoration  and  allied 
subjects. 


172  PENNSYLVANIA 


PHILADELPHIA 

HISTORICAL  SOCIETY  OF  PENNSYLVANIA 
1300  Locust  Street,  Philadelphia 

Hampton  L.  Carson President      Ernest  Spofford — Acting  Librarian 

Francis  H.  Williams Treasurer      R.  Sturgis  Ingersoll Rec.-Sec. 

Gregory  B.  Keen Curator      John  Bach  McMaster Cor.-Sec. 

For  list  of  portraits  see  Vol.  XI,  p.  309. 

Organized  1824.    Open,  free,  daily  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.    Permanent  collection  of 
portraits;  valuable  collection  of  books,  autograph  letters,  etc. 

NUMISMATIC  AND  ANTIQUARIAN  SOCIETY  OF  PHILADELPHIA 
1300  Locust  Street,  Philadelphia 

David    Milne President      Ernest    Spofford Rec. -Secretary 

John  F.  Lewis 1st  Vice-President      Webster  King  Wetherill Treas. 

Organized  1857. 

►^FELLOWSHIP  OF  THE  PENNSYLVANIA 

ACADEMY  OF  FINE  ARTS 

Broad  and  Cherry  Streets,  Philadelphia 

Mary  Butler President      Frank  Reed  Whiteside.  .  ..Treasurer 

H.  H.  Brecf.enridge.  . .  1st  Vice-Pres.      Elinor  Earle Secretary 

Blanche  Dillaye 2d  Vice-Pres.      S.  Gertrude  Schell Asst.  Sec. 

Organized  1897.    A  picture  purchase  fund,  established  in  1912,  enables  The 
Fellowship  to  place  pictures  in  the  public  schools  and  libraries  of  Philadelphia. 
Exhibitions  in  public  and  private  schools ;  lectures  given, 

ASSOCIATE  COMMITTEE  OF  WOMEN  TO  THE  BOARD  OF 

TRUSTEES  OF  THE  PENNSYLVANIA  MUSEUM 

AND  SCHOOL  OF  INDUSTRIAL  ART 

320  South  Broad  Street,  Philadelphia 

Mrs.    Rudolph   Blankenburg.  .Pres.      Countess  of   Santa  Eulalia 

Treasurer 
Mrs.  Henry  S.  Grove,  Secretary,  258  Tulpehocken  St.,  Germantown 
Organized   1883.     Maintains   Students'  League  House  at  1309  South  Broad 
Street    for   resident    students ;    awards    scholarships    and   prizes    in    Industrial 
Art  School. 

►^ALUMNI  ASSOCIATION  OF  THE  PENNSYLVANIA  MUSEUM 

AND  SCHOOL  OF  INDUSTRIAL  ART 

320  South  Broad  Street,  Philadelphia 

Charles    T.    Scott President      Miss  O.  P.  Bachman Treasurer 

John  Ray  Sinnock,  Secretary,  6241   Webster  Street,  Philadelphia 
Founded   1902.     Traveling  exhibitions  of  school  work  arranged.     Library ; 
Saturday  afternoon  sketch  class;  large  collection  of  costumes.     Collection  of 
photographs,    furniture,   pottery   and    bronze.     Employment   bureau   and   loan 
fund  maintained. 

ALUMNI  ASSOCIATION  OF  THE  PHILADELPHIA 

TEXTILE    SCHOOL   OF  THE   PENNSYLVANIA   MUSEUM 

AND  SCHOOL  OF  INDUSTRIAL  ART 

Bradley   C.   Algeo President      Willis    Fleisher    Treasurer 

William  J.  Maurer,  Secretary,  320  South  Broad  Street,  Philadelphia 
Organized    1902.      Occasional    technical    publications.      Students'    loan    fund 
maintained.     Lectures  are  held  throughout  the  year. 


PENNSYLVANIA  173 


PHILADELPHIA 

>^PENNSYLVANIA   SOCIETY  OF   MINIATURE  PAINTERS 

Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts,  Broad  and  Cherry  Streets. 

Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Mrs.  Emily  Drayton  Taylor.  .Pres.      Mrs.  Rebecca  B.   Peale   Patterson, 

Harry    L.    Johnson Vice-Pres.  Treasurer 

A  Margaretta  Archambault,  Secretary 
1710  Chestnut  Street,  Philadelphia 
Mrs.  Berta  Carew,  Chairman  Executive  Committee 
Organized   1901.     Annual  exhibitions  held  at  the  Pennsylvania  Academy  of 
Fine  Arts, 

^^PHILADELPHIA  ART  ALLIANCE 

Rittenhouse  Square,  Philadelphia 

John   F.   Braun President      H.  G.  Lloyd Treasurer 

HuGER    Eijliott 1st    Vicc-Pres.      Clara  R.  Mason Executive  Sec. 

E.    J.    Lavino 2nd    Vice-Pres.  1823   Walnut   St.,   Philadelphia 

Organized  1915. 

Owns  building  with  exhibition  rooms,  studios  and  restaurant.  Numerous 
lectures,  exhibitions  and  receptions. 

^-PHILADELPHIA  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

George  I.  Lovatt President      W.   P.  Barney Treasurer 

E.   H.   Fetterolf 1st  Vice-Pres.       Paul  A.  Davis,  III Secretary 

H.  B.  Register 2nd  Vice-Pres.  1713   Sansom   St.,   Philadelphia 

Founded  1869;  incorporated  1872. 

PHILADELPHIA  FOUNTAIN  SOCIETY 
1508  Walnut  Street,  Philadelphia 

Charles  J.  Cohen President      J.    M.    Sleeve Treasurer 

John  Story  Jenks 1st  Vice-Pres.      C.    W.    Bailey Secretary 

Henry  Tatnall 2nd  Vice-Pres.  1508   Walnut   St.,   Philadelphia 

Organized  1920. 

^-PHILADELPHIA  SKETCH  CLUB 

235  South  Camac  Street,  Philadelphia 

Herbert   Pullinger President       F.    R.    Whiteside Treasurer 

Frank  F.  English Vice-Pres.       Sidney  C.  Lomas Secretary 

Organized  1860.     Numerous  exhibitions. 

PHILADELPHIA  SOCIETY  OF  ARTS  AND  LETTERS 

Howard  S.  Anders President       W.  W.  Thomson Treasurer 

Henry  T.  Spangler.  .  .1st  Vice-Pres.       Henry    C.    Diller Secretary 

Ida    Mae    Pecht 2nd    Vice-Pres.  409    West    Stafford    St.,    German- 

town,   Philadelphia 

Organized  1907.  The  object  of  the  Society  is  to  encourage  original  work 
in  arts  and  letters  by  affording  opportunities  for  performance,  exhibition  c\ 
criticism  at  public  meetings  of  the  Society. 


174  PENNSYLVANIA 


PHILADELPHIA 

.^PHILADELPHIA  WATER  COLOR  CLUB 

George    Walter    Dawson  . .  President      Thornton  Oakley Secretary 

Blanche    Dillaye Vice-Pres.  905    Clinton    Street,    Philadelphia 

J.  Frank  Copeland Treasurer 

Organized  1900.  The  annual  exhibition  is  held  in  November  and  December 
at  the  Pennsylvania  Academy   (see  Academy  exhibitions). 

Prizes  offered  are  the  Beck  prize  of  $100,  and  the  Philadelphia  Water  Color 
Club  prize  of  $200.  A  traveling  exhibition  is  maintained  of  the  work  of 
members,  which  is  managed  by  the  Club  or  by  the  American  Federation  of 
Arts.    The  Club  is  affiliated  with  the  Philadelphia  Art  Alliance. 

•^PLASTIC  CLUB       . 
247  South  Camac  Street,  Philadelphia 
Mrs.  S.   Stauffer  Oliver.  .President      Clara  V.  M.  Richardson.  .Rec.  Sec. 

Mrs.  Alice  B.  Stephens.  1st  V.-Pres.      Emma  J.  Lawrence Cor,   Sec. 

Althea    J.    Carnell Treasurer  1954  Bridge  St.,  Frankfort,  Phila. 

Organized  1897;  incorporated  1903.  A  woman's  club  with  tea  room;  rooms 
rented  to  other  organizations.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

.^PRINT  CLUB 

219  S.  17th  Street,  Philadelphia 

Mrs.  J.  Y.  Brinton President       Mrs.   Gideon  Boericke.  ..  .Treasurer 

Mrs.  Robert  von  Moschzisker  Mrs.  W.   B.  Linn Secretary 

1st  Vice-Pres.      Clara    T.    Chase.  ..  .Exec. -Secretary 
Mrs.  John  S.  Newbold.  .2nd  V.-Pres. 

Organized  1914,  by  Mrs.  Alice  McF.  Brinton  for  purpose  of  making  acces- 
sible the  work  of  the  most  distinguished  living  American  etchers  and  engravers. 
Entertainments,  lectures  and  demonstrations  of  practical  work  given.  Library 
of  art,  literature  and  periodicals  maintained. 

*hT  SQUARE  CLUB 
204  South  Quince  Street,  Philadelphia 

Nicola    D'Ascenzo President      Ellery    K.    Taylor Secretary 

H.   L.   Duhring,  Jr Vice-Pres.      John    Craig   Janney.  ..  .Acting   Sec. 

W.   J.   H.   Hough Treasurer  412  Otis  Bldg.,  Philadelphia 

Organized  1880;  incorporated  1897.  Atelier  maintained  in  co-operation  with 
the  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of  Design.     Occasional  exhibitions. 

wilstach  gallery 

Memorial  Hall,  Fairmount  Park,  Philadelphia 
Joseph   E.   Widener Chairman      Langdon    Warner Director 

Committee  on  Wilstach  Bequest 

For  further  data  sec  Vol.  XVII,  p.  212. 

Open,  free,  daily;  Sundays,  1  to  6  p.m.;  Mondays,  12  m.  to  5  p.m.;  during 
the  winter  it  closes  one-half  hour  before  sunset.     Gallery  opened  1893. 

PITTSBURGH 

ART  COMMISSION   OF  THE  CITY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

John  W.  Beatty President      John  T.  Comes Architect 

Art    Director,    Carnegie    Inst.  W.   L.   Mellon 

C.  D.  Armstrong Vice-President       N.    F.   Brown 

Benno  Janssen Secretary      Herman    A.    MacNeil Sculptor 

E.  V.  Babcock  William    Boyd    Architect 


PENNSYLVANIA  175 


PITTSBURGH 

Pittsburgh  Art  Commission — Contitiucd 

George  M.  P.  Baird,  Executive  Secretary 

522  City-County  Building,  Pittsburgh 

Organized  1911.    Appointed  by  the  Mayor,  who  with  the  Director  of  Public 

Works  is  ex-officio  member.     Passes  upon  works  of  art  for  the  city,  furnishes 

illustrated  lectures  for  schools  and  civic  organizations,  etc. 

^ART  SOCIETY  OF  PITTSBURGH 
313  Sixth  Avenue,  Pittsburgh 

P.   G.    Eaton President      F.  M.  Wilmot Treasurer 

C.   E.   Dickson Vice-President      Walter   Boswell Secretary 

Mrs.  George  H.  Wilson,  Manager 
Organized  1873. 

Exhibitions ;  concerts  and  lectures  are  held  in  the  galleries  of  Carnegie 
Institute  and  are  free  to  the  public.  The  Society  is  represented  on  the  Art 
Commission  of  Pittsburgh. 

ASSOCIATED  ARTISTS  OF  PITTSBURGH 
714  Penn  Building,  Pittsburgh 

James    Bonar President      G.    Hennis 2nd    Vice-Pres. 

Will  J.  Hyett     1st  Vice-Pres.      Alexander  H.  Lappe Sec.-Treas. 

Organized  1910.  Exhibitions  are  held  at  Carnegie  Institute  (see  Institute 
list). 

^BEAUX  ARTS  SALON 

John  L.   Porter Vice-President       Mrs.  Roy  A.  Hunt Sec.-Treas. 

5050  Amberson  Place,   Pittsburgh 
Organized  1915. 

ONE  HUNDRED  FRIENDS  OF  PITTSBURGH  ART 

J.    D.    Hailman Chairman      John  L.  Porter Sec.-Treas. 

Edward  Duff  Balken.  .  . . Vice-Chm.  421  Wood  St.,  Pittsburgh 

Organized  1916.  Encourages  local  art  by  the  purchase  of  paintings  by  local 
artists,  which  are  presented  to  the  public  schools. 

PITTSBURGH  ARCHITECTURAL  CLUB 
P.  O.  Box  816,  Pittsburgh 

W.   H.   King,  Jr President      W.  H.  Harrold Treasurer 

L.    A.    McMuLLEN Vice-Pres.       David   Roland Secretary 

Organized  1897;  incorporated  1901.  Publish  8-page  monthly  periodical,  "The 
Charette." 

PITTSBURGH  CHAPTER 

AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

536  City-County  Bldg.,  Pittsburgh 

S.  F.   Heckert,  Sr President      Louis    Stevens Treasurer 

J.  T.  Comes Vice-Pres.      Stanley  L.  Roush Secretary 

Organized  1891  as  the  Western  Pennsylvania  Chapter  of  the  American 
Institute  of  Architects,  name  changed  1896. 

Gives  yearly  scholarship  for  student  of  architecture  at  night  school  of 
Carnegie  Institute  of  Technology. 


176  PENNSYLVANIA— RHODE  ISLAND 


PITTSBURGH 

TEACHERS'  ART  CLUB 
Fulton  Building,  Pittsburgh 

Ella  Hazelwood President      Grace   Jones Treasurer 

Elmer    Stephan 1st  Vice-Pres.      Marrian    Parker Secretary 

Frances    McCreery 2nd    V.-Pres.  153  South  Fairmont  St.,  Pittsburgh 

Organized  1902.  Federated.  Pennsylvania  Federation  of  Women's  Clubs, 
1904;  also  federated  with  the  Civic  Club.  The  purpose  of  the  Club  is  to  pro- 
mote the  interests  of  the  arts  taught  in  the  public  schools.    Lectures  given. 

WILLIAMSPORT 

JAMES  V.  BROWN  LIBRARY 

Williamsport 

O.  R.  Howard  Thomson,  Librarian  and  Director 

Rev.  Charles  N.  Tyndell,  Chairman  Art  Committee 

Founded  1904.     Permanent  collection  includes  canvases  by  Kensett,  Cropsey, 

Brownscombe,    Craig,    J.    G.    Brown    ("Stump    Speech"),    Leon    Moran    and 

Shirlaw. 

^PUBLIC  SCHOOL  ART  LEAGUE 

Rena    Frankeberger President      Lulu  M.  Yount Secretary 

Roland  T.  MacLaren Vice-Pres.  937  High  Street,  Williamsport 

Genevieve  L.  Bubb Treasurer 

Organized  1918.     Lectures  and  demonstrations. 

YORK 

YORK  ART  CLUB 
Cassatt  Building,  Centre  Square,  York 

Reinhardt    Dempwolf President      Albert    Boshart Vice-Pres. 

Mary  Leifer,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Founded  1905.    Classes  meet  two  evenings  each  week. 

RHODE   ISLAND 

RHODE  ISLAND  ASSOCIATION  OF  TEACHERS  OF  DRAWING 
AND  MANUAL  ARTS 

Antonio    Cirino President      Alice    Collins Sec.-Treas. 

Marie    Stillman Vice-Pres.  Supervisor    of    Drawing,    Cumber- 

land 
For  further  information  see  Vol.  XVII,  p.  214. 
Organized  1908.     Lectures  are  held  and  exhibitions  given. 

.^RHODE  ISLAND  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

F.  Ellis  Jackson President      Gorham    Henshaw Treasurer 

JoHN^    H.    Cady Vice-Pres.      Norman    M.    Isham Secretary 

915  Turk's  Head  Bldg.,  Providence 
Organized  1875. 

NEWPORT 

^ART  association  of  NEWPORT 
76  Bellevue  Avenue,  Newport 

Harrison    S.    Morris President      Walter   C.   Cabell Treasurer 

Edwin    Wiley Vice-Pres.      Mrs.    Maud   Howe   Elliott Sec'y 

Rhode    Island    Ave.,    Newport 
Organized  1912;  incorporated  1913.     The  school  has  classes  in  winter   (see 
school  reports).    Lectures  and  informal  talks  are  given  throughout  the  winter. 
Numerous  exhibitions. 


RHODE  ISLAND  177 


NEWPORT 

REDWOOD  LIBRARY  AND  ATHEN.^UM 
Newport 
George  L.  Hinckley,  Librarian 
For  foundation  see  Art  Annual,  Vol.  I,  p.  319. 

Founded  1747.  Open,  daily,  10  a.m.  to  6  p.m.,  except  Sundays  and  holidays. 
Collection  of  books,  pictures,  statues.  Paintings  by  Charles  B.  King  and 
belonging  to  him,  numbering  212,  were  bequeathed  to  the  institution  in  1862. 
There  are  also  portraits  by  Sully,  Stuart  and  other  early  American  painters. 
Exhibitions  are  held. 

PROVIDENCE 

HANDICRAFT  CLUB 

227  Benefit  Street,   Providence 

Mrs.  T.  Harris  Shipman.  .President      Mrs.   John    A.    Cross Treasurer 

Mrs.  H.   H.  Goss 1st  Vice-Pres.      Elizabeth    T.    Brown Secretary 

Mrs.  C.   p.  Knight.. 2nd  Vice-Pres.  91  Keene  St.,  Providence 

Organized  1905.  The  Club  occupies  an  old  Colonial  homestead  set  in  an  old 
garden.  Some  of  the  upper  rooms  are  used  as  work-shops  by  the  craftsmen 
members.     Meetings,  sales,  talks,  teas  and  exhibitions. 

.^PROVIDENCE  ART  CLUB 
11   Thomas   Street,   Providence 

Sydney  R.   Burleigh President      James  A.   Kinghorn Treasurer 

George  F.  Hall Vice-President      George   L,   Cooke Secretary 

Club  house  open  daily,  10  a.m.  to  6  p.m.  Friday  and  Saturday  evenings. 
Incorporated  1880.     Saturday  evening  life  classes  held.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

PROVIDENCE  WATER  COLOR  CLUB 

Percy  F.  Albee President       Stowell  B.   Sherman Treasurer 

W.   H.   Drury Vice-Pres.      Stacy   Tolman Secretary 

7   Thomas    St.,    Providence 
Organized  1896.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

PROVIDENCE  ATHEN^UM 
Benefit  and  College  Streets,  Providence 

William  L.  Hodgman President       Edward   A.   Stockwell Treasurer 

G.    Alder   Blumer 1st   Vice-Pres.      Henry   A.   DuVillard Secretary 

Mrs.  Daniel  Beck  with,  2nd  V.-Pres.      Grace  F.  Leonard Librarian 

For  further  data  see  Vol.  XV,  p.  224. 

Open  daily,  except  Sundays  and  legal  holidays,  from  July  1  to  Labor  Day, 
8.30  A.M.  to  6.30  P.M. ;  balance  of  the  year.  8.30  to  9  p.m. 

The  Providence  Library,  established  1753,  and  the  Providence  Athenaeum, 
established  1831,  were  united  and  chartered  in  1836.  The  building  was  opened 
in  1838. 

The  Athenaeum  owns  a  few  valuable  portraits  and  miniatures,  its  chief 
treasure  being  "The  Hours,"  by  Edward  Malbone  (fully  described  in  Vol  I 
p.  370.) 

RHODE  ISLAND  SCHOOL  OF  DESIGN  ALUMNI  ASSOCIATION 
11  Waterman  Street,  Providence 

W.    E.   Brigham President       Molly  Nye  Gamonons Treasurer 

Hugo  O,  E.  Carlborg Vice-Pres.      Alice    Collins Secretary 

Traveling  scholarships  are  given  to  graduates  of  the  Rhode  Island  School  of 
Design. 


178      SOUTH  CAROLINA—SOUTH  DAKOTA— TENNESSEE 


SOUTH  CAROLINA 

SOUTH  CAROLINA  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Nat  Gaillard  Walker President      H.    Olin   Jones Sec.-Treas. 

J.  Herbert  Johnson Vice-Pres.  Greenville 

CHARLESTON 

.^CAROLINA  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Meeting  Street,  Charleston 

John    F.    Ficken President      W.C.Miller Treasurer 

Thomas  BELLA  Torre.  .1st  Vice-Pres.      T.   R.   Waring Secretary 

Open  week  days,  10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.;  Sundays,  4  to  7  p.m.     Permanent  and 
special  exhibitions  of  paintings.     Sketch  club. 

Incorporated  1858;  building  erected  1904.     Annual  meeting  in  March;  quar- 
terly meetings  in  June,  September  and  December. 

CAROLINA  ARTS  AND  CRAFTS 
Gibbes  Art  Building,  Charleston 

Mrs.  F.  M.  La  Bruce President      Jean  A.  Robinson Vice-President 

Bessie  P.  Ravenel,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Occasional  exhibitions  are  held.     (No  report  1921.) 
COLUMBIA 

^COLUMBIA  ART  ASSOCIATION 
803  Sumter  Street,  Columbia 

T.    I.    Weston President      Harold    Tatum Sec.-Treas. 

Mrs.  J.  H.  Fowles Vice-Pres. 

Organized   1916.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

SOUTH   DAKOTA 

SIOUX    FALLS 

4-SIOUX  FALLS  ART  SOCIETY 

Mary    Hollister President      Mary    Perkins Secretary 

1607  South  Summit  Avenue, 
Sioux   Falls 
Organized  1914.     (No  report  1921.) 

TENNESSEE 

TENNESSEE  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Henry  C.  HiBBS President      J,    W.    Holm  an Sec.-Treas. 

B.   F.   McAluRRY Vice-Pres.  701  Stahlman  Bldg.,  Nashville 

Organized  1919. 
MEMPHIS 

JUNIOR  ART  ASSOCIATION   OF  THE   MEMPHIS   ART 

ASSOCIATION 

707  Adams  Ave.,  Memphis 

Florence  M.  McIntyre,  Chairman 

The  purpose  of  the  Association  is  to  encourage  the  love  and  study  of  art, 

to  encourage  and  visit  the  art  gallery,  and  study  special  exhibits  planned  for 

this  work. 


TENNESSEE  179 

MEMPHIS 

•^MEMPHIS  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Mrs.  Daniel  Grant President      Mrs.  Philip  Williams Treasurer 

Mrs.  Milton  Hunt... 1st  Vice-Pres.       Mrs.  F.  O.  Gamble Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.  Henry  Haley.  .2nd  Vice-Pres.      Florence    McIntyre Secretary 


707  Adams  Ave.,  Memphis 


Organized  1914;  lectures  given. 


NASHVILLE 

ART  COMMISSION  OF  THE  CITY  OF  NASHVILLE 

Mrs.  James  C.  Bradford.  .Chairman      Mrs.   Robert   Nichol Secretary 

George  W.  Hale  1910  Ridley  Ave.,  Nashville 

E.  H.  Thompson 

Organized  1918  by  Act  of  Legislature.  The  Art  Commission  has  charge 
of  all  art  matters  pertaining  to  the  city;  holds  exhibitions  and  gives  courses  of 
lectures  and  recitals. 

CENTENNIAL  CLUB 
128  Eighth  Avenue,  South  Nashville 
Mrs.  Frank  W.  Ring,  Chairman  Art  Committee 
Organized  1909.     This  is  a  Women's  Department  Club  with  a  Committee 
on  Art. 

EAST  NASHVILLE  WOMAN'S  CLUB 

ART   DEPA'RTMENT 
Carnegie  Library,  Each  Branch,  Nashville 
Mrs.  Ida  C.  Noble,  Chairman 
Exhibitions  and  lectures  are  given.    Conducts  art  study  classes. 

4-NASHVILLE  art  ASSOCIATION 
Art  Gallery,  Carnegie  Public  Library,  Nashville 

Mrs.  James   C.  Bradford.  .President      Mrs.  R.  O.  Tucker Treasurer 

W.  R.  Cole 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.    R.    W.    Nichol Secretary 

Mrs.  J.  E.  Caldwell  ..  2nd  Vice-Pres.  1910  Ridley  Ave.,  Nashville 

Chartered  1910.  Invested  funds,  $10,000.  Permanent  collection  of  paintings 
and  sculpture  in  gallery  of  Carnegie  Library. 

Monthly  exhibitions,  some  with  paid  admission  and  others  free ;  in  winter 
at  Carnegie  Library  and  in  summer  at  the  Parthenon. 

NASHVILLE  CLUB  OF  DESIGNERS 
Boscobel  Street,  East  Nashville 

Mrs.  L.  W.  Hussey President       Miss  Will  Petway Treasurer 

Mrs.  W.  H.  Sory Vice-Pres.       Mrs.  W.  H.  Perry Secretary 

Members  do  original  work,  and  hold  sales  exhibitions  at  Christmas,  Easter 
and  at  the  Tennessee  State  Fair. 

TENNESSEE  STATE  FAIR 

►fiART    DEPARTMENT 

Mrs.  Robert  W.  Nichol,  Director 
1910  Ridley  Ave.,  Nashville,  Tenn. 
Annual  exhibition  of  art  at  the  Tennessee  State  Fair;  prizes  awarded.     A 
children's  art  department  has  also  been  formed. 


180  TENNESSEE— TEXAS 

NASHVILLE 

TENNESSEE  FEDERATION  OF  WOMEN'S  CLUBS 

,^ART    DEPARTMENT 

Mrs.  George  A.  Washington,  Chairman 
"Washington  Hall,"  Cedar  Hill 
Has   organized  art  department  in  every  federated  club  and  department  of 
school  art  in  every  county  in  Tennessee.    Exhibitions  are  held. 

PARK  COMMISSION 

R.  M.  Dudley Chairman      R.  T.  Creighton 

M.  T.  Bryan Vice-Chairman      J.  J.  Loventhal 

J.    S.   Lewis Secretary      W.  R.  Cole 

C.  P.   Connell Superintendent 

Organized  1901.  The  Commission  appropriates  $2,500  each  year  _  for  art 
purposes.  Gives  concerts  and  moving  pictures;  encourages  community  sing- 
ing and  folk  dancing  in  the  play  grounds. 

TEXAS 

TEXAS  CHAPTER  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

D.  F.   CoBURN President      A.   C.   Finn Treasurer 

H.    M.    Green Vice-Pres.      Roy  E.  Lane Secretary 

Waco 
Organized  1913. 

AUSTIN 

AUSTIN  ART  LEAGUE 

Mrs.  Charles  Gardner President      Mrs.  J.  S.  Moss Sec.-Treas. 

Miss  E.  L.  Bascom Vice-Pres.  511  West  32nd  St.,  Austin 

Founded  1909.  The  beginning  of  a  public  collection  is  hung  in  the  Uni- 
versity of  Texas  Library. 

DALLAS 

^-DALLAS  ART  ASSOCIATION 
Art  Gallery,  Fair  Park,  Dallas,  Texas 

Mrs.jGeorge  K.  Meyer.  ..  .President      Ruth  de  Capree Secretary 

Mrs.  R.  B.  Stickler Treasurer  1010  South  Akard  Street,  Dallas 

Mrs.   Osce   Goodwin Cor.-Sec. 

Gallery  open,  free,  Wednesdays,  Saturdays  and  Sundays,  2  to  5  p.m.  Perma- 
nent collection  of  49  pictures  by  contemporary  American  painters. 

Four  exhibitions  are  held  each  year.  Junior  League  organized ;  monthly 
lectures  in  the  gallery.     (No  report  1921.) 

DALLAS  WOMAN'S  FORUM 

806  South  Akard  Street,  Dallas 

ART   DEPARTMENT 

Mrs.  Y.  B.  Dowell President      Marguerite  Middlebrook.  ..  Secretary 

Mrs.  J.  E.  Lenington Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  George  Coon Asst.   Sec. 

Vivian  L.  Anspaugh,  Leader 
Organized  1908.     In  1920  received  the  E.  C.  Frank  Memorial  Collection  of 
paintings  and  art  objects.    Exhibitions  held. 

FORT  WORTH 

PAINTERS'  CLUB 

S.  P.  Zeigler President      Mrs.  Harry  Mummert Secretary 

1308  South  Adams  St.,  Ft.  Worth 


TEXAS— UTAH  181 


GALVESTON 

^GALVESTON  ART  LEAGUE 

A.  T.  Webster President      Mrs.  F.  T.  Rennie Treasurer 

Mrs.  R.  L.  Tschumy,  Secretary,  923  Sixth  Street,  Galveston 
Organized  1914.     (No  report  1921.) 

HOUSTON 

4-HOUSTON  ART  LEAGUE 
3015  Main  Street,  Houston 

Mrs.  H.  B.  Fall President      Mrs.   Luke   C.   Bradley.  .  .Treasurer 

Mrs.  a.  C.  Ford 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  J.  W.  Lockett Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.  a.  L.  Cleveland,  2nd  V.-Pres.      Mrs.  O.  L.  Norsworthy.  . .  .Cor-Sec. 
Organized  1900.    Invested  fund,  $15.0CO.    Junior  Art  League  formed  among 
school  children ;  story  hour  and  library  in  Home  for  Young  Children  ;  free  art 
lectures.     Land  given  by  citizens  for  site  for  new  Museum. 

SAN    ANTONIO 

.^SAN  ANTONIO  ART  LEAGUE 
Carnegie  Library,  San  Antonio 

Mrs.  H.  p.  Drought President      Mrs.  A.   H.   Worden Treasurer 

Mrs.   E.   C.  Branch..  1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  James  B.  Cunningham.  .  .Sec. 

Mrs.  a.  Wagner 2nd  Vice-Pres.  1836  N.  Flores  St.,  San  Antonio 

Organized  1913.    Exhibitions  held. 

WACO 

WACO  ART  LEAGUE 

Kate    Edmond President      Mrs.  W.  T.  Abernathv  ..  .Treasurer 

Mrs.  I.  A.  Goldstein Vice-Pres.       Mrs.  A.  J.  Hall Secretary 

Mrs.  H.  C.  Lindsey,  Corresponding-Secretary,  1301  Columbus  Street,  Waco 
Organized  1900.    Lectures  given  and  occasional  exhibitions  held. 

UTAH 

PROVO 

ART  SERVICE  CLUB 
Brigham  Young  University,  Provo 

Arch  C.  West President      Mary  Harris Treasurer 

Maurice  Olson Vice-President      La  Vern  Page Secretary 

Organized  for  the  benefit  of  students  having  special  talent  in  any  particular 
phase  of  fine  and  applied  art.     Exhibitions  and  lectures  given. 

SALT    LAKE    CITY 

ASSOCIATED  CRAFTSMEN 
322  University  Avenue,  Salt  Lake  City 

Mabel  Frazer President      F.  J.  Russon Treasurer 

E.  W.  Gesswein,  Secretary 

FINE  ARTS  SOCIETY  OF  UTAH 

Evelyn  D.  Mayer President      Mrs.  Ernest  Bumberger.  ..Treasurer 

F.   C.   Richmond Vice-President      Mrs.  Solomon  Siegei Secretary 

The  Bransford,  Salt'  Lake  City 
Organized  1920.  ,    i 


182  UTAH— VIRGINIA 


SALT    LAKE    CITY 

INDUSTRIAL  ARTS  CLUB 

Sara   Young President      Olivia   Waters Secretary 

Organized  1919.     Lectures  are  given. 

UTAH  ART  INSTITUTE 
State  Capitol,  Salt  Lake  City 

J,  Leo  Fairbanks President      Taylor  Woolley Vice-President 

W.  M.  McCoNAHY,  Secretary 
For  details  see  Vol  XI,  p.  341. 

Created,  1899,  by  Act  of  Legislature.  This  was  the  first  State  Art  Society. 
It  provides  for  the  following:  An  art  collection,  known  as  the  Alice  Art 
Collection ;  an  animal  art  exhibition  of  both  the  fine  arts  and  the  applied  arts. 
No  exhibition  held  since  1916. 

UTAH  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Leslie  Hodgson President      Taylor  Woolley See. -Treasurer 

Burton  E.  Morse Vice-President         715  Mclntyre  Bldg.,  Salt  Lake  City 

Organized  1910  as  the  Utah  Association  of  Architects. 

UTAH  EDUCATIONAL  ASSOCIATION 

ART  SECTION 

O.  D.  Campbell President      Mary  Barton Secretary-Treasurer 

675  East  2d  South,  Provo  R.  F.  D.  1,  Box  11,  Logan 

Lectures  given.     Circulate  exhibition  of  public  school  art  as  aid  in  raising 

the  standards  of  art  teaching  in  Utah. 

CIVIC  PLANNING  COMMISSION 
Room  103,  City  and  County  Building,  Salt  Lake  City 

C.  Clarence  Neslin Chairman      J.  Leo  Fairbanks Secretary  and 

R.  Kletting Vice-Chairman  Chairman    Art    and    Civic    Center, 

1228  Bryan  Ave.,  Salt  Lake  City 
Organized  1913.    The  commission  is  composed  of  seven  members. 


VIRGINIA 

ART  COMMISSION  OF  VIRGINIA 

The  Capitol,  Richmond 

FiSKE  Kimball,  Chairman,  University  of  Virginia,  Charlottesville 

Westmoreland  Davis,  Governor  of  Virginia,  Chairman  ex-officio 

E.  V.  Valentine Sculptor      W.  C.  Taylor Architect 

D.  J.  O'Connell,  Bishop  of  Richmond 

Established  1916,  by  Act  of  Assembly.     Passes  upon  all  works  of  art  pur- 
chased by  or  presented  to  the  State. 

VIRGINIA  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

FiSKE  Kimball President      Charles  J.  Calrow.  . .  Sec. -Treasurer 

New  Monroe  Bldg.,  Norfolk 
Organized  1914. 


VIRGINIA— WASHINGTON  183 

LYNCHBURG 

.^WOMAN'S  CLUB 

ART   CIRCLE 
Georgia  Morgan,  Chairman,  700  Church  Street,  Lynchburg 
Organized  1903.    Lectures  given.    Occasional  exhibitions.     (No  report  1921.) 

NORFOLK 

►^NORFOLK  SOCIETY  OF  ARTS 
Mowbray  Arch  and  Fairfax  Avenues,  Norfolk 

Mrs.  Junius  R.  Wilcox.  ...President      Mrs.  Max  Pincus Treasurer 

Mrs.  William  Sloane Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  Finlay  F.  Ferguson.  .Cor.-Sec. 

Westover  Ave.,  Norfolk 
Organized  1905.     Lectures  each  week.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

RICHMOND 

^VIRGINIA  LEAGUE  OF  FINE  ARTS  AND  HANDICRAFTS 
519  East  Franklin  Street,  Richmond 

Adele  Clark Director      Helen  L.  Lorraine Treasurer 

Nora  Houston Assistant-Director      Charles  F.  Gillette.  .Rec.-Secretary 

Helen  Stockdell,  Corresponding-Secretary 
Organized  1919.    Lectures  given.     Classes  held  (see  school  section).    Exhi- 
bitions are  held. 

WASHINGTON 

WASHINGTON  STATE  CHAPTER 
AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Charles  H.  Alden President      Carl   Siebrand Treasurer 

David  J.  Meyers 1st  Vice-l'res.      Harold  O.  Sexsmith Secretary 

A.J.Russell 2d  Vice-President  Dept.    of    Architecture,    University 

of  Washington,  Seattle 
Organized  1894.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

SEATTLE 

SEATTLE  ART  CLUB 
Hoge  Building  Annex,  Seattle 
Arthur  Lingenbrink,  Chairman  Board  of  Directors 
Organized  1917  as  the  Seattle  Art  Students'  League.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

►^SEATTLE  FINE  ARTS  SOCIETY 
1213  Fourth  Avenue,  Seattle 

Mrs.  R.  H.  Parsons President      H.  O.  Grondahl Treasurer 

Charles  H.  Alden 1st  Vice-Pres.      Mrs'.  Irene  Ewing  Davis.  .  .Secretary 

Mrs.  F.  H.  Parks 2d  Vice-Pres.  25  West  Roy  St.,  Seattle 

Organized  1907.  Co-operates  with  the  Art  Department  of  the  public  schools 
and  all  educational  institutions,  so  that  pupils  visit  all  exhibitions.  Lectures 
and  exhibitions  given. 

SEATTLE  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 
Fourth  Avenue  and  Madison  Street,  Seattle 

JuDsoN  T.  Jennings Librarian      Annie  H.  Calhoun,  Head  Fine  Arts 

Division 
Art  department  opened  1907.    There  are  12,000  volumes ;  2,500  music  scores, 
including  miniature  orchestra  scores ;  9,000  pictures  for  circulation,  and  a  small 
print  collection,  including  60  Japanese  prints ;  exhibitions  are  held. 


184  WASHINGTON— WISCONSIN 

TACOMA 

TACOMA  SOCIETY  OF  ARCHITECTS 
1412  Puget  Sound  Bank  Building,  Tacoma 

R.  E.  BoRHEK .President      E.  N.  Dugan Vice-President 

A.  J.  Russell,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Organized  1911. 

TACOMA  FINE  ARTS  ASSOCIATION 
426  Broadway,  Tacoma 

George  W.  Bullard President      Frank  B.  Cole Treasurer 

Mrs.  T.  J.  Handforth.  . .  .1st  Vice-P.      Paul  T.  Prentice Secretary 

Mrs.  a.  D.  E.  Beek.  . .  .2d  Vice-Pres. 
Organized  1893.     Occasional  exhibitions. 

WASHINGTON  STATE  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 
City  Hall,  Tacoma 

W.  B.  Blackwell President      W.  H.  Dickson Treasurer 

O.  B.  Sperlin Vice-President      W.    P.   Bonney Secretary 

Organized  1891.     Annual  meeting  in  January. 

WISCONSIN 

WISCONSIN  CHAPTER  AMERICAN  INSTITUTE  OF  ARCHITECTS 

Peter  Brust President      W.  W.  Judell Sec-Treasurer 

A.  C.  Aschweiler Vice-President  445  Milwaukee  St.,  Milwaukee 

Organized  1911. 

GREEN    BAY 

KELLOGG  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 

Green  Bay,  Wis. 
Deborah  B.  Martin,  Librarian 
Collection  includes  22  paintings  by  Howard  Pyle  and  26  antique   Oriental 
rugs.     There  are  743  books  on  the  fine  and  applied  arts. 

JANESVILLE 

JANESVILLE  ART  LEAGUE 

Mrs.  C.  a.  Sanborn President      Mrs.  G.  F.  Ehrlinger Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.  H.  H.  Faust.  ..  .Vice-President      Charlotte  A.  Prichakd Cor. -Sec. 

Mrs.  J.  P.  Thorne Treasurer 

Organized  1894;  incorporated  1904.     (No  report  1921.) 

LA    CROSSE 

ART  ASSOCIATION  OF  LA  CROSSE 

D.  O.  Coate President      Carl  Race Treasurer 

Mrs.  C.  K.  Pettingill 1st  Vice-P.      Harriet  E.  Batchelder Secretary 

Frances  Sill 2d  Vice-Pres.  315  South  5th  St.,  La  Crosse 

Organized  1915.     Exhibitions  are  held. 

MADISON 

.^MADISON  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Mrs.  a.  B.  Chapman President      Robert   Shaffer Vice-President 

Mrs.  Clara  Fuller  Taylor,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Organized  1900.    Continuous  exhibitions. 


WISCONSIN— WYOMING— EUROPE  185 

MADISON 

STATE  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY  OF  WISCONSIN 
816  State  Street,  Madison 

E.  Ray  Stevenson President      Lucien  S.  Hanks Treasurer 

Joseph  Schafer,  Secretary 
Founded   1849;   Museum  organized   1908.     Exhibitions  held  throughout  the 
year  in  connection  with  the  Madison  Art  Association.     Permanent  collections 
of    coins    and    medals,    furniture,    paintings,    prints,    art    objects.      Occasional 
lectures. 

MILWAUKEE 

MILWAUKEE  ART  COMMISSION 
City  Hall,  Milwaukee 

Alexander  C.  Eschweiler Pres.-      George   B.    Raab Curator 

Architect  Loyal  Durand President  School 

James  Currie Vice-President  Board 

President  Park  Board  Robert  Wheeler.  .President  Museum 

Alexander  Mueller Painter  Board 

Peter  Brust Secretary 

Organized  1911;  term  of  office,  four  years. 

WISCONSIN  PAINTERS  AND  SCULPTORS 

Alexander  Mueller President      Elsa    Ulbricht Treasurer 

Francesco  Spiccuzza Vice-Pres.      Gu stave  Moeller Secretary 

757  36th  St.,  Milwaukee 
Organized  1913.     Annual  State  Circuit  and  High  School  Circuit  Exhibition. 
Holds  annual  exhibition  at  the  Milwaukee  Art  Institute. 

TWO    RIVERS 

LADIES  OF  THE  ROUND  TABLE 
Two  Rivers 

Mrs.  William  Ellis President      Mrs.  A.  H.  Lohman.  .Vice-President 

Mrs.  H.  C.  Wilke,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Organized  1912. 

WYOMING 

CHEYENNE 

►J*CHEYENNE  ART  ASSOCIATION 

Mrs.  a.  S.  Meyring President      Mrs.  Mark  T.  Cox Treasurer 

Mrs.  O.  E.  Garretson 1st  Vice-P.      Mrs.  C.  C.  Warrington.  ..  .Rec.-Sec. 

Mrs.  E.  H.  Cook 2d  Vice-Pres.      Mrs.  John  Howard.  .  .Cor. -Secretary 

122  West  26th  St.,  Cheyenne 
Organized    1905   as   study   club;    reorganized    1919.     Owns   two   pictures   as 
nucleus  for  collections. 

EUROPE 

FRANCE 

AMERICAN  ART  ASSOCIATION  OF   PARIS 
4   Rue   Joseph    Bara,    Paris 

Rodman  Wanamaker President      H.  Wallce  Methven Sec.-Treas. 

F.    C.    Frieseke,    Chairman,    Board    of    Governors 
Organized  1911  for  the  "purpose  of  helping  by  all  possible  means,  such  as 
conferences,  exhibitions,  pamphlets  and  gatherings,  the  artistic,  literary,  scien- 
tific and  musical   studies   of  American  students   residing  or  passing   through 
France." 


186  EUROPE 


FRANCE 

AMERICAN  ART  STUDENTS'  CLUB 
4  Rue  de  Chevreuse,  Paris 
Mrs.  James  Van  Allen  Shields,  Directress 
Founded  1891.    The  club  is  supported  entirely  by  Mrs.  Whitelaw  Reid. 
No  report  1921. 

AMERICAN   STUDENTS'  CLUB 
4  Rue  Joseph  Bara,  Paris 

Rodman   Wanamaker President      H.  Wallce  Methven Sec.-Treas. 

Frederick  C.  Frieseke,  Chairman,  Board  of  Governors 
Affiliated  with  the  American  Art  Association  of  Paris. 

INTERNATIONAL  CLUB  FOR  WOMEN  STUDENTS 
93  Boulevard  St.  Michel,  Paris 
Mme.  Pannier,  Chairman 
Organized  1907  as  the  International  Art  Union ;  reorganized  1919. 
No  report  1921. 

PARIS  SOCIETY  OF  AMERICAN  PAINTERS 
William  T.  Dannat President      Walter  McEv^en 1st'  Vice-Pres. 

Eugene  La  Chaise,  Secretary,  39  Rue  Joubert,  Paris 
Arranges  for  special  group  of  American  work  at  foreign  exhibitions. 
No  report  1921. 

ITALY 

AMERICAN  ACADEMY   IN   ROME 
(See  under  National  Societies,  p.  91,  and  Schools,  p.  224) 


Art  Schools 


All  enrollment  figures  are   for  1920-21,  including  summer  of    1921,  unless 
otherwise  noted. 

Only  schools  offering  technical  instructions  are  listed. 

ALABAMA 
AUBURN 

Alabama  Polytechnic  Institute,  Department  of  Architecture. 

Frederick  Biggin,  professor  in  charge;  four  instructors.  Department 
founded  1907.  Four-year  course  in  architecture  with  degree  of  B.S.; 
four-year  course  in  architectural  engineering,  degree  of  B.S. ;  two- 
year  special  course  in  architecture  for  office  draftsmen ;  courses  in 
free-hand  drawing,  pen-and-ink  rendering,  charcoal  drawing,  water 
colors,  clay  modeling,  life  class,  history  of  architecture,  painting  and 
sculpture  for  general  students.  Tuition  free  for  residents  of  Alabama, 
$36  for  non-residents.  Term  of  nine  months.  Fellowship  of  $225  a 
year  offered  for  post  graduate  work  in  architecture.    Enrollment,  75. 

BIRMINGHAM 

Birmingham  Atelier  of  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  Night  School,  1607  Empire 
Building. 

E.  H.  Knight,  patron.  Architecture  in  co-operation  with  the  Beaux- 
Arts  Institute  of  Design.  Evening  classes  twice  a  week.  Tuition,  $25 
for  six  months.    Enrollment,  14. 

CALIFORNIA 

BERKELEY 

California  School  of  Arts  and  Crafts,  2119  Allston  Way. 

Frederick  H.  Meyer,  director;  17  instructors.  Founded  1907.  Fine, 
applied  and  normal  arts.  Tuition,  day,  $140;  evening,  $46;  Saturday, 
$24.    Term  of  nine  months.    Enrollment,  333. 

Summer.  Fourteen  instructors.  Tuition,  $25  for  five  weeks.  Enroll- 
ment, 155. 

Also  summer  session  at  Piedmont,  Calif.,  and  King's  River  Canyon, 
Calif. 

University  of  California,  Department  of  Architecture. 

J.  G.  Howard,  director ;  six  instructors.  School  founded  1913.  Tuition 
free  to  residents  of  California.  Term  of  nine  months.  Enrollment, 
190. 

CARMEL-BY-THE-SEA 

Carmel  Summer  School  of  Art. 

M.  De  Neale  Morgan,  instructor.  Founded  1914.  Drawing  and 
painting  (landscape  and  figure).  Tuition,  $30  for  eight  weeks.  En- 
rollment, 28. 

.  CLAREMONT 

Pomona  College,  Art  Department. 

Mrs.  H.  T.  Jenkins,  head  of  art  department;  five  instructors.  Or- 
ganized 1887.  Drawing,  painting,  modeling  and  design.  Tuition  $150 
for  ten  months.    Enrollment,  90. 

187 


188  ART  SCHOOLS 


California —  ( Continued). 

FRESNO 

Fresno  State  Teachers'  College,  Art  Department. 

Alexandra  Bradshaw,  head  of  department;  three  instructors.  Founded 
1911.  Normal  art;  one  year  of  art  required;  three  and  four-year 
courses  for  special  art  students.  Tuition,  free.  Term  of  nine  months. 
Enrollment,  400. 

LOS  ANGELES 

Cannon's  School  of  Art,  227  South  Spring  Street. 

H.  W.  Cannon,  director;  two  instructors.  Founded  1909.  Life 
classes,  cartoons,  illustrations  and  posters,  drawing  and  painting. 
Tuition  $13.50  a  month  for  day  classes;  $7.50  a  month  for  evening. 
Open  all  year.     Enrollment,  150. 

Chouinard  School  of  Art,  2606  West  Eighth  Street. 

Nelbert  Murphy  Chouinard,  director ;  three  instructors.  Founded 
1921.  Drawing,  painting,  composition,  commercial  art,  interior  decor- 
ation, design.  Day  classes,  $150  for  nine  months,  evening  classes, 
$30  for  five  months;  Saturday  classes  for  adults,  twelve  lessons, 
$25 ;  Saturday  classes  for  children,  twenty-four  lessons,  $35. 

Los  Angeles  School  for  Illustration  and  Painting,  156  North  Spring 
Strtet. 

J.  Francis  Smith,  director;  two  instructors.  Founded  1914.  Draw- 
ing, painting,  magazine  illustration  and  poster  classes.  Classes  six 
days  a  week;  all  year  session.  Tuition,  $10  a  month  for  morning  or 
afternoon  classes ;  $8  a  month  for  evening  classes.     Enrollment,  300. 

Otis  Art  Institute,  of  the  Museum  of  History,  Science  and  Art,  2401 
Wilshire  Boulevard. 

C.  P.  Townsley,  managing  director;  eight  instructors.  Founded  1918. 
Drawing,  painting,  illustration,  sculpture,  commercial  art,  metal  work 
and  jewelry,  interior  decoration,  textile  decoration,  decorative  design. 
Day  and  evening  classes.  Tuition  $80  for  nine  months.  Enroll- 
ment 300. 

Southern  Branch,  University  of  California  (formerly  California  State 
Normal  School)  Department  of  Art,  855  North  Vermont  Avenue. 
Nellie  Huntington  Gere,  head  of  department ;  ten  instructors.  De- 
partment founded  1911.  Three  courses  are  given:  I,  courses  for 
teaching  certificates;  II,  professional  course  with  interior  decorating; 
III,  commercial  art.  Tuition,  free;  studio  fees  average  $4.50  for 
38  weeks.     Enrollment,  125. 

University   of    Southern    California,   Department    of  Art,   University 
Avenue  and  35th  Street. 

A.  C.  Weatherhead,  head  of  department;  five  instructors.  Drawing, 
painting,  design,  crafts.  Tuition,  $200  for  nine  months^  Enroll- 
ment 175. 


MILLS 


Mills  College,  Department  of  Fine  and  Applied  Arts. 

Eugen  Neuhaus,  director ;  four  instructors.  Founded  1865.  Draw- 
ing, painting.  Design,  handicraft.  Tuition,  $200  for  ten  months. 
Enrollment.  275. 


ART  SCHOOLS  189 


California — (Continued) . 

PASADENA 

Stickney  Memorial  School  of  Art,  Pasadena  Music  and  Art  Associa- 
tion, Fair  Oaks  and  Lincoln  Avenues. 

Lucille  Lloyd,  director ;  four  instructors.  Founded  1914.  Drawing, 
painting,  illustration,  first  two  years  of  architecture.  Also  for  chil- 
dren.    Tuition,  $100  for  eight  months. 

PIEDMONT 

California  School  of  Arts  and  Crafts. 
(Division  of  the  school  at  Berkeley.) 

Frederick  H.  Meyer,  director;  one  instructor.  Founded  1907.  Land- 
scape painting.    Tuition,  $25  for  six  weeks.    Enrollment,  15. 

SAN  DIEGO 

San  Diego  Academy  of  Fine  Arts,  Balboa  Park. 

Eugene  DeVol,  director;  seven  instructors.  Founded  1921.  Painting, 
drawing,  stagecraft,  pictorial  photography.  Tuition,  $120  for  nine 
months.     Enrollment,  about  40. 

SAN  FRANCISCO 

California  School  of  Fine  Arts  of  the  San  Francisco  Art  Association, 
California  and   Mason  Streets. 

Lee  F.  Randolph,  director ;  ten  instructors.  Founded  1874.  Affili- 
ated College  of  the  University  of  California  1893.  Fine  and  applied 
arts,  normal  art,  commercial  and  industrial  design.  Saturday  classes 
for  juveniles  and  others.  Twelve  scholarships  in  school  and  three 
to  pupils  of  high  schools  in  California.  Day  and  evening  classes. 
Tuition,  $15  a  month,  or  $110  for  nine  months.  Enrollment,  70O. 
Summer.  Eight  instructors.  Founded  1874.  Tuition,  %37  for  full 
day,  $25  for  half  day,  for  six  weeks.    Enrollment,  80._ 

San  Francisco  Architectural  Club,  77  O'Farrell  Street. 

Architectural    atelier   in    co-operation    with   the    Beaux-Arts    Institute 

of  Design. 

No  report  1921. 

SANTA  BARBARA 

State  Normal  School  of  Manual  Arts  and  Home  Economics. 

A.  Irene  Struthers,  director  art  department ;  four  instructors  in 
design.  Founded  1916.  Industrial,  normal,  applied,  domestic  and 
manual  arts.  Two  terms  of  twenty  weeks.  Tuition  free,  except  for 
laboratory  fees.    Enrollment,  217. 

Summer.  Tuition  of  $10  for  term  of  twelve  weeks.  Enrollment,  150. 
No  report  1921. 

STANFORD  UNIVERSITY 

4*Leland  Stanford  Junior  University,  Division  of  Graphic  Arts,  De- 
partment of  Education. 

A.  B.  Clark,  head  of  division;  three  instructors.  Department  founded 
1892.  Drawing,  design,  handicraft,  household  art,  commercial  art  and 
normal  art  Tuition,  $270  for  term  of  nine  months.  Enrollment, 
about  100. 


190  ART  SCHOOLS 


COLORADO 

BOULDER 

University  of  Colorado,  Art  Department. 

F.  B,  R.  Hellems,  head  of  department;  three  instructors.  Founded 
1917.  Color  and  design ;  house  furnishing  and  decoration.  Tuition, 
$56  for  resident,  $101  for  non-resident  for  term  of  nine  months. 
Enrollment  165. 

COLORADO  SPRINGS 

Academy  of  Fine  Arts,  Perkins  Hall,  Colorado  College,  Colorado  Springs. 

Susan     F.     and     Charlotte     Leaming,    directors ;     three     instructors. 

Founded   1911;   affiliated  with   College   1916.     Painting  and  drawing, 

design,  illustration,  commercial  art,  normal  art.     Tuition,  $50  to  $150 

for  nine  months.    Enrollment  about  30. 
•^Broadmoor  Art  Academy,  West  Dale  Street. 

Rolland    L.    Boutwell,    director;    seven    instructors.      Founded    1920. 

Drawing,    painting,    design,    interior    decoration,    and    crafts    work. 

Tuition  $300  for  twelve  months.     Enrollment  about  95. 

DENVER  ' 

Atelier  Denver,  1459  Pennsylvania  Street. 

Two  instructors.  Founded  1919.  Architecture  in  coperation  with  the 
Beaux  Arts  Institute  of  Design.  Tuition,  $5  a  month.  Enrollment, 
28. 

Denver  Academy  of  Art,  37  East  18th  Avenue. 

J.  Campbell  Cory,  director;  ten  instructors.  Founded  1920.  Painting, 
sculpture,  design,  illustration  and  commercial  art.  Day  and  evening 
classes.    Tuition,  $7  to  $25.    Enrollment,  about  500. 

Student's  School  of  Art,  1311  Pearl  Street. 

Henry  Read,  director.  Founded  1895.  Drawing,  painting,  illustra- 
tion, design.  Day  and  evening  classes;  open  all  year.  Tuition,  $4 
to  $8  a  month.    Enrollment  60. 

GREELEY  i    i 

Colorado   State   Teachers   College,   Department  of  Fine   and  Applied 
Arts. 

Grace  M,  Baker,  head  of   department;   three   instructors.     Founded 
1889.     Design,  painting,  construction,  pottery.     Tuition,  $20  for  nine 
months  to  non-Colorado  students.     Enrollment,  300. 
Summer.    Four  instructors.    Tuition,  $30  for  ten  weeks.    Enrollment, 
600.  _  , 

GUNNISON 

Colorado  State  Normal  School,  Art  Department. 

Mary  Helen  Hatch,  head  of  department;  three  instructors.     Founded 
1911.      Construction    and    applied    design;    public    school    training; 
academic  courses.     Tuition,  $15  for  term  of  nine  months. 
Summer.    Tuition,  $25  for  term  of  ten  weeks.    Enrollment  600. 

CONNECTICUT 

CANAAN 

Clarence  H.  White  School  of  Photography   (winter,  460  West  144th 
Street,  New  York  City). 

Clarence     H.     White,     director;     two     instructors.      Founded     1909. 
Photography,   design   and   art   appreciation.     Tuition,   $100   for   eight 
weeks.     Enrollment,  35. 
No  report  1921. 


ART  SCHOOLS  191 


Connecticut — (Continued). 
HARTFORD 

Connecticut  League  of  Art  Students,  709  Main  Street. 

James  Goodwin  McManus,  director;  four  instructors.     Founded 
Drawing,   painting,  perspective   and   anatomy.     Evening  classes   only. 
Tuition,  ^36  for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  about  35. 

Hartford  Evening  High  School,  Art  Department,  Broad  Street. 

James  Goodwin  McManus,  director;  two  instructors.  Founded  1902. 
Antique,  life.  Evening  classes  only ;  six  months'  course.  Tuition  free. 
Enrollment,  50  to  60. 

School  of  the  Art  Society  of  Hartford,  280  Collins  Street. 

Albertus  E.  Jones,  head  of  department ;  Five  instructors.  Established 
1877.  Drawing,  painting,  decorative  and  applied  design,  costume 
illustration,  modeling,  juvenile.  Day,  evening  and  Saturday  classes. 
Tuition,  $100  for  all  day  course  of  seven  months.  Numerous  scholar- 
ships and  prizes  awarded.     Enrollment,   110. 

Summer.  Landscape  painting  and  sketching.  Tuition,  $18  for  six 
weeks.     Enrollment,    10. 

NEW  HAVEN 

Yale  School  of  the  Fine  Arts,  Yale  University. 

William  Sergeant  Kendall,  director;  George  H.  Langzettel,  secre- 
tary; fifteen  instructors.  Founded  1866;  building  erected  1864. 
Drawing,  painting,  sculpture  and  architecture.  Courses  lead  to  de- 
gree of  Bachelor  of  the  Fine  Arts.  Winchester  Fellowship  of  $1,000 
and  English  scholarship  of  $750  awarded  each  year  for  European 
travel ;  several  scholarships  in  the  school  and  prizes.  Art  Museum 
and  library  in  school  building.  Tuition,  $90  for  drawing,  painting 
and  sculpture;  $180  for  architecture  for  eight  months.  Enrollment, 
140. 

NORWICH 

Norwich  Art  School. 

Mrs.  Guy  Warner  Eastman,  director ;  four  instructors.  Established 
1890.  Drawing,  design,  pottery,  metalry.  Three  scholarships  in  the 
school ;  one  entitling  to  free  tuition  to  the  School  of  the  Boston 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts.    Tuition,  $35  for  eight  months.    Enrollment,  42. 

DISTRICT  OF  COLUMBIA 

WASHINGTON 

Corcoran  School  of  Art,  Corcoran  Gallery,  17th  Street  and  New  York 
Avenue. 

Edmund  C.  Tarbell,  principal ;  five  instructors.  Founded  1875.  Life, 
antique,  draped  and  still  life,  portrait,  composition,  perspective,  water 
color  and  anatomy.  Tuition  free,  annual  entrance  fee,  $10  for  eight 
months ;  also  evening  courses.    Enrollment,  250. 

George  Washington   University.  Department  of  Architecture. 

William  Miller  Collier,  president ;  H.  L.  Hodgkins,  dean ;  five  art 
instructors.  Department  re-established  1912.  Four-year  course. 
Tuition,  $180  for  eight  months ;  day  and  evening  classes.  Enroll- 
ment, 58. 

National  School  of  Fine  and  Applied  Art,  Connecticut  Avenue  and  M 
Street,  N.  W. 

Felix  Mahony,  director ;  ten  instructors.  Founded,  1916.  Painting, 
academic  drawing,  composition,  poster  and  costume  design,  interior 
decoration,  illustrative  advertising,  applied  art.  Tuition,  $80  for  eight 
months.     Day  and  evening  classes.     Enrollment,  226. 


192  ART  SCHOOLS 


FLORIDA 

ST.  PETERSBURG 

Florida  Art  School,  Beach  Drive  and  Second  Avenue,  North.  • 
J.  Liberty  Tadd,  dirAtor.     Painting,  sculpture,  arts  and  crafts. 

GEORGIA 

ATLANTA 

Georgia  School  of  Technology,  Department  of  Architecture. 

Francis  Palmer  Smith,  professor;  three  instructors.  Department 
founded  1908.  Four-year  course  leads  to  degree  of  B.S.  in  Arch. 
Day  and  evening  classes.  Tuition,  Georgia  students,  $25 ;  others, 
$100  for  eight  and  one-half  months.  Special  two-year  course  for 
draughtsmen  leads  to  certificate.     Enrollment,  73. 

Lewis  C  Gregg  School  of  Drawing,  Constitution  Building. 

Lewis  C.  Gregg,  director;  two  instructors.  Established  1915.  Antique 
and  sketch  from  costume  models,  cartoon  and  newspaper  illustration. 
Tuition,  $10  a  month  for  four  days  a  week.    Enrollment,  45. 

HAWAII 

HONOLULU 

University  of  Hawaii,  Art  Department. 

Minnie  E.  Chipman,  head  of  department,  two  instructors.  Founded 
1908.  Drawing,  design,  interior  decoration,  ceramics.  Tuition,  free ; 
term  of  nine  months.     Enrollment,  51. 

ILLINOIS 

CHAMPAIGN 

University  of  Illinois.     See  Urbana. 

CHICAGO 

Applied  Arts  Summer  School,  2210  South  Park  Avenue. 

Florence  H.  Fitch  (of  Indianapolis),  director;  eight  instructors, 
EstabHshed  1908;  incorporated  1912.  Methods,  mechanical  drawing, 
posters,  home  planning,  costume  designs,  industrial  and  applied  arts, 
and  art  appreciation.     Tuition,  $20  for  three  weeks.    Enrollment  200. 

Armour  Institute  of  Technology,  Architectural  Department. 

Edmund  S.  Campbell,  director ;  eight  instructors.  Founded  1893. 
Tuition,  $200  for  nine  months.  Enrollment,  87.  Architecture  in  co- 
operation with  the  Art  Institute. 

Art  Institute  of  Chicago  Art   School,   Grant   Park,    South   Michigan 
Avenue  and  Adams  Street. 

Robert  B.  Harshe,  director ;  forty-two  instructors.  Founded  1879 
as  continuation  of  a  school  established  about  1866.  W.  M.  R,  French 
Memorial  scholarship  of  $1,000  awarded  every  two  years;  Bryan 
Lathrop  scholarship  of  $800;  John  Quincy  Adams  foreign  traveling 
scholarship  of  $700;  Municipal  Art  League  American  traveling 
scholarship  of  $125  ;  Tuesday  Art  and  Travel  Club,  five  scholarships 
of  $100  each ;  twelve  free  tuition  scholarships.  In  1921  two  notable 
prizes  were  oflrered  by  Chicago  newspapers,  the  competition  in  each 
case  was  conducted  by  the  Art  Institute  of  Chicago.  The  Chicago 
Tribune  offered  $5,000  for  the  best  mural  design  for  decorating  the 
walls  in  the  new  Tribune  Institute  Building.  The  competition  was 
restricted  to  students  of  the  Art  Institute  School.  Also  restricted  to 
students   of  the  Art   Institute   is   the  Chicago  Daily  Nezvs'  Prize  of 


ART  SCHOOLS  193 


Chicago — Art  Institute  School — (Continued). 

$1,000  for  the  best  design  for  a  fountain  to  decorate  the  grounds  of 
the  sanitarium  for  babies  conducted  by  the  Daily  News  on  the  small 
island  north  of  Lincoln  Park.  Special  facilities  for  work  in  the  Art 
Institute  Galleries  and  Ryerson  Library ;  lectures  and  concerts  in 
Fullerton   Memorial   Hall. 

Seven  departments :  Academic  drawing,  painting,  sculpture,  illustra- 
tion; decorative  design;  architecture;  normal  art;  Saturday  juvenile 
class ;  evening  classe's.  Tuition,  day  $198  for  nine  months ;  evening, 
$54  for  nine  months;  Saturday  juvenile,  $24  for  nine  months.  Total 
enrollment,  4,267. 

Summer.  Twenty  instructors.  Tuition,  $50  for  ten  weeks,  five  days 
a  week.    Enrollment,  487. 

Chicago  Architectural  Club,  40  South  Clark  Street. 

William  E.  Parsons,  patron.  Architecture  in  co-operation  with  Beaux- 
Arts  Institute  of  Design.    Enrollment,  50. 

HhCniCAGo  Academy  of  Fine  Arts,  81  East  Madison  Street. 

Carl  N.  Werntz,  director ;  thirty  instructors.  Founded  1900.  Illus- 
tration, design,  cartoon,  interior  decoration,  applied  design,  costume 
design,  normal  art,  handicraft.  Tuition  $200  for  ten  months.  Day 
and  evening  classes.     Enrollment  about  700. 

Summer.  Fourteen  instructors.  Tuition,  $65  for  ten  weeks;  day  and 
evening  sessions.     Enrollment,  200. 

Industrial  Art  School,  700  Oakwood  Blvd. 

(Winter  address — Fawcett  School  of  Industrial  Art,  55  Academy  St., 
Newark,  N.  J.) 

Hugo  B.  Froehlich  and  Bonnie  E.  Snow,  directors ;  five  instructors. 
Founded  1916.  Normal  course  in  industrial  art ;  special  courses  for 
teachers.     Tuition,  $25  for  five  weeks.     Enrollment  about  100. 

Lewis  Institute,  Madison  and  Robey  Streets. 

George  N.  Carman,  director ;  two  instructors.  Founded  1896.  Draw- 
ing, design.  Day  and  evening  classes.  Tuition  $15  for  each  course 
of  three  months.     Enrollment  about   125. 

University  of  Chicago,  School  of  Education,  Department  of  Art  Edu- 
cation. 58th  Street  and  Kenwood  Avenue. 

William  G.  Whitford,  professor  in  charge;  nine  instructors.  Founded 
1902.  Drawing,  painting,  design,  modeling,  pottery,  normal  courses. 
Tuition,  $180  for  nine  months ;  in  session  all  year  except  September. 
Enrollment,  400. 

Summer.  William  G.  Whitford,  director ;  ten  instructors.  Tuition, 
$60  for  twelve  weeks.     Enrollment,  400. 

DECATUR 

James  Milliken  University,  School  of  Fine  and  Applied  Arts. 

Emma  B.  Robbins  and  Christine  Spencer,  directors;  two  instructors. 
School  founded  1900.  Fine  and  Applied  Arts,  art  history,  normal  art, 
pottery  and  metal  work.  Four  years  leading  to  B.S.  in  F.A.  and 
A. A.  Tuition,  $150  for  nine  months  and  laboratory  fees.  Enrollment, 
105. 

DE  KALB 

Northern  Illinois  State  Teachers'  College.  Art  Department. 

L.    Eveline   Merritt,   head   of   department ;   two   instructors.     Founded 
1899.     Two  years'  normal  art  course,  perspective,  water  color,  design, 
color  theory,  mechanical  drawing;  $12  for  course  of  36  weeks.     En- 
rollment, 50. 
Summer.    Tuition,  $4  for  six  weeks.     Enrollment,  35. 


194  ART  SCHOOLS 


Illinois — (Continued). 

JACKSONVILLE 

•^Illinois  Woman's  College,  School  of  Fine  Arts.- 

Nellie  A.  Knopf,  director  or  art;  two  instructors.  College  founded 
1846;  art  department  about  1875.  Teachers'  diploma  and  certificate 
courses  in  drawing  and  painting;  courses  in  historic,  practical  and 
theoretical  design  and  applied  arts;  art  appreciation;  industrial  art 
and  interior  decoration.  Tuition,  $150  for  eight  months.  Enroll- 
ment, 65. 

PEORIA 

Bradley  Polytechnic  Institute,  School  of  Arts  and  Sciences. 

Theodore  C.  Burgess,  president;  four  instructors  in  art.  Founded 
1897.  Architectural,  freehand  and  mechanical  drawing;  industrial 
and  normal  art ;  horology.  Day  and  evening  classes.  Tuition,  $100 
for  nine  months.  Enrollment  in  normal  art,  75;  industrial  art,  12; 
horology,  330. 

Summer.  Albert  F.  Siepert,  director;  two  instructors.  Four  weeks. 
Tuition,  $25.    Enrollment,  about  150. 

ROCKFORD 

RocKFORD  College,  Fine  and  Applied  Arts  Department. 

Mrs.  Eleanor  M.  George,  director;  two  instructors.  Founded  1849. 
Painting,  composition,  perspective,  color  theory,  history  of  art;  de- 
sign; interior  decoration;  costume  design.  No  extra  charge  to 
regular  students;  $90  to  outsiders  for  nine  months.  Enrollment, 
about  22  in  fine  arts;  35  in  domestic  arts;  50  in  history  of  art. 
No  report  1921. 

URBANA  AND  CHAMPAIGN 

University  of  Illinois,  Department  of  Architecture. 

L.  H.  Provine,  head  of  department ;  fifteen  instructors.  Department 
founded  1870.    Tuition  free;  nine  months.    Enrollment,  257. 

Department  of  Art  and  Design,  College  of  Liberal  Arts  and  Sciences. 
Eduard  J.  Lake,  head  of  department;  four  instructors.  Department 
founded  1873.  Drawing,  design,  painting,  modeling,  history  of  art. 
Tuition  free;  incidentals,  $50  for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  350. 


INDIANA 

INDIANAPOLIS 

School  of  the  John  Herron  Art  Institute,   Art  Association   of   In- 
dianapolis, Pennsylvania  and  Sixteenth  Streets. 

Eight  instructors.  Founded  1902.  Drawing,  painting,  illustration, 
industrial  design,  modeling,  design,  costume  design,  interior  decoration, 
and  normal  art.  Tuition,  $95  for  eight  months  day  course.  Evening 
and  Saturday,  $25;  children's,  $11.  Enrollment,  366. 
Summer.  Twelve  instructors.  Tuition,  $25  for  six  weeks.  Enroll- 
ment, 75. 

LAFAYETTE 

Purdue  University,  Art  Department. 

Laura  A.  Fry,  director ;  two  instructors.     Established  1869.     Tuition, 
free  for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  150. 


ART  SCHOOLS  195 


Indiana — (Continued). 

NOTRE  DAME 

University  of  Notre  DAMii,  College  of  Architecture. 

Francis  Wynne  Kervick,  head  of  department;  six  instructors.  De- 
partment founded  1898.  Tuition,  $150  for  thirty-six  weeks.  En- 
rollment, 80. 

TERRE  HAUTE 

State  Normal  School,  Art  Department 

William  T.  Turman,  head  of  department.  Founded  1870.  Free- 
hand and  mechanical  drawing  and  design  suited  to  public  schools ; 
mechanical  extended  for  vocational  work ;  industrial  arts.  Four 
year  normal  and  four  year  college  course.  Four  terms  of  12  weeks 
each.  Day  classes.  Tuition  free  to  residents  of  Indiana;  $12  a  term 
to  non-residents.     Enrollment,  about  900. 

VALPARAISO 

Valparaiso  University,  Art  Department. 

Bula  Beshears,  director ;  two  instructors.  Established  1873 ;  crafts 
department,  1902.     Tuition,  $135  for  twelve  months.     Enrollment,  200. 

IOWA 

CEDAR  FALLS 

lowA  State  Teachers'  College,  Art  Department. 

Henrietta  Thornton,  head  of  department;  eight  instructors.  Founded 
1876.  Normal  art,  for  public  school,  rural  school  and  supervision. 
Tuition,  $15  for  three  months.     Enrollment,  specializing  in  art,  about 

25-  .     . 

Summer.     Six  instructors.     Tuition,  $5   for   12  weeks.     Applied  arts 

and  mechanical  drawing.    Enrollment,  420. 

DAVENPORT 

Tri-City  Art  League  Students,  Savings  Bank  Building. 

Herman  More,  director;  one  instructor.  Founded  1915.  Day,  even- 
ing and  Saturday  classes.  Tuition,  $95  for  seven  months.  Enroll- 
ment, 100. 

DES  MOINES 

Des  Moines  College,  School  of  Art. 

Edith  Gilbert,  director;  two  instructors.  Founded  1901.  Normal  and 
academic  art,  fine  arts.  Tuition,  from  $50  to  $160  for  9  to  12  months. 
Enrollment,  46. 

Summer.     Tuition,  from  $5  to  $20  for  12  weeks.     Enrollment,  15. 
No  report  1921. 

IOWA  CITY 

State  University  of  Iowa,   College  of  Liberal   Arts,  Department   of 
Graphic   and  Elastic   Arts. 

Charles  A.  Cumming,  head  of  department;  seven  instructors.  Founded 
1910.  Academic  drawing  and  painting,  design  with  theory  of  linear 
perspective  and  construction  drawing.  Day  classes  with  lectures  at 
night.  Tuition  included  in  college  fee  of  $40  for  nine  months.  En- 
rollment, 175. 
No  report  1921. 


196  ART  SCHOOLS 


KANSAS 
BALDWIN 

Baker  University,  Art  Department. 

Ella  Heath,  director;  one  instructor.  Founded  1858.  Mechanical 
drawing,  applied  design,  illustration,  design,  applied  arts.  Tuition 
varies  according  to  course.  Term  of  nine  months.  Enrollment, 
about  60. 

LAWRENCE 

University  of  Kansas,  Department  of  Architecture. 

Goldwin  Goldsmith,  professor  in  charge;  four  instructors.  Founded 
1913.  Architecture  and  Architectural  Engineering  lead  to  B.S.  Tui- 
tion, $20  for  nine  months  for  residents  of  Kansas;  $30  for  non- 
residents.    Enrollment,  60. 

School  of  Fine  Arts. 

Harold  L.  Butler,  dean;  five  instructors.     Department  founded  1877. 
Dravv^ing,  painting,  design,  pottery,  history  of  art,  crafts  w^ork.     Tui- 
tion, $60  for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  350. 
.    Summer.     Harold  Putnam  Browne,  instructor.     Drawing  and  paint- 
ing; normal  course.    Tuition,  $10  for  six  weeks.     Enrollment,  45. 

LINDSBORG 

Bethany  College,  Art  Department. 

Birger  Sandzen,  director;  three  instructors.  Founded  1881.  Draw- 
ing, painting,  china  painting,  normal  art  and  design.  Tuition,  $64 
for  36  weeks.     Enrollment,  38. 

MANHATTAN 

►f«KANSAS  State  Agricultural  College,  Department  of  Architecture. 
Cecil  F.  Baker,  professor  in  charge ;  four  instructors.     Founded  1863. 
No  tuition,  incidental  fee,  $12  for  nine  months.     Four-year  course  in 
architecture.     Enrollment,  ?),?)76  in  all  courses. 

Department  of  Applied  Art. 

Araminta  Holman,  head  of  department ;  three  instructors.  Design, 
interior  decoration  and  furnishing ;  craftswork.  College  incidental 
fee,  $23  for  nine  months.    Enrollment,  500. 

TOPEKA 

►J* Washburn  College,  Art  Department. 

Mrs.  L.  D.  Whittemore,  director;  five  instructors.  Founded  1910. 
Drawing,  painting,  interior  decoration.  Tuition,  $12  to  $48  for  ten 
months.     Enrollment,  145. 

WICHITA 

Fairmont  College,  Art  Department. 

Elizabeth  Sprague,  head  of  department;  one  instructor.  Founded 
1901.  Drawing,  painting,  design,  interior  decoration,  history  of  art. 
Tuition  included  in  College  fee  of  $80  for  nine  months.  Enroll- 
ment,  100. 

KENTUCKY 
LEXINGTON 

4*University  of  Kentucky,  Art  Department. 

Two  instructors.  Founded  1918.  Drawing,  painting,  art  appreciation. 
Term  of  ten  months.     Enrollment,  200, 


ART  SCHOOLS  197 


Kentucky —  (  Continued) . 
LOUISVILLE 

Louisville  School  of  Art,  638  South  Fourth  Avenue. 

Alexander  J.  Van  Leshout,  director ;  five  instructors.     Founded  1919. 

Freehand    drawing,   commercial    art,    painting,   modeling   and    etching. 

Day  and  evening  classes.    Tuition,  $130  for  34  weeks.     Enrollment,  75. 

University  of  Louisville,  Department  of  Architecture. 

W.  E.  Glossop,  head  of  department ;  one  instructor.  Established 
1913.  Conducted  in  co-operation  with  the  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of 
Design.    Tuition,  $25  for  nine  months.    Evening  classes  only. 

Art  Department,  119  West  Broadway. 

Keith  Sperry,  head  of  department ;  one  instructor.  Established  1912. 
Design,  handicrafts,  normal  art.  Tuition,  $100  for  full  academic 
course,  $25  art  alone;  course,  ten  months.     Enrollment,  22. 

LOUISIANA 

LAFAYETTE 

Southwestern  Louisiana  Institute,  Art  Department. 
Jane  Gibbs,  head  of  department;   one  instructor.     Founded   1900.       Tui- 
tion free ;  nine  months.     Enrollment,  about  175. 

NEW  ORLEANS 

Tulane  University,  College  of  Technology,  School  of  Architecture. 
Charles    Armstrong,    assistant    professor    of    architecture ;     four    in- 
structors.     School    founded    1907.      Tuition,   $100    for   eight   months. 
Enrollment,  about  30. 

Tulane  Normal  Summer  School. 

A.  B.  Dinwiddie,  director ;  three  instructors.  Drawing,  painting, 
design,  modeling,  mechanical  drawing.  Tuition,  $7.50  to  teachers ; 
others  $15  for  six  weeks ;  for  nine  weeks,  $10  and  $20.  Enrollment, 
1,375. 

H.  Sophie  Nezvcomh  Memorial  College  School  of  Art,  Audubon  Place, 
New  Orleans. 

Ellsworth  Woodward,  director;  eight  instructors.  Founded  1887. 
Fine,  decorative,  industrial  art ;  special  courses  in  pottery,  book- 
binding, jewelry,  and  embroidery.  Tuition,  $165  for  eight  months. 
Enrollment,  311. 

MAINE 
BANGOR 

School  of  the  Bangor  Society  of  Art,  25  Broad  Street. 

Alice  P.  Walker,  head  of  department;  six  instructors.     Founded  1917. 
Painting,    drawing,    crafts.      Tuition,    $10    for    course    of    20   lessons. 
Enrollment,  49. 
No  report  1921. 

BOOTHBAY  HARBOR 

Commonwealth  Art  Colony,  Summer  Art  School. 

Asa  G.  Randall,  director  (winter,  498  Broadway,  Providence,  R.  I.), 
five  instructors.  Founded  1904.  Drawing,  painting,  design,  block 
printing  and  crafts.    Tuition,  $35  for  seven  weeks.    Enrollment,  64. 

Snell  Summer  Class. 

Henry  B.  Snell,  director;  one  instructor.  Founded  1921.  Oil  and 
water  color  painting,  composition.  Tuition,  $45  for  from  six  to 
eight  weeks.    Enrollment,  40. 


198  ART  SCHOOLS 


Maine —  (  Continued) . 
OGUNQUIT 

Summer  School  in  Modeling. 

Victor  D.  Brenner,  director.    Founded  1914.    Sculpture,    Tuition,  $100 

for  six  weeks. 

Inactive. 

Summer  School  of  Drawing  and  Painting. 

Russell  T.  Hyde,  director ;  one  instructor.     Founded  1919.     Painting, 
drawing.     Tuition,  $40  for  six  weeks.     Enrollment,  20. 
No  report  1921. 

Thurnscoe  School  of  Modern  Art. 

Hamilton  Easter  Field  (winter,  106  Columbia  Heights,  Borough  of 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y.),  director;  two  instructors.  Founded 
1911.  Painting,  life  drawing  and  wood  carving.  Tuition,  $50  for 
ten  weeks.     Enrollment,  about  25, 

PORTLAND 

School  of  Fine  Arts  of  the  Portland  Society  of  Art,  Sweat  Memorial, 
97  Spring  Street. 

Alice  H,  Howes,  director;  four  instructors.  Founded  1911.  Draw- 
ing, painting,  design.    Tuition,  $80  for  eight  months.    Enrollment,  99. 


MARYLAND 

BALTIMORE 

Charcoal  Club  School  of  Art,  1230  St.  Paul  Street. 

R.  McGill  Mackall  and  Eric  Haupt,  directors.  School  founded  1883. 
Drawing  and  painting,  etching  and  architecture.  Day,  evening  and 
Saturday  classes.  Tuition,  $10  to  $36  for  eight  months.  Enroll- 
ment, 40. 

Architectural  Atelier. 

Laurence    H.    Fowler,    patron ;    Guy    Hecklinger,    massier.      Founded 
1917.     Architecture  in  co-operation  with  the  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of 
Design.    Enrollment,  6. 
Inactive. 

Maryland  Institute  for  the  Promotion  of  the  Mechanic  Arts. 

School  of  Fine  and  Practical  Arts. 

Alon  Bement,  director ;  sixty-four  instructors.  Original  school 
founded  in  1825 ;  reorganized  into  two  schools  in  1849 ;  reorganized 
into  three  schools — School  of  Architectural  Drawing,  School  of  Fine 
Arts,  and  School  of  Sculpture,  in  1899.  Tuition  from  $8  to  $50  for 
eight  months.     Total  enrollment,  2,199. 

Summer.  Edith  Hoyt  Stewart,  director.  Founded  1916.  Three  in- 
structors. Drawing  and  painting  from  the  model  and  out-of-doors ; 
landscape ;  design.  Tuition,  $20  for  six  weeks.  Open  only  to  Fine 
Art  and  Design  students.    Enrollment,  44. 

Night  School,  Mt.  Royal  Avenue  and  Lanvale  Street ;  also  Market  Place. 
B.  Wheeler  Sweany,  principal  Market  Place  schools ;  thirty-two  in- 
structors. Founded  1850.  Architecture,  mechanical  and  sheet  metal 
courses ;  free-hand  drawing  and  design  at  Mt.  Royal  Avenue.  Over 
$500  annually  in  premiums.  Four  years  leading  to  diploma.  Three 
evenings  a  week,  7.30  to  9.30  p.m.    Tuition,  $8  to  $30. 


ART  SCHOOLS  199 


Maryland  Institute —  ( Continued ) . 

Saturday  Schools,  Mt.  Royal  Avenue ;  also  Market  Place. 

Seventeen  instructors.  Classes  for  both  children  and  adults  ^  in 
sculpture,  fine  and  industrial  arts,  teachers'  training  courses.  Tuition, 
$6  to  $12  for  eight  months.     Enrollment,  450. 

RiNEHART  School  of  Sculpture. 

Maintained  jointly  by  the  Peabody  Institute  and  the  Maryland  In- 
stitute. Herbert  Adams  and  Ephraim  Keyser,  instructors.  Tuition, 
free  to  graduates  of  the  Maryland  Institute,  with  90  per  cent, 
average;  to  others,  $50  for  eight  months.  Traveling  scholarships 
to  Paris  and  Rome.     Enrollment,  8. 


MASSACHUSETTS 

AUBURNDALE 

Lasell  Seminary,  Art  Department. 

Margarita  W.  Ells,  director;  one  instructor.  Founded  1851.  Drawing, 
painting,  design,  crafts,  history  of  art.  Tuition,  $90  for  nine  months. 
Enrollment,  24. 

BOSTON 

Boston  Architectural  Club,  16  Somerset  Street. 

William  Roger  Greeley,  president  (9  Park  Street)  ;  ten  instructors. 
Architecture  in  co-operation  with  the  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of  De- 
sign, Harvard,  and  the  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology. 
Founded  1889.  Evenings  only.  Tuition,  $10  to  $25  for  eight 
months.    Enrollment,  about  100. 

Copley  Society,  Rogers  Building.     (See  Society  report). 

Frederick  W.  Coburn,  secretary ;  John  Wilson,  instructor.  Paint- 
ing, sculpture;  also  use  of  models  without  instruction.  Fees,  $1.50 
a  month  for  members ;  $2.50  for  non-members. 

Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology,  Department  of  Architecture, 
491  Boylston  Street. 

William  Emerson,  chairman  of  department;  Ralph  Adams  Cram, 
senior  professor  of  architecture;  twelve  instructors.  Founded  1865. 
Architecture  and  architectural  engineering.  Tuition,  $300  for  nine 
months.  Day  classes  only;  rooms  open  evenings.  Enrollment,  123. 
Summer.    Tuition,  $20  to  $75  for  six  to  eight  weeks. 

►^•Massachusetts  Normal  Art  School,  Exeter  and  Newbury  Streets. 
Royal  B.  Farnum,  director;  twenty-five  instructors.  Founded  1873. 
Elective  courses :  Applied  arts  in  public  schools,  including  depart- 
mental instruction  and  supervision  of  drawing  and  handwork  in 
elementary  schools — drawing,  design,  and  handicrafts  in  high  schools — 
and  mechanical  and  architectural  drafting  in  high  schools ;  general 
design ;  modeling  and  casting ;  and  graphic  arts,  including  general  and 
costume  illustration.  Courses  are  given  in  wood  and  metal  working, 
jewelry  and  drafting  and  proving  of  costume  patterns.  All  candidates 
for  the  diploma  of  the  School  (four  years'  course)  are  required  to 
demonstrate  their  ability  to  do  practical  work  in  part-time  relations 
in  education  and  industry  under  co-ordinating  and  supervising  in- 
structors from  the  field.  Full  college  entrance  requirements  for  ad- 
mission. Tuition  is  free  to  students  who  are  citizens  of  this  State; 
to  others,  $100  for  ten  months.  Enrollment,  300,  day  school,  not 
including  postgraduates. 


200  ART  SCHOOLS 


Massachusetts — (Continued) . 

The  New  School,  248  Boylston  Street. 

Douglas  John  Connah,  director;  ten  instructors.  Founded  1911. 
Design,  painting,  illustration,  commercial  design,  interior  decora- 
tion, costume  design,  mural  decoration ;  Saturday  classes.  Tuition, 
$150  for  nine  months ;  evening,  $50.  Enrollment,  400. 
Summer  school  at  Boston ;  four  instructors.  Tuition,  $40  for  nine 
weeks.     Enrollment,  75. 

School  of  Decorative  Design,  739  Boylston  Street. 

Amy  M,  Sacker,  director;  three  instructors.  Founded  1901,  Gen- 
eral design,  costume,  interior  decoration,  special  lecture  course  on 
interior  decoration.     Tuition,  $120  for  term  of  eight  months. 

School   of   Fine  Arts,   Crafts  and  Decorative  Design,  349   Newbury 
Street. 

Katherine  B.  Child,  director;  C.  Howard  Walker,  critic;  nine  in- 
structors. Established  1913.  Design,  painting,  drawing,  interior 
decoration,  illustration,  costume  design,  history  of  art,  metal  work, 
etc.  Work  conducted  by  problems,  criticisms  and  lectures ;  Museum 
study.  Four  years'  course  for  diploma.  Day  and  evening  classes. 
Tuition,  $225  for  eight  months.     Enrollment,  85. 

School  of  the  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Huntington  Avenue. 

Thomas  Allen,  Chairman  of  the  Council ;  eleven  instructors.  Founded 
1876.  Drawing  required  ;•  painting,  modeling  or  design  elective. 
Traveling  Scholarships:  Paige  (painting).  Hunt  (modeling),  Cum- 
mings  (design).  20  resident  Scholarships,  Registration  fee  of  $10. 
Tuition,  $120  for  first  year;  $110  for  succeeding  years.  Term  of 
eight  months.     Enrollment,  283. 

CAMBRIDGE 

Harvard  University 

Graduate  School  of  Architecture,  Robinson  Hall. 

Charles  Wilson  Killam,  chairman;  ten  instructors.  Department 
founded  1893.  Courses  leading  to  degree  of  Master  in  Architecture 
and  in  Architectural  Engineering.  Tuition,  $250  for  nine  months. 
Enrollment,  38. 

Graduate  School  of  Landscape  Architecture. 

James  Sturgis  Pray,  Chairman,  and  Charles  Eliot,  Professor ;  Henry 
Vincent  Hubbard,  Assistant  Professor;  four  instructors.  School  es- 
tablished 1900.  Special  course  in  city  planning.  Course  leading  to 
degree  of  M.L.A.  Several  scholarships  and  traveling  fellowships. 
Tuition,  $250  for  nine  months.    Enrollment,  Z2. 

.    Division  of  Fine  Arts. 

George  Henry  Chase,  chairman ;  eight  professors  and  nine  instruc- 
tors. Department  established  1874.  Tuition,  $250  for  nine  months. 
Enrollment,  328. 

Summer  School  of  Architecture. 

Charles  W.  Killam,  chairman ;  Architectural  design.  Tuition,  $35 
for  six  weeks ;  registration  fee,  $5.     Enrollment,  29, 

Radcliffe  College,  Art  Department,  10  Garden  Street. 

George  H.  Chase,  chairman  of  department;  four  professors  and 
two  instructors.  Founded  1879.  Drawing,  painting,  design  and  his- 
tory of  art.    Tuition,  $250  for  nine  months.    Enrollment,  about  100. 


ART  SCHOOLS  201 


Massachusetts — (Continued). 

CHATHAM 

Chatham   (Cape  Cod)    Summer  Classes. 

Harold  C.  Dunbar,  director;  one  instructor.  Founded  1915.  Land- 
scape painting,  poster  and  monotype  designing.  Tuition,  $20  a  month. 
Term  of  ten  weeks.     Enrollment,  21. 

EAST  GLOUCESTER 

Breckenridge  School  of  Painting. 

Hugh  H.  Breckenridge,  director.  Founded  1920.  Drawing  and  paint- 
ing.    Tuition,  $65  for  eight  weeks;  $40  for  four  weeks. 

Summer  Painting  Class,  78  Rocky  Neck  Road. 

Felicia  Waldo  Howell,  director.  Founded  1918.  Tuition,  $60  for 
eight  weeks.     Enrollment,  26. 

GROTON 

LowTHORPE  School  of  Landscape  Architecture  for  Women. 

Miss  A.  L.  Cogswell,  principal;  six  instructors.  Founded  1901.  Three- 
year  course  in  landscape  architecture;  two-year  course  in  horticul- 
ture and  planting  design.  Tuition,  $200  for  nine  and  a  half  months. 
Enrollment,  21. 

LOWELL 

Textile  School,  Moody  Street  and  Colonial  Avenue. 

Charles  H.  Fames,  president ;  Herman  H.  Bachman,  head  of  depart- 
ment;  two  other  instructors  in  drawing  and  design.  Founded  1897; 
building  erected  1903.  Design  for  textile  trades  with  full  technical 
application.  Tuition  in  day  course  $150  for  residents  of  Massachu- 
setts ;  $200  for  non-residents,  and  $300  for  foreigners ;  evening  free  to 
residents  of  Lowell;  others,  $10  for  two-night  a  week  courses;  $15 
for  three-night,  and  $20  for  four-night.  Term  of  8  months  for  day 
classes,  20  weeks  for  evening.     Enrollment,  293. 

MONTEREY 

Berkshire  Summer  School  of  Art. 

Raymond  P.  Ensign  (of  the  Cleveland  School  of  Art),  and  Ernest 
W.  Watson  (of  Pratt  Institute,  Brooklyn,  New  York),  directors; 
eight  instructors.  Founded  1915.  Painting,  pencil  sketching,  design, 
crafts,  commercial  illustration,  interior  decoration,  linoleum  block 
poster  printing,  mechanical  drawing,  normal  course.  Tuition,  $40  for 
six  weeks.     Enrollment,  112. 

NEW  BEDFORD 

New  Bedford  Textile  School,  1171-1219  Purchase  Street. 

W.  E.  Hatch,  president ;  Samuel  Holt,  head  of  art  department ;  two 
instructors.  Founded  1900.  Textile  design  as  part  of  a  well-equipped 
textile  school.  Tuition  free  for  residents  of  State;  for  non-residents, 
$150.     Term  of  nine  months.     Enrollment,  about   100. 

SwAiN  Free  School  of  Design,  391  County  Street. 

H.  A.  Neyland,  director;  ten  instructors.  Founded  1882;  re-or- 
ganized 1902.  Drawing,  painting,  illustration,  arts  and  crafts,  archi- 
tecture, jewelry  and  metal  work,  ceramics,  modeling;  normal  art. 
Tuition  free ;  eight  month  course ;  day  and  evening  sessions.  Sev- 
eral prizes.     Enrollment,  244. 

Architectural  Atelier. 

Nat.  C.  Smith,  patron;  Joseph  Welsh,  massier.  Architecture  in  co- 
operation with  the  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of  Design. 


202  ART  SCHOOLS 


Massachusetts — (Continued). 
PROVINCETOWN 

Cape  Cod  School  of  Art. 

Harry    N.    Campbell,    director ;    two    instructors.      Established    1899. 

Still-life,  portrait,  figure  and  landscape  painting.    Tuition,  $50  for  two 

months.     Enrollment,  125. 

Summer  School  of  Drawing  and  Painting. 

E.  Ambrose  Webster,  director ;  one  instructor.  Founded  1907.  Draw- 
ing, painting,  landscape  and  still  life.  Tuition,  $25  a  month  for  16 
to  20  weeks.     Enrollment,  about  60. 

West  End  School  of  Art. 

George  Elmer  Browne,  director.  Landscape  and  figure  painting,  oil 
and  water  color. 

ROCKPORT 

Summer  School  of  Drawing  and  Painting. 

A.  T.  Hubbard,  director ;  two  instructors.  Founded  1920.  Composi- 
tion, drawing  and  painting.  Tuition,  $50  for  nine  weeks.  Enroll- 
ment, 30. 

SALEM 

State  Normal  School,  Art  Department,  Lafayette  St.  and  Loring  Ave. 
Charles  Frederick  Whitney,  head  of  Department ;  two  instructors. 
Department  established  1854.  Practical  and  fine  arts.  Tuition  free 
to  residents  of  Massachusetts.  Term  of  ten  months.  Enrollment, 
250  in  regular  art  courses ;  30  taking  special  art  courses. 

WELLESLEY 

Wellesley  College,  Art  Department. 

Alice  Van  Vechten  Brown,  head  of  department;  seven  instructors. 
Founded  1875;  re-organized  1897.  Courses  in  history  of  art  and 
studio  practice.    Term  of  nine  months.    Enrollment,  268. 

WORCESTER 

School  of  the  Worcester  Art  Museum,  Salisbury  House,  24  Highland 
Street. 

H.  Stuart  Michie,  principal;  six  instructors.  Founded  1898.  De- 
sign, drawing  and  painting,  metal  work,  pottery,  modeling,  weaving 
and  basketry.  Tuition  for  eight  months,  $30  in  day  class ;  evening 
class,  $2  for  six  months ;  several  scholarships  awarded.  Enrollment, 
344. 

MICHIGAN 
ANN  ARBOR 

University  of  Michigan,  College  of  Architecture. 
Emil  Lorch,  professor  in  charge ;  thirteen  instructors.  School  founded 
1906.  Architecture,  building  construction,  decorative  design,  drawing 
and  painting.  Tuition,  nine  months,  for  residents  of  the  State,  women 
$91,  men  $95;  non-residents,  women  $116,  men  $120.  Enrollment,  183. 
Summer.  Four  instructors.  Architectural  design,  freehand  drawing 
and  painting,  teachers'  art  course.  Tuition,  $26.50  for  eight  weeks. 
Enrollment,  53. 

BATTLE  CREEK 

School  of  Applied  Art. 

C.  W.  Ellis,  director ;  four  instructors.  Founded,  1898.  General  draw- 
ing, commercial  illustration,  cartooning,  architectural  perspective, 
teachers'  normal  course.     Correspondence  classes  only. 


ART  SCHOOLS  203 


Michigan — (Continued) . 

DETROIT 

School  of  Fine  Arts,  Parsons  Building,  Adams  Avenue. 

John  P.  Wicker,  director,  and  two  instructors.  Founded  1910.  Paint- 
ing, illustration,  commercial  design.  Tuition,  eight  months,  day  $125, 
evening  $50.    Enrollment,  350. 

Van  Leyen  &  Schilling  Atelier,  1115  Union  Trust  Building, 

Architecture  in  co-operation  with  the  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of  Design, 
Enrollment,  6. 
No  report  1921. 

GRAND  RAPIDS 

School  of  Art  and  Industry,  Fountain  Street. 

A.  G.  Pelikan,  director;  five  instructors.  Established  1916.  Drawing, 
painting,  illustration,  decorative,  applied  and  commercial  design,  model- 
ing, interior  decoration.  Day,  night  and  children's  classes.  Tuition, 
$80  for  non-residents;  $40  for  residents,  for  nine  months.  Enroll- 
ment, 152, 

KALAMAZOO 

Western  State  Normal  School,  Art  Department. 

Rose  R.  Netzorg,  director;  three  instructors.  Founded  1904.  Normal 
drawing,  painting,  design,  construction,  history  of  art;  industrial  art. 
Tuition,  $22.50  for  ten  months.     Enrollment,  200. 

Summer.  Four  instructors.  Teachers'  art,  handicrafts,  design,  figure 
illustration,  commercial  art.  Tuition,  $5  for  term  of  six  weeks.  En- 
rollment, 125, 

SAUGATUCK 

Summer  School  of  Art  Institute  of  Chicago. 

F.   F,    Fursman,    director;    two   instructors.     Founded    1911.      Land- 
scape,  figure   painting,    composition,    drawing.     Tuition,   $50    for    ten 
weeks.     Enrollment,  80. 
No  report  1921. 

MINNESOTA 

MINNEAPOLIS 

DuNwooDY  Institute,  818   Superior  Boulevard. 

C.  A.  Prosser,  director ;  three  instructors.  Founded  1914.  Interior 
decoration;  design  for  printers.  Evening  classes  only.  Tuition,  $10 
for  six  months.    Enrollment,  50, 

•^Federal  Schools,  Incorporated,  (Federal  School  of  Commercial 
Designing  and  Federal  School  of  Applied  Cartooning),  15  South 
Fourth  Street, 

Lauros  Monroe  Pheonix  and  Charles  Batholomew,  deans  of  schools; 
eight  instructors.  Founded  1914.  In  commercial  design ;  composition, 
rendering,  advertising,  theory  of  color,  anatomy,  lettering,  perspective, 
and  book  illustration.  In  applied  cartooning;  cartooning,  animated 
art,  card  writing,  lettering,  animal  draftsmanship,  covers,  chalk  talks. 
Tuition  in  both  schools,  $125^.  Instruction  through  correspondence 
methods  averages  eighteen  months  of  consecutive  work.  Enrollment, 
commercial  designing,  5,077;  illustrating  and  cartooning,   1,828, 

Minneapolis  School  of  Art,  Minneapolis  Institute  of  Arts,  200  East 
25th  Street. 

Mary    Moulton    Cheney,   director ;    seven   instructors.  Founded    1886. 

Painting,    illustration,    sculpture,   commercial    design,  interior   decora- 


204  ART  SCHOOLS 


Minnesota — Minneapolis   School  of  Art — ^(Continued). 

tion,  textile  and  decorative  design.  Tuition,  $125  for  eight  months ; 
evening,  $55   for  six  months.     Enrollment,  400. 

Summer.  Six  instructors.  Outdoor  figure  and  landscape  painting, 
outdoor  figure-painting,  modeling,  drawing,  design  and  lettering, 
textile  v^eaving.     Tuition,  $30  for  six  weeks.    Enrollment,  71. 

University  of  Minnesota,  Department  of  Architecture. 

Frederick  M.  Mann,  professor  in  charge;  eight  instructors.  Depart- 
ment founded  1913.  Architecture  and  decoration.  Day  and  evening 
classes.  Tuition,  $90  for  residents  of  Minnesota;  $120  for  non- 
residents for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  about  150. 

Department  of  Art  Education. 

Ruth  Raymond,  principal;  five  instructors.  Founded  1906;  affiliated 
with  University  1918.  Representative,  decorative  and  industrial  art 
for  teachers.  Tuition,  $60  for  residents  of  Minnesota;  $90  for  non- 
residents for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  85. 

MISSISSIPPI 

JACKSON 

Belhaven  College,  Art  Department. 

Elizabeth  Cary  Lemly,  director.  Founded  1911.  Painting,  drawing, 
illustration,  design,  interior  decoration,  ceramics.  Tuition,  $50  for 
nine  months.     Enrollment,  92,  and  15  special. 

MISSOURI 

COLUMBIA 

University  of  Missouri,  Ai't  Department. 

John  S.  Ankeney;  three  instructors.  Theory  and  practice  of  art,  class- 
ical archaeology,  manual  arts,  history  of  art.  Tuition  free.  Term 
of'four  months.     Enrollment,  125. 

KANSAS  CITY 

Kansas  City  Art  Institute  School,  Armour  and  Warwick  Boulevards. 
H.  M.  Kurtzworth,  director;  six  instructors.  Founded  1907.  Draw- 
ing, painting,  design,  illustration,  modeling,  interior  decoration.  Day 
and  evening ;  Saturday  children  classes.  Tuition,  $90  for  day,  $30  for 
evening  for  thirty-three  weeks.  Enrollment,  340. 
Summer.  Academic  and  normal  art.  Tuition,  $15  for  six  weeks. 
Enrollment,  60. 

ST.  LOUIS 

St.  Louis  Architectural  Club  Atelier,  514  Culver  Way. 

Gabriel  Ferrand,  director ;  three  instructors.  Founded  1895.  Prob- 
lems in  co-operation  with  Washington  University.  Evening  classes 
only.  Four  year  course  with  Washington  University  credits,  leading 
to  a  certificate  in  architecture.  Tuition,  $30  for  eight  months.  En- 
rollm.ent,  45. 

Washington  University,  School  of  Architecture. 

Gabriel  Ferrand,  professor  of  design;  one  associate  professor  and 
one  assistant  professor,  and  four  instructors.  School  founded  1901. 
Architecture.  Day  and  evening  classes.  Tuition,  eight  months,  $200; 
day  classes;  $30,  evening  classes.     Enrollment,  118. 


ART  SCHOOLS  205 


Missouri — Washington  University —  ( Continued) . 

Department  of  Draiving  and  History  of  Art. 

Holmes  Smith,  professor  in  charge;  three  instructors.  Department 
founded  1896.  History  of  art,  eleven  courses;  drawing,  nine  courses. 
Day  and  evening  clases.  Students  are  graduated  as  of  The  College 
or  The  School  of  Architecture.  Tuition  in  each  department,  $150 
for  34  v^eeks. 

School  of  Fine  Arts,  Skinker  Read  and  Lindell  Boulevard. 

E.  H.  Wuerpel,  director ;  thirteen  instructors.  Founded  1874.  Drav^- 
ing,  painting,  sculpture,  modeling,  illustration,  design,  interior  dec- 
oration, metal  work,  etching,  pottery,  bookbinding,  wood-carving,  crafts. 
Several  scholarships.  Tuition,  $75  for  full  time,  36  weeks ;  $54  for 
half   time.     Saturday    classes.     Enrollment,   470. 

WARRENSBURG 

Central  Missouri  State  Teachers'  College,  Art  Department. 

Mayme  B.  Harwood,  head  of  department;  two  instructors.  Founded 
1870.  Composition  and  perspective;  theory  and  practice  of  teaching; 
drawing,  bookbinding,  commercial  and  dress  design,  interior  decora- 
tion, history  of  art,  applied  science.  Tuition,  $36  for  nine  months; 
two  years'  course.     Enrollment,  1167. 

Summer.  Three  instructors.  Tuition,  $12  for  term  of  ten  weeks. 
Enrollment,  1496. 

NEBRASKA 

LINCOLN 

University  of  Nebraska,  School  of  Fine  Arts. 

Paul  H.  Grummann,  director ;  seven  instructors.  Reorganized  1912. 
Degree  of  B.F.A.  Gallery  contains  paintings  purchased  by  Nebraska 
Art  Association.  Fine  industrial  and  normal  art,  interior  decoration, 
ceramics.  Matriculation  fee,  $5 ;  incidentals,  $5 ;  studio  $2  and  $3. 
Term  of  nine  months.  Day  and  evening  classes.  Enrollment,  399 
in  university;  83  specializing  in  drawing  and  painting. 
Summer.  Four  instructors.  Fine  and  normal  art  and  ceramics. 
Tuition,  $3  for  six  weeks.    Enrollment  148. 

NEW  HAMPSHIRE 
DUBLIN 

Dublin  School  of  Painting. 

R.  S.  Meryman  and  A.  R.  James,  directors ;  two  instructors.  Founded 
1920.  Tuition,  $80  for  nine  weeks  $50  for  five  weeks,  $11  for  one 
week.     Enrollment,  27. 

MANCHESTER 

Manchester  Institute  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  Concord  and  Pine  Streets. 
Jennie  Young,  head  of  art  department ;  seven  instructors.  Founded 
1898.  Drawing,  painting,  modeling,  design,  wood  carving,  metal 
vvork,  jewelry,  block  printing,  lace  making,  embroidery,  basketry,  book- 
binding, weaving  and  rug  making.  Membership  dues  of  $5  a  year 
include  tuition ;  twenty-four  weeks'  course.  Day,  evening  and  chil- 
dren's classes.     Enrollment,  1,200. 

NEW    JERSEY 

NEWARK 

Fawcett  School  of  Industrial  Art,  55  Academy  Street. 

Hugo  B.  Froehlich,  director ;  thirty-five  instructors.  Founded  1882.  A 
school   of   industrial   art   workers,   particularly    for   engineers,  drafts- 


206  ART  SCHOOLS 


New  Jersey — Fawcett  School — (Continued). 

men,  machinists,  tool-makers,  building  tradesmen,  jewelers,  commercial 
illustrators  and  printers.  Department:  Industrial  art,  general  art, 
mechanical,  architectural.  Afternoon  and  evening  classes ;  courses 
three  to  five  years.  Tuition  free  to  residents  of  Newark,  for  others, 
$30  for  seven  months.  Enrollment,  about  1,200. 
Summer.    Tuition,  $5  for  six  weeks. 

TRENTON 

School  of  Industrial  Arts,  West  State  and  Willow  Streets. 

Frank  Forrest  Frederick,  director ;  forty  instructors.  Founded  1898. 
Fine,  normal,  mechanic,  and  domestic  art,  architecture,  industrial  art, 
including  pottery,  and  wood  work.  Winter,  ten  months :  day  and 
evening  sessions.  Tuition,  $25  a  year  for  residents  of  New  Jersey ; 
treble  for  non-residents  of  State.    Enrollment,  1,333. 

NEW    MEXICO 

EAST  LAS  VEGAS 

New  Mexico  Normal  University,  Art  Department. 

Marie  Senecal,  head  of  department;  two  instructors.     Founded  1898. 

Drawing,    modeling,    design.      Registration,    library   and    text    fee    of 

$10.20  for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  60. 

Summer.     Tuition,  $5   for  eight  weeks.     Enrollment,  30. 

No  report  1921. 

SANTA  FE 

School  of  American  Research,  Palace  of  the  Governors. 

Edgar  L.  Hewett,  director;  Paul  A.  F.  Walter,  secretary;  Lansing 
Bloom,  assistant  to  the  director ;  Kenneth  M.  Chapman,  head  of  art 
department.  Founded  1907.  Does  not  offer  regular  course  of  instruc- 
tion. Maintains  lecture  courses.  Offers  facilities  for  original  work. 
Art  Gallery  and  Museum  of  Archaeology.  Continual  art  exhibitions. 
Maintained  by  the  Archaeological  Institute  of  America  and  State  of 
New  Mexico. 

NEW    YORK 

ALFRED 

•^New  York   State   School  of  Clay-Working  and  Ceramics,  Alfred 
University. 

Charles  F.  Binns,  director;  two  art  instructors.  School  founded 
1900.  Ceramic  engineering,  pottery,  applied  design.  Tuition  free  for 
residents  of  New  York  State.  Term  of  nine  months.  Enrollment, 
87. 

BUFFALO 

Art  School  of  the  Albright  Art  Gallery,  1110  Elmwood  Avenue. 

Urquhart  Wilcox,  head  of  department;  ten  instructors.  Founded 
1885.  Drawing,  painting,  modeling,  design,  applied  arts,  interior 
decoration,  normal  art.  Day  and  evening  classes.  Tuition,  $80  for 
eight  months.     Enrollment,  250. 

CHAUTAUQUA 

Chautauqua  School  of  Arts  and  Crafts. 

Frank  von  der  Lancken,  director ;  seven  instructors.  Founded  1903. 
Twenty-seven  courses,  including  outdoor  sketching,  crafts  and  normal 
art.  Tuition,  $18  a  course  for  six  weeks;  $35  for  teachers'  training 
course.    Enrollment,  208. 


ART  SCHOOLS  207 


New  York — (Continued). 

ITHACA 

Cornell  University,  College  of  Architecture. 

Francke  Huntington  Bosworth,  Jr.,  dean;  twelve  instructors.  College 
founded  1871.  Four  and  five  year  courses  for  degree  B.Arch.  or 
B.S.Arch. ;  one  year  graduate  course  for  M.Arch. ;  two-year  special 
course  for  certificate.  Tuition,  $250  for  nine  months.  Enrollment, 
168. 

MILTON-ON-HUDSON 

Elverhoj  Colony  of  Painters  and  Craftsmen,  Summer  School. 

A.  H.  Andersen,  director;  four  instructors.  Founded  1913.  Paint- 
ing, sculpture,  etching,  weaving,  pottery,  jewelry  and  metal  crafts. 
Tuition,  averages,  $50  for  ten  weeks.     Enrollment,  34. 

NEW  YORK  CITY 

American  School  of  Miniature  Painting,  939  Eighth  Ave.,  Borough  of 
Manhattan, 

Mabel  R.  Welch,  director;  three  instructors.  Established  1914.  En- 
rollment, 25. 

Ardsley  School  of  Modern  Art,  106  Columbia  Heights,  Borough  of 
Brooklyn. 

Hamilton    Easter    Field,    director.     Founded    1916.      Life   and    figure 
painting,  wood  carving.     Term  of  eight  months. 
Summer  at  Ogunquit,  Maine. 

•I^Art  Students'  League  of  New  York,  215  West  57th  Street,  Borough 
of  Manhattan. 

Gififord  Beal,  president;  twenty-three  instructors.  Founded  1875. 
Painting,  drawing,  illustration,  sculpture,  etching.  Day  and  evening 
classes.  Tuition,  $70  to  $80  for  eight  months.  Enrollment,  2,381. 
Summer.  Three  instructors.  Drawing,  painting,  illustration.  Tui- 
tion, $30  for  seventeen  weeks.  Enrollment,  346.  Also  summer  at 
Woodstock,  N.  Y.     Enrollment,  135. 

•^Beaux-Arts  Institute  of  Design,  126  East  75th  Street,  Borough  of 
Manhattan.     Lloyd  Warren,  director. 

Department  of  Architecture.  R.  M.  Hood,  director.  Established  in 
1894.  Forty-six  competitions  annually  in  architectural  design  and 
the  styles  of  architecture,  open  to  the  draughtsmen  and  students 
in  architectural  schools  in  the  United  States  and  Canada,  and  modeled 
on  the  system  of  instruction  adopted  by  the  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  in 
Paris.  Free,  except  for  the  annual  registration  fee  of  $2  for  twelve 
months,  no  restrictions  as  to  the  age,  nationality  or  sex  of  the 
students.  No  preliminary  examinations,  but  new  students  are  ex- 
pected to  have  a  knowledge  of  the  five  orders  of  architecture.  Bronze 
and  silver  medals  awarded  for  excellence  in  design,  and  money-prizes 
are  offered  in  special  prizes  for  decoration,  group-planning  of  build- 
ings, etc.  Certificates  presented  to  all  students  completing  the  course 
as  defined  in  the  circular  of  information,  which  will  be  furnished 
on  request.     Total  enrollment,  850. 

Department  of  Interior  Decoration.  Fourteen  competitions,  programs 
issued  every  six  weeks.  Atelier  in  the  building  of  the  Institute  with 
instructor  correcting  twice  a  week  in  the  evening.  Open  to  male 
students  without  examinations  or  fees.  Programs  sent  to  individuals 
or  schools  on  application ;  they  can  be  executed  by  students  in  any 
locality  and  sent  to  the  Insitute  for  judgment  by  the  special  jury. 
Bronze  and  silver  medals  awarded.    Enrollment,  58. 


208  ART  SCHOOLS 


New  York  City — Beaux-Arts   Institute — (Continued). 

Department  of  Sculpture.  John  Gregory,  director.  Ateliers  for  male 
students  in  the  building  of  the  Institute;  three  courses  (Architectural 
Ornament,  Life  Drawing  and  Modeling  and  Composition)  ;  no  exam- 
inations ;  no  fees ;  open  all  day,  and  evening,  all  the  year  round, 
instructors  visit  classes  twice  a  week.  Judgments  by  special  juries 
every  four  weeks.  Bronze  and  silver  medals  awarded.  Enroll- 
ment, 330. 

Department  of  Mural  Painting.  Ernest  C.  Peixotto,  director.  Programs 
of  problems  issued  every  month  to  whoever  applies  for  them.  No 
examinations,  nor  fees.  No  atelier  for  this  department  at  the  In- 
stitute ;  sketches  criticized  once  a  week  by  an  artist  who  receives 
the  students  at  his  studio.  Out  of  town  students  work  up  the 
problems  under  their  own  instructors;  monthly  judgment  by  jury 
of  artists.     Bronze  and  silver  medals  awarded.     Enrollment,  57. 

Brooklyn  Art  School  (Brooklyn  Institute  of  Art  and  Sciences),  355 
Adams  Street,  Borough  of  Brooklyn. 

Francis  Muller,  director ;  six  instructors.  Founded  1892.  Life,  cos- 
tume and  portrait  classes  for  men  and  women.  Afternoon  and 
evening  classes.     Tuition,  $8  a  month  for  term  of  eight  months. 

Columbia  University,  West   114th  to   121st   Streets,   Borough  of   Man- 
hattan. 
Nicholas  Murray  Butler,  president.    Founded  1754. 

School  of  Architecture,  Avery  Hall. 

W.  H.  Carpenter,  chairman  Administrative  Board ;  William  A.  Bor- 
ing, director ;  fourteen  instructors.  Founded  as  Department  under 
School  of  Mines  1881;  School  under  faculty  of  Fine  Arts  1902;  self- 
governing  school  1912.  Day  School  of  Architecture,  four  year  course, 
admits  only  candidates  for  the  degree  of  Bachelor  of  Architecture. 
The  equivalent  of  two  years  of  academic  study  in  a  college  of  recog- 
nized standing  is  required  for  entrance.  The  Combined  Course  (Col- 
lege and  Architecture)  is  designed  to  enable  students  to  begin  the 
study  of  architecture  as  early  in  the  College  course  as  practicable. 
Time  required  about  six  years.  Three  fellowships  for  foreign  study, 
six  undergraduate  scholarships,  emergency  appropriation  for  students, 
annual  medals  of  the  Alumni  Association  of  the  School  and  of  the 
American  Institute  of  Architects.  Tuition  in  Day  School  on  basis 
of  $8  an  academic  "point,"  averages  $360  for  eight  months.  Enroll- 
ment, about  85. 

Extension  Teaching  Course  in  Architecture. 

Evening  classes,  leading  to  the  Certificate  of  Proficiency  admits  stu- 
dents who  have  graduated  from  an  accredited  high  school  and  have 
had  one  year's  office  work.  Qualified  students,  not  candidates  for  a 
certificate,  may  be  admitted  to  individual  courses  as  special  students. 
Tuition  in  extension  courses,  $8  a  point;  total  amount  varies  accord- 
ing to  number  of  courses  a  student  carries  a  session.  Enrollment, 
about  205. 

Summer  Session,  Deportment  of  Architecture. 

John  J.  Coss,  director;  six  instructors.  Department  founded  1900. 
Six  weeks  during  July  and  August.  Separate  courses  open  to  those 
qualified  without  examination.  Tuition,  $8  a  point;  term  of  six 
weeks.    Enrollment,  78. 


ART  SCHOOLS  209 


New  York  City— Columbia  Vniversity— (Continued). 

Extension  Teaching,  Department  of  Architecture  and  Fine  Arts. 

J.  C.  Egbert,  director;  twelve  instructors.  Department  founded  1910. 
Design,  painting,  drawing,  modeling.  Afternoon,  evening  and  Sat- 
urday sessions,  open  without  examination  to  those  qualified  for  indi- 
vidual courses.  Tuition,  $6  per  point.  .  Term  of  15  weeks.  Enroll- 
ment, 1,031. 
No  report  1921. 

Teachers  College  of  Columbia  University,  School  of  Practical  Arts, 
525  West  120th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan. 
Maurice  A.  Bigelow,  director. 

Department  of  Fine  Arts. 

Arthur  W.  Dow,  director;  eighteen  instructors.  Fundamental  courses 
in  art  structure,  free-hand  drawing  and  appreciation.  Five  majors, 
any  one  of  which  may  lead  to  Bachelor's  degree:  I,  Drawing,  paint- 
ing and  modeling;  II,  Design  in  the  art  industries,  including  color 
printing,  silversmithing,  jewelry,  wood  carving  and  photography;  III, 
House  design  and  decoration,  including  furniture  and  metal  design; 
IV,  Costume  design  and  illustration ;  V,  Fine  Arts  education.  Tui- 
tion $180  to  $200  for  nine  months.  Enrollment,  810. 
Summer.  Arthur  W.  Dow,  director;  ten  instructors.  Same  courses 
as  in  winter.  Tuition,  $8  a  point;  term  of  six  weeks.  Enrollment, 
580. 

Cooper  Union  for  the  advancement  of  Science  and  Art,  Fourth  Avenue 
and  Eighth  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan. 
Charles  R.  Richards,  director. 

Night  School  of  Art  for  Men. 

Frederick  Dielman,  art  director ;  thirty-two  instructors.  Founded 
1860.  Architectural  and  free-hand  drawing,  including  life  class,  mod- 
eling, principles  of  design,  interior  decoration,  historic  decorative 
design ;  design  for  printing  and  for  costume.  Tuition  free ;  eight 
months'  session.  Enrollment,  681. 
No  report  1921. 

Woman's  Art  School. 

Frederick  Dielman,  art  director ;  Kate  L.  Reynolds,  principal ;  fifteen 
instructors.  .Founded  1859.  Elementary,  antique,  life,  illustration,  oil 
and  water  color  painting,  design,  fashion  design,  modeling.  School 
library  2,546  volumes ;  facilities  for  work  in  Museum  of  Decorative 
Arts.     Tuition  free ;  eight  months'  session.     Enrollment,  250. 

Educational   Alliance,  Art   School,    197   East   Broadway,   Borough    of 
Manhattan. 

Abbo  Ostrowsky,  director ;  seven  instructors.  Founded  1914  as  draw- 
ing class ;  reorganized  and  enlarged  1917.  Drawing,  painting,  model- 
ing, etching,  batik  and  pottery.  Tuition,  $12  for  twelve  months. 
Day  and  evening  classes.    Enrollment,  145. 

Federal    School   of    Commercial   Designing    (of    Minneapolis,    Minn.), 
185  Madison  Avenue,  Borough  of  Manhattan. 
L.  M.  Pheonix,  dean  of  Eastern  Division. 

Greenwich  House  Neighborhood  Art  School,  27  Barrow  Street,  Bor- 
ough of  Manhattan. 

Victor  Salvatore,  chairman  of  committee ;  seven  instructors.  Draw- 
ing, painting,  pottery,  wood  carving,  toy  making,  modeling.  Day  and 
evening  classes. 


210  ART  SCHOOLS 


New  York  City — (Continued). 

Mechanics'  Institute,  20  West  44th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan. 

Louis  Rouillion,  director;  twenty- four  instructors.  Architectural  and 
mechanical  drafting,  free-hand  drawing,  decorative  design  and  physics. 
Free  evening  school  only.  Courses  7.30  to  9.30  p.m.  for  six  months. 
Library  of  100,000  volumes.  Enrollment  over  1,700  in  school,  many 
taking  drafting  and  a  few  design. 

Metropolitan  Art  School,  58  West  57th  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan. 
Michel  Jacobs,  director ;  seven  instructors.  Color,  drawing,  design, 
Sculpture.  Day  and  evening  classes.  Tuition,  $50  to  $200  for  term 
of  eight  months.    Enrollment,  125. 

National  Academy  of  Design  Free  Schools,  175  West  109th  Street, 
Borough  of  Manhattan. 

William  S.  Robinson,  chairman  school  committee ;  nine  instructors  and 
three  lecturers.  Founded  1826.  Drawing,  painting,  sculpture,  etching, 
perspective,  composition  and  anatomy.  Day  and  evening  classes. 
Over  $1,000  annually  in  scholarships  and  prizes.  Matriculation  fee 
of  $10  for  each  of  the  two  terms  of  the  school  year;  tuition  free 
for  term  of  seven  months.     Enrollment,  506. 

New  York  Evening  School  of  Industrial  Art,  204-214  East  42d  Street, 
Borough  of  Manhattan. 

George  K.  Gombarts,  principal ;  seventeen  instructors.  Founded  1913. 
Book  illustration,  costume  design,  interior  decoration,  jewelry  and 
metal  design,  textile  and  stained  glass  design,  poster  and  commercial 
design,  mural  decoration,  modeling  and  sculpture.  Tuition  free ;  7.30 
to  9.30  P.M.,  four  nights  a  week  for  nine  months.    Enrollment,  875. 

•^New  York  School  of  Applied  Design  for  Women,  160  Lexington  Ave., 
Borough  of  Manhattan. 

Ellen  J.  Pond,  superintendent,  eleven  instructors.  Incorporated  1892. 
Design  for  textiles,  fashion  sketching,  posters,  advanced  commercial 
art,  interior  decoration,  illustration.  Frequent  exhibitions.  Tuition, 
$105  for  seven  and  one-half  months.  Several  free  scholarships  in 
school ;  about  $700  in  prizes.     Enrollment  limited  to  400. 

New  York  School  of  Fine  and  Applied  Art,  2239  Broadway,  Borough 
of  Manhattan. 

Frank  Alvah  Parsons,  president ;  thirty-six  instructors.  Founded  1909. 
Design,  landscape  and  domestic  architecture,  interior  decoration,  illus- 
tration, advertising,  posters,  stage  design,  costume,  normal  training. 
Tuition,  $200  for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  700. 

Summer.  Eleven  instructors.  Same  as  winter.  Tuition,  $50  for  six 
weeks.     Enrollment,  225. 

New  York  University,  Summer  School  of  Art,  University  Heights,  Bor- 
ough of  the  Bronx. 

James  Parton  Haney,  director  (winter.  Director  of  Art,  High  Schools, 
500  Park  Ave.,  New  York  City)  ;  three  instructors.  Department 
founded  1907.  Double  normal  course  each  summer  in  methods  of 
teaching  and  in  practice  of  design.  Course  changed  each  session 
through  five  successive  summers.  Tuition,  $40  for  three  weeks.  En- 
rollment, 122. 

»f«PRATT  Institute,  School  of  Fine  and  Applied  Arts,  215  Ryerson  Street, 
Borough  of  Brooklyn. 

Walter  Scott  Perry,  director ;  forty-two  instructors.  Founded  1887. 
Applied  design;   interior  decoration;  jewelry;   crafts;   pictorial,  com- 


ART  SCHOOLS  211 


New  York  City — Pratt  Institute — (Continued) . 

mercial  and  costume  illustration;  painting;  mural  painting;  archi- 
tectural construction  and  design;  applied  design;  crafts;  normal 
art  and  manual  training.  Saturday  morning  class  in  pottery.  Library, 
lectures  and  exhibitions.  Tuition,  $100  for  nine  months.  Evening 
7.30  to  9.30  P.M.,  three  evenings  a  week;  tuition,  $15  for  six  months. 
Enrollment,  day  course,  498;  evening,  433;  Saturday,  284;  total,  1,215. 

Reiss  School,  4  Christopher  Street,  Borough  of  Manhattan. 

Winold    Reiss,    director.      Founded    1914.      Commercial    and    fine   art. 
Tuition,  $360  for  eight  months. 
No  report  1921. 

School  of  American  Sculpture,  9  East  59th  Street,  Borough  of  Man- 
hattan. 

Solon  H.  Borglum,  director ;  one  instructor.  Founded  1919.  Con- 
struction from  the  human  form  and  from  the  horse,  drawing  in 
black  and  white,  modeling.  Day  and  evening  classes.  Tuition,  $50 
a  month  for  day  class;  $20  for  night  class.  Open  all  year.  Enroll- 
ment, 50. 

School  of  the  New  York  Society  of  Craftsmen,  65  East  56th  Street, 
Borough  of  Manhattan. 

Charles  E.  Pellew,  president ;  seven  instructors.     Founded  1919.    Batik, 
block  printing,  dyeing,  history  of  ornament,  leather  working,  weaving. 
Tuition,  $25  for  course  of  12  lessons  of  2^  hours.    Enrollment,  26. 
Summer  at  National  Academy  of  Design  Building,  109th  Street  and 
Amsterdam  Avenue,  Borough  of  Manhattan.    Six  weeks  course. 

School  of  Design  and  Liberal  Arts,  212  Central   Park,  South    (West 
59th  Street),  Borough  of  Manhattan. 

Irene  Weir,  director;  eleven  instructors.  Founded  1917.  Drawing, 
painting,  illustration,  applied  design,  interior  decoration,  costume 
design,  weaving,  pottery,  etching.  Registration  fee  of  $5 ;  tuition, 
$200  for  eight  months;  special  rates  of  $50  for  half  year.  Enroll- 
ment, 75. 

School  of  the  Society  of  Illustrators,  370  Seventh  Avenue,     Borough 
of  Manhattan. 

W.  A.  Rogers,  director.  Founded  1920.  The  instructors  are  members 
of  the  Society  of  Illustrators  and  volunteer  to  teach.  Conducted  under 
the  auspices  of  the  Federal  Board  of  Vocational  Education.  The  pur- 
pose of  this  school  is  to  teach  Federal  Board  students  lettering  and  de- 
signing, advertising,  illustration,  poster  designing,  typography.  Term 
of  eleven  months.     Enrollment,  about  75. 

White  (Clarence  H.)  School  of  Photography,  460  West  144th  Street, 
Borough  of  Manhattan. 

Clarence  H.  White,  director;  seven  instructors.     Founded  1909.     Art 
photography  design,  and  art  appreciation.     Day  and  evening  classes. 
Tuition,   $300   for   30  weeks.      Special   classes   $50  and   up.     Enroll- 
ment, 67. 
Summer  at  Canaan,  Conn. 

OYSTER  BAY 

Louis  Comfort  Tiffany  Foundation    (Art  Guild),   Oyster  Bay,   L.   I., 
N.  Y. 

Stanley  Lothrop.  resident  director.  Established  1919.  The  Foundation 
provides  a  residence  and  working  facilities  for  a  limited  number  of 


212  ART  SCHOOLS 


New  York — Tiffany  Foundation — (Continued). 

artists  of  ability  and  technical  training.  Such  artists  must  be  American 
citizens  between  the  ages  of  20  and  35.  They  are  selected  upon  the 
comparative  quality  of  the  work  submitted  by  the  various  candidates, 
and  upon  the  recommendation  of  well-known  artists.  Purpose  is 
not  to  give  academic  training  but  opportunity  for  independent  work 
under  the  most  favorable  conditions  and  largely  out  of  doors.  No 
tuition ;  $10  a  week  charged  for  board.  A  limited  number  of  Fel- 
lowships offered  of  sufficient  size  to  cover  the  artists'  expenses  while 
in  residence. 

ROCHESTER 

•|<RocHESTER  Athenaeum  and  Mechanics  Institute,  School  of  Fine 
and  Applied  Art,  Bevier  Memorial  Building,  55  Plymouth  Avenue. 
Clifford  M.  Ulp,  director ;  fourteen  instructors.  Athenaeum  chartered 
1830.  School  of  Fine  and  Applied  Art  founded  1903,  Architecture, 
design,  crafts,  teachers'  training  in  art  and  craft  education  and  art 
and  manual  training,  costume  design,  fine  and  graphic  arts,  pottery, 
modeling,  metal  and  jewelry,  toy  making,  interior  decoration;  chil- 
dren's classes,  occupational  therapy.  Salesroom  for  work  by  faculty, 
graduates  and  students.  Day  and  evening  courses.  Tuition,  $200 
for  nine  months.     Enrollment  about  100. 

SARATOGA  SPRINGS 

Skidmore  School  of  Arts. 

Charles  Henry  Keyes,  president;  Cora  L.  Stebbins,  director;  four 
instructors.  Founded  1911.  Domestic  science,  normal  art,  fine  arts, 
music.  Tuition,  $175  for  ten  months.  Enrollment,  304;  three  and 
four  year  courses  and  confers  degrees  in  four  year  course. 

SYRACUSE 

Syracuse  University,  College  of  Fine  Arts. 

George  A.  Parker,  dean ;  seven  instructors.  College  founded  1873. 
Besides  the  formative  arts  includes  music  and  belles-lettres.  Day 
and  evening  classes.  Tuition,  $200  for  nine  months.  Enrollment, 
about  150. 

Department  of  Architecture. 

Frederick  W.  Revels,  director ;  ten  instructors.  Department  founded 
1882.  Three  four  year  courses  lead  to  B.A.  degree ;  one  two  year 
course  leads  to  certificate ;  one  three  year  course  in  interior  architec- 
tural design  and  decoration  leads  to  certificate.  Several  scholarships 
and  prizes.     Tuition,  $200  for  nine  months. 

Department  of  Painting. 

Jeannette  Scott,  head  of  Department;  nine  instructors.  Painting,  il- 
lustration, design,  china  decoration.  Three  year  course  in  design, 
and  three  year  course  in  illustration  giving  certificate.  Four  year 
course  in  drawing  and  painting  leading  to  B.P. ;  four  year  course 
in  design  leading  to  B.D..  Traveling  fellowship  of  $500,  several 
scholarships  and  prizes.  Three  year  course  in  illustration  for  cer- 
tificate. Tuition,  $200  for  all  courses,  for  term  of  nine  months.  En- 
rollment,   150. 

Summer  School  of  Draming,  Painting,  and  Design. 

C.  Bertram  Walker,  director;  four  instructors.  Founded  1911.  Paint- 
ing, design,  applied  art.     Tuition,  $25  for  six  weeks.     Enrollment,  40. 


ART  SCHOOLS  213 


New  York — Syracuse  University — (Continued). 

Department  of  Public  School  Art,  Teachers'  College. 

Rilla  E.  Jackman,  head  of  department;  four  instructors  in  art. 
Founded  1906.  Four  year  course  leading  to  Bachelor  of  Science;  three 
year  course  leading  to  certificate  in  art ;  three  year  combination  music 
and  art  course  leading  to  certificate.  Tuition,  $200  for  nine  months. 
Enrollment,  30. 

WOODSTOCK 

Woodstock  School  of  Landscape  Pointing  (Summer  School  of  the  Art 
Students'  League  of  New  York). 

Charles  Rosen,  director.  Founded  1875.  Landscape  and  figure  paint- 
ing. Tuition,  $20  a  month  for  landscape  class,  $15  a  month  for  studio 
class.     Term  of  four  months.     Enrollment,  135. 

YONKERS 

YoNKERs  School  of  Design,  2  Manor  House  Square. 

Frank  Leonard  Allen,  director.  Drawing,  painting,  composition,  com- 
mercial illustration,  design.  Day  and  evening  classes.  Tuition  free 
for  term  of  eight  months.     Enrollment  about  75. 


NORTH    DAKOTA 

UNIVERSITY 

University  of  North  Dakota,  Department  of  Art  and  Design. 

Erwin  O.  Christensen,  head  of  department;  two  instructors.  Univer- 
sity founded  1883 ;  art  department  1910.  Drawing,  painting  and  design 
Tuition,  $25  for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  305. 

OHIO 

ADA 

Ohio  Northern  University,  School  of  Fine  Arts,  South  Main  Street 

Three  instructors.  Founded  1882.  Modeling,  drawing,  painting  china 
decoration,  stenciling,  Indian  basketry.  Tuition,  $75  for  eleven  months 
No  report  1921. 

BOWLING  GREEN 

State  Normal  College,  Industrial  Arts  Department. 

Daniel  J.  Crowley ;  two  instructors.  Department  founded  1910  Draw- 
mg,  design,  mechanic  arts.     Tuition  free.     Enrollment,  350. 

CINCINNATI 

Art  Academy,  Eden  Park. 

J.  H.  Gest,  director;  ten  instructors.  Founded  1869.  Fine  arts,  handi- 
cratt  design,  wood  carvmg,  china  painting,  metal  work,  leather  work 
bookbinding.  Thirty  scholarships.  Tuition,  $80  for  eight  and  one- 
halt  months;  evening,  $10  for  eight  months.  Enrollment  380 
^unimer.  Five  mstructors..  Fine  arts,  design,  wood  carving  china 
paintmg.    Tuition,  $20  for  ten  weeks.    Enrollment,  50. 

Ohio    Mechanics    Institute,   Department   of  Applied   Arts,    Canal   and 
Walnut  Streets. 

John  T.  Faig,  President ;  ten  instructors  in  art  course.  Founded  18^8  • 
art  department  1856.  Architectural  and  mechanical  drawing,  industrial 
design  wood  and  metal  work,  graphic  arts,  needlework,  lithographv 
several  scholarships  in  lithography.  Tuition,  $50  to  $100  for  nine 
months;  day  and  evening  classes.  Enrollment  about  250 
Summer  Six  instructors.  Tuition,  $10  to  $50  for  six  weeks.  En- 
rollment about  155. 


214  ART  SCHOOLS 


Ohio — (Continued). 
CLEVELAND 

Cleveland  School  of  Art,  11,441  Juniper  Road. 

Henry  Turner  Bailey,  director;  George  Leighton  Norton,  associate 
director ;  eighteen  instructors.  Founded  1882.  Painting,  sculpture, 
illustration,  design,  normal  art,  ceramics,  costume  design,  interior  deco- 
ration, architecture  and  crafts.  Graduate  school,  individual  special 
courses  under  supervision.  Scholarships  and  prizes.  Mutual  Service 
Fund.  Frequent  special  exhibitions.  Tuition,  $175  for  eight  months ; 
evening  courses,  $24  for  six  months.     Enrollment,  700. 

John  Huntington  Polytechnic  Institute,  2307  Prospect  Avenue. 

Henry  T.  Bailey,  director;  eight  instructors.  Founded  1918.  Archi- 
tectural design ;  commercial  life  drawing ;  advertising ;  industrial  per- 
spective ;  theory  of  color.  Evening  classes  with  privilege  of  working 
during  the  day.  Tuition  free.  Term  of  eight  months.  Enrollment, 
246. 

COLUMBUS 

Columbus  Art  School,  Columbus  Art  Association,  492  East  Broad  St. 
Helen  G.  Brown,  director ;  four  instructors.  Founded  1879  by  the 
Columbus  Art  Association.  Drawing,  painting,  illustrating,  sculpture, 
interior  decoration,  design.  Tuition,  $100  for  first  year,  regular  course. 
Day  and  night  classes.  Diploma  Course  of  eight  months.  Tuition, 
$100. 

►f'OHio  State  University,  Art  Department. 

Charles  Fabens  Kelley,  head  of  department ;  eight  instructors.  Founded 
1898.  Drawing,  painting,  design,  history  of  art,  normal  art.  Tuition, 
$15  for  each  semester  for  four  and  one-half  months.    Enrollment,  14. 

Department  of  Architecture. 

Joseph   N.  Bradford,  professor  in  charge;   five   instructors.     Depart- 
ment founded  1890.    Architecture  and  architectural  engineering.     Tui- 
tion  free,  incidentals  $50,  for  ten  months.    Enrollment,  120. 

DELAWARE 

•^Ohio  Wesleyan  University,  School  of  Fine  Arts. 

Sallie  T.  Humphreys,  director ;  five  instructors.  Founded  1854. 
Drawing,  painting,  and  design  in  both  theory  and  practice;  crafts; 
normal  art;  home  decoration.  Tuition,  $35  to  $100  for  nine  months. 
Enrollment,  145. 

OBERLIN 

Oberlin  College,  Department  of  Fine  Arts. 

Clarence  Ward,  head  of  department;  five  instructors.  Founded  1917. 
Theory  and  practice  of  art.  Tuition,  $200  for  nine  months.  Enroll- 
ment about  350. 

TOLEDO 

School  of  the  Toledo  Museum  of  Art,  Scott  Place. 

Mrs.  George  W.  Stevens,  director;  three  instructors.     Theory  of  de- 
sign, interpretative  drawing,  crafts,  costume  design,  toy  making.    Free 
instruction  to  selected  pupils  from  Toledo  schools. 
Summer.     Term  of  six  weeks.     Enrollment,  314. 

WESTERVILLE 

Otterbein  University,  Fine  Arts  Department. 

Delphine  Dunn,  director;  three  instructors.  Founded  1847.  Fine  and 
normal  arts,  applied  design.  Tuition,  $90  for  term  of  nine  months. 
Enrollment  about  50. 


ART  SCHOOLS  215 


Ohio — (Continued). 

YOUNGSTOWN 

School  of  the  Butler  Art  Institute. 

Margaret  Evans,  director.     Founded  1921.     Classes  in  drawing,  paint- 
ing, jewelry,  pottery. 


OKLAHOMA 

CHICKASHA 

Oklahoma  College  for  Women,  Art  Department. 

Marion  D.  Pease,  head  of  department;  one  instructor  with  student  as- 
sistant. Founded  1908.  Costume  design,  house  planning,  interior 
decoration,  painting,  crafts,  commercial  design.  Tuition  free  for  nine 
months.     Enrollment  about  114. 

EDMOND 

Central  State  Normal  School,  Art  Department. 

Clara  M.  Howard,  head  of  department;  one  instructor,  with  assist- 
ants.  Founded  1890.  Normal  course  in  drawing  and  industrial  arts ; 
crafts,  costume  design,  interior  decoration ;  graduates  required  to  take 
one  term's  work.  Tuition  free ;  eleven  months.  Enrollment,  42. 
Summer.  Nine  weeks ;  tuition  free.  One  instructor  with  assistant. 
Enrollment,  125. 

NORMAN 

University  of  Oklahoma,  Department  of  Art. 

Oscar  B.  Jacobson,  head  of  department;  six  instructors.  Estab- 
lished 1909.  Drawing,  painting,  history  of  art;  history  of  architec- 
ture, commercial  art,  home  architecture,  costume  design,  design,  inte- 
rior decoration,  composition,  normal  art.  Tuition,  free  for  eleven 
months.     Enrollment.  270. 


OREGON 

CORVALLIS 

Oregon    State  Agricultural   College,  Department   of  Art   and  Archi- 
tecture. 

Farley  D.  McLouth,  head  of  department;  four  instructors.  Founded 
1902.  Drawing,  composition,  design,  water  color,  clay  modeling,  pot- 
tery, metal  work  and  jewelry.  Tuition  nominal.  Term  of  nine  months. 
Enrollment  about  40O. 

EUGENE 

University  of  Oregon,  School  of  Architecture  and  Allied  Art. 

Ellis  F.  Lawrence,  M.S.,  dean ;  ten  instructors.  Founded  1914.  Archi- 
tecture, painting,  modeling,  drawing,  design ;  teachers'  courses ;  history 
and  appreciation  of  art.  Small  fee.  Term  of  nine  months.  Day  and 
evening  classes.     Enrollment,  architecture,  40;  art,  80. 

PORTLAND 

Portland  Atelier,  Extension  of  the  University  of  Oregon,   Central 
Library. 

Ellis  F.  Lawrence,  patron.  Founded  1914.  Architectural  design; 
problems  in  co-operation  with  the  Beaux- Arts  Institute  of  Design. 
Tuition  nominal  for  term  ^f  nine  months.    Enrollment,  12. 


216  ART  SCHOOLS 


Oregon — (Continued) . 

School  of  the  Portland  Art  Association,  Fifth  and  Taylor  Streets. 

Anna  B.  Crocker,  curator;  five  instructors.  Founded  1909.  Paint- 
ing, drawing,  design,  crafts ;  children's  classes.  Three  scholarships 
awarded.  Tuition,  day,  $100  for  eight  months ;  evening,  ^36 ;  chil- 
dren's class  $24  to  $30.  Five  day  and  two  evening  classes  a  week. 
Enrollment,  155. 

PENNSYLVANIA 

CALIFORNIA 

Southwestern  State  Normal  School,  Art  Department. 

Irene  C.  Niebaum,  head  of  department;  one  instructor.  Founded  1874. 
Drawing,  elementary  handwork,  industrial  arts.  Tuition  paid  by 
State.    Term  of  eleven  months.     Enrollment,  200. 

CHESTER  SPRINGS 

Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts  Summer  School. 

D.  Roy  Miller,  director;  four  instructors.  Founded  1917.  Outdoor 
painting,  sculpture.  Tuition,  including  board,  $12.50  and  up  a  week. 
Term  of  twenty-four  weeks.     Enrollment,  215. 

EDENBORO 

State  Normal  Art  School. 

Waldo  Bates,  director;  two  instructors.  Founded  1920.  Normal  art, 
crafts,  outdoor  sketching.  Tuition,  $80  for  nine  weeks.  Enrollment, 
350. 

INDIANA 

Pennsylvania  State  Normal  School,  Art  Department. 

Jean  R.  McElhaney,  director ;  three  instructors.  Founded  1907.  Nor- 
mal course  of  two  years.  Tuition,  $40  for  ten  months.  Enrollment,  15. 
No  report  1921. 

JENKINTOWN 

►J'Beechwood  School  of  Fine  Arts. 

R.^  C.  Nuse,  director ;  six  instructors.  Founded  1912.  Drawing, 
painting,  design,  ceramics,  leather  work,  jewelry,  interior  decoration, 
and  wood-block  printing.  Tuition,  $100  for  eight  months.  Enroll- 
ment, 138. 

MILLERVILLE 

State  Normal  School,  Art  Department. 

Helena  Way,  head  of  department;  two  instructors.  Founded  1859. 
Drawing,  industrial  arts,  manual  training.  Tuition,  $80  a  year  for 
regular  normal  course  of  ten  months.  Enrollment,  740.  No  report 
1921. 

PHILADELPHIA 

Graphic  Sketch  Club,  719  Catharine  Street. 

David  Finkelgreen,  president;  eight  instructors.  Founded  1898.  Or- 
ganized as  Beginners  (under  16),  Class  members.  Juniors,  Seniors, 
and  Advisory  Board ;  each  group  has  its  officers ;  non-sectarian  and  no 
limit  to  age,  sex  or  race.  Painting,  sculpture,  illustration,  fashion 
design.    Evening  classes  open  all  year.    Tuition  free.    Enrollment,  300. 

Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts,  Broad  Street,  above  Arch. 
Eleanor    B.    Barker,    curator ;    twelve    instructors.      Founded     1805. 
Drawing,  painting,  sculpture,  illustration.     Twenty-two  free  scholar- 


ART  SCHOOLS  217 


Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts — <(Continucd). 

ships  in  school;  20  William  Emlen  Cresson  traveling  scholarships  of 
$500  each;   other  prizes.     Tuition,  $150  for  eight  months.     Day  and 
evening  classes.     Enrollment,  300. 
Summer.    School  at  Chester  Springs,  Pa. 

•^Philadelphia  School  of  Design  for  Women;  Broad  and  Master 
Streets. 

Harriet  Sartain,  principal ;  seventeen  instructors.  Founded  1844.  The- 
oretic and  technical  design,  normal  art,  fine  arts,  fashion  illustration, 
.interior  decoration.  Six  fellowships  for  year's  study  in  school;  city 
and  State  scholarships;  Widener  European  fellowship.  Tuition,  $100 
for  eight  months.  Day,  evening  and  Saturday  classes.  Enrollment, 
about  180. 

Public  Industrial  Art  School,  Park  Avenue,  below  Master  Street. 

Ida  E.  Fenimore,  principal;  ten  instructors.  Organized  1881,  Open 
to  pupils  in  the  Grammar  Grades  of  the  Public  Schools ;  each  pupil 
attends  one  afternoon  a  week,  bemg  excused  from  the  regular  school 
session  to  do  so.  All  pupils  work  in  the  three  departments — drawing, 
clay  modeling  and  wood  carving,  rotating  monthly.  Tuition  free;  ten 
months.    Enrollment,  1,000. 

•^School  of  Industrial  Art;  School  at  Broad  and  Pine  Streets. 

Huger  Elliott,  principal;  forty-two  instructors.  Founded  1877.  Free 
scholarships  in  each  county  of  State;  seventy  to  pupils  in  Philadelphia 
high  schools ;  also  scholarships  for  meritorious  work  in  school  and 
numerous  prizes.  Museum  in  Fairmount  Park.  Tuition,  $100  for 
eight  months.  Day,  evening  and  Saturday  classes.  Total  enrollment, 
1,588. 

Industrial  Art  Department — Huger  Elliott,  principal;  twenty-four  instruc- 
tors. Design,  wood  work  and  carving,  decorative  painting,  modeling, 
illustration,  architectural  drawing,  metal  work,  interior  decoration, 
pottery,  teachers'  training  course.  Tuition,  $100  for  eight  months ; 
evenings,  $20;  Saturdays,  $10  for  six  months.  Enrollment,  1,009. 
Summer  School — Huger  Elliott,  principal ;  ten  instructors.  Established 
1914.  Esthetics,  design,  normal  art,  interior  decoration,  crafts.  Tui- 
tion, $25  for  four  weeks.    Enrollment,  100. 

Philadelphia  Textile  School — E.  W.  France,  director;  eighteen  instructors. 
Fully  equipped  with  courses  in  dyeing,  weaving  and  finishing  as  well  as 
design.     Tuition,  $250  in  day  course;  evening,  $20.     Enrollment,  579. 

T  Square  Club  Atelier,  204  South  Quince  Street. 

John  F.  Harbeson,  director;  two  instructors.  Founded  1902.  Archi- 
tecture in  co-operation  with  the  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of  Design; 
drafting,  architectural  design,  and  rendering.  Evening  classes  only. 
Tuition,  $12  for  ten  months,  with  an  additional  charge  of  $5  a  prob- 
lem.    Enrollment,  45. 

HhUNiVERSiTY  OF  PENNSYLVANIA,  School  of  Fine  Arts,  Department  of 
Architecture. 

Warren  P.  Laird,  head  of  department;  twenty-eight  instructors. 
Founded  1890.  Four-year  course  leads  to  B.S.  in  Arch. ;  two-year 
special  course  leading  to  certificate  of  proficiency;  graduate  course 
leading  to  degree  of  M.  Arch.  Tuition,  $300  for  eight  and  one-half 
months.     Enrollment,  200. 

Summer.  H.  Lamar  Crosby,  director.  Six  weeks'  course.  Architec- 
tural subjects  and  course  in  drawing  for  teachers.  Tuition,  from 
$12.50  to  $50. 


218  ART  SCHOOLS 


University  of  Pennsylvania — (Continued). 

School  of  Fine  Arts,  Department  of  Fine  Arts. 

Warren  P.  Laird,  dean ;  twenty-nine  instructors.  Founded  1920. 
Four-year  course  leading  to  degree  of  B.F.A.  Special  course  in  science 
of  painting.     Tuition,  $250  for  term  of  eight  and  one-half  months. 

PITTSBURGH 

►f«CARNEGiE  Institute  of  Technology,  College  of  Fine  Arts. 

E.  Raymond  Bossange,  director ;  sixty  instructors.  Founded  1909 ; 
present  building  erected  1913.  Architecture — design  and  construction ; 
painting  and  illustration — commercial  art,  mural,  landscape,  figure  and 
portrait;  applied  art — crafts,  costume  design,  normal  art,  advertising 
and  industrial  art ;  music — vocal,  instrumental,  composition,  teacher's 
course,  music  supervisor's  course ;  dramatic  art — acting,  production, 
play-writing,  sculpture.  Day  and  evening  courses  of  nine  months. 
Tuition,  day,  $150;  night,  $40.     Enrollment,  700. 

University  of  Pittsburgh,  School  of  Education,  Department  of  Fine  and 
Industrial  Arts. 

Walter  H.  Klar,  head  of  department ;  six  instructors.  University 
founded  1787 ;  art  department,  1913.  Thirty-two  courses  in  fine  and 
industrial  arts.  Tuition,  $210  for  thirty-two  weeks.  Day  and  evening 
classes.    Enrollment,  160. 

Summer.  Three  instructors.  Twelve  courses  in  fine  and  industrial 
arts.    Tuition,  $7  a  credit  for  six  weeks.    Enrollment,  59. 

SCRANTON 

School  of  Illustration  and  Design  of  the  International  Corre- 
spondence Schools. 

E.  Leonard  Roller,  principal ;  sixteen  instructors.  Founded  1900. 
Practical,  artistic  and  commercial  courses  in  magazine  and  book  illus- 
trating; newspaper  illustrating;  cartooning;  advertisement  illustrating; 
handicrafts  and  industrial  designing;  architectural  drawing  and  de- 
signing; interior  decoration.  Courses  are  by  the  correspondence 
method.    Tuition,  $100  to  $150  a  course. 

SLIPPERY  ROCK 

State  Normal  School,  Art  Department. 

Inis  F.  McClymonds,  head  of  department ;  two  instructors.  Founded 
1889.  Open  all  year.  Art  included  in  regular  normal  course  with 
enrollment  of  400. 

STATE  COLLEGE 

Pennsylvania  State  College,  Department  of  Architectural  Engineering. 
A.  L.  Kocher,  director ;  eleven  instructors.  Founded  1910.  Archi- 
tectural engineering  and  industrial  art;  architectural  design  in  co- 
operation with  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of  Design.  Nominal  fees ;  nine 
months'  course.     Enrollment,  54. 

Department  of  Industrial  and  Fine  Art. 

A.  L.  Kocher,  head  of  department;  eleven  instructors.  Founded  1865. 
Free-hand  drawing ;  construction  and  design,  interior  decoration,  paint- 
ing, metal  work,  posters,  history  of  art,  public  school  art.  Fee,  $3.50 
for  term  of  five  months.     Enrollment,  650. 

Summer.  Five  instructors.  Founded  1909.  Public  school  art,  paint- 
ing, industrial  design.    Term  of  nine  weeks.    Enrollment,  258. 

WEST  CHESTER 

State  Normal  School,  Art  Department. 

Herbert  A.  Stiles,  head  of  department;  three  instructors.  Founded 
1871.     Drawing,  painting,  industrial  art,  crafts.     Term  of  ten  months. 


ART  SCHOOLS  219 


RHODE  ISLAND 

NEWPORT 

Art  Association  of  Newport  School,  Totiro  Park,  Bellevue  Avenue. 
Helena  Sturtevant,  director ;  four  instructors.  Founded  1912.  Draw- 
ing, painting,  modeling,  decorative  design,  and  mechanical  drawing; 
Saturday  morning  classes  for  juniors.  Day  and  evening  classes.  Tui- 
tion, $50  for  six  months.  Enrollment,  51  in  fine  arts;  30  mechanical 
drawing. 

PROVIDENCE 

Rhode  Island  School  of  Design,  11  Waterman  Street. 

L.  Earle  Rowe,  director ;  Roger  Oilman,  dean ;  forty-eight  instructors. 
Founded  1877.  Special  facilities  for  work  in  Museum  and  Library ; 
lectures  and  concerts  in  Memorial  Hall ;  468  State,  100  city  and  22 
competitive  scholarships.  Departments :  I.  Drawing,  painting  and 
illustration;  II.  Decorative  design;  III.  Alodeling;  IV.  Architecture, 
interior  decoration;  V.  Mechanical  design;  VI.  Textile  design;  VII. 
Jewelry  design  and  silversmithing;  VIII.  Normal  art;  IX.  Saturday 
classes  for  teachers  and  children.  Tuition,  $90  in  day,  $20  in  evening ; 
$10  for  Saturday  classes;  for  eight  months.  Enrollment,  1,856,  of 
whom  243  are  in  day,  982  in  evening  and  314  in  Saturday  classes,  and 
317  special  classes. 

SOUTH   DAKOTA 

SPRINGFIELD 

Southern  Normal  School,  Art  Department. 

Mary  E.  Hodges,  head  of  department;  one  instructor.  Department 
founded  1911.  Normal  art;  two-year  course.  Tuition,  $12  for  nine 
months.     Enrollment,  75. 

Summer.  Founded  1920.  Drawing,  basketry,  weaving.  Tuition,  $5 
for  six  weeks.     Enrollment,  67. 

TENNESSEE 
KNOXVILLE 

University  of  Tennessee,  Department  of  Fine  and  Applied  Arts. 

Mrs.  Cora  Fischer  Braun,  director;  two  instructors.     Drawing,  paint- 
ing, theory  of  design,  applied  design,  normal  art.     Matriculation  fee 
$10,  and  studio  fee  of  $2. 
Summer,     Term  of  twelve  weeks. 

MURFREESBORO 

Middle  Tennessee  State  Normal  School,  Art  Department. 

Mrs.    Elizabeth    Cunningham,    head    of    department,    one    instructor. 
Founded   1911.     Public  school   drawing;   elementary   water  color  and 
design;  advanced  color.     Term  of  forty-six  weeks;  tuition  free.     En- 
rollment, 405. 
Tennessee  College,  Art  Department. 

Ernma  Cadwallader,  director.  School  founded  1907.  Drawing  and 
painting. 

NASHVILLE 

George  Peabody  College  for  Teachers,  Art  Dcpt.,  Hillsboro  Road. 

George   S.   Dutch,  director ;   two   instructors.     Founded   1914.     House 
decoration,    modeling,    design,   applied   design,    public    school   drawing. 
Tuition,  $100  to  $150  for  nine  months.    Enrollment,  about  200. 
Summer.    Average  tuition,  $30  to  $50  for  term  of  twelve  weeks.    En- 
rollment, 300. 


220  ART  SCHOOLS 


Nashville — Peabody  College — (Continued) . 
Department  of  Industrial  Arts. 

Clarence  H.  Lander,  head  of  department;  two  instructors.     Founded 
1914.     Mechanical  drawing,  wood  working,  metal  working;  printing. 
Tuition  averages  $100  for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  about  100. 
Summer.    Term  of  twelve  weeks.     Enrollment,  about  100. 

St.  Cecilia  Academy,  Art  Department. 

Sister  Mary  Luke,   director;  two  instructors.     School   founded   1860. 
Term  of  nine  months. 

School  of  Art  and  Applied  Design,  301  Vauxhall  Annex, 

L.  Pearl  Saunders,  director;  two  instructors.     Founded  1907.     Draw- 
ing   and    painting;    illustration;    design    and    its    application.      Nine 
months.     Enrollment,  60. 
Summer.     Eight  weeks.     Enrollment,  20, 

Ward-Belmont  College,  Sixteenth  Avenue. 

Mrs.  Cora  G.   Plunkett,  director.     Illustration,  design,  interior  decor- 
ation, poster  advertising,  crafts. 

Watkins   Institute  Free  Night  School. 

Waldemar  Hirschfeld,  director.    Free-hand  drawing  and  design. 

NORMAL 

West  Tennessee  State  Normal  School,  Art  Department. 

Marie  McCormack,  head  of  department.    Founded  1909.    Normal  art. 


TEXAS 

ABILENE 

Simmons  College. 

Ella  Marie  Ross,  head  of  department;  one  instructor.  Founded  1891. 
Painting,  crafts,  designing.  Tuition,  $108  for  nine  months.  Enroll- 
ment, 35. 

AUSTIN 

University  of  Texas,  School  of  Architecture. 

F.  E.  Giesecke,  chairman;  two  instructors.  School  founded  1910. 
Tuition  free ;  matriculation  fee,  $10 ;  nine  months.  Four-year  course 
leading  to  degree  of  B.S.  in  architecture;  five  year  course  leading 
to  degree  of  M.S.  in  architecture;  four-year  course  leading  to  degree 
of  B.S.  in  architectural  engineering.  Work  carried  on  in  co-opera- 
tion with  the  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of  Design.     Enrollment,  70. 

BROWNWOOD 

Daniel  Baker  College. 

Martha  Wilson  Morris,  director ;  one  instructor.     Painting,  drawing, 
china  painting.    Tuition,  $75  for  nine  months.    Enrollment,  about  12. 
No  report  1921. 

COLLEGE  STATION 

Agricultural    and    Mechanical    College    of    Texas,    Department    of 
Architecture. 

E.  B.  La  Roche,  B.Arch.,  head  of  dep^irtment ;  four  instructors.  Archi- 
tectural engineering  founded  1906 ;  Architecture  founded  1912.  Term 
of  nine  months.     Enrollment,  65. 


ART  SCHOOLS  221 


Texas — (Contmued). 

DALLAS 

AuNSPAUGH  Art  School,  3409  Bryan  Street. 

Vivian  L.  Aunspaugh,  director;  two  instructors.  Founded  1902. 
Fine,  decorative  and  normal  art ;  commercial  art  and  illustrating. 
Tuition,   $135    for  nine   months.  •  Enrollment,  90. 

Summer.  Founded  1902.  Tuition,  $12  to  $30  for  eight  weeks.  En- 
rollment, 40,  including  sketching  camp. 

Southern  Methodist  University,  Art  Department. 

Olive   Donaldson,   head   of   department;    three    instructors.      Founded 
1915.      Portraiture,    illustration,    landscape,    design,    commercial    art ; 
modeling,    interior    decoration;    normal    course.      Tuition,    $150    for 
nine  months  five  lessons  a  week.     Enrollment,  95. 
No  report  1921. 

DENTON 

College  of  Industrial  Arts    (State   College   for  Women),  Department 
of  Fine  and  Applied  Art. 

Virginia  Alexander,  director ;  eight  instructors.  Founded  1903. 
Courses  in  design  and  illustration,  drawing,  painting,  advertising,  inte- 
rior decoration,  costume  design,  pottery,  modeling,  bookbinding,  china 
painting,  art  appreciation  and  education  are  credited  towards  a  B.S. 
degree  with  Fine  Arts  as  a  major  subject.  A  three  year  professional 
course  is  offered  in  applied  design,  interior  decoration  and  pottery. 
Tuition,  $35  for  nine  months.    Enrollment,  810. 

North  Texas  State  Normal  College,  Art  Department. 

Elizabeth  A.  Hillyer,  head  of  department ;  two  instructors.  Founded 
1900.  Public  school  drawing,  costume  design,  household  decoration. 
Tuition  free;  term  of  eleven  and  one-half  months.    Enrollment,  800. 

FORT  WORTH 

►f«TEXAs  Christian  University,  Art  Department. 

Mrs.  Dura  Brokaw  Cockrell,  principal ;  three  instructors.  Founded 
1899.  Fine,  decorative,  commercial  and  normal  art.  Tuition,  $100  for 
nine  months.     Enrollment,  40. 

Summer.  Two  instructors.  Tuition,  $25  for  six  weeks.  Enroll- 
ment, 25. 

Texas  Woman's  College,  Art  Department. 

S.  P.  Ziegler,  principal;  three  instructors.  Founded  1913  (succeeds 
Polytechnic  College).  Classical,  decorative,  and  normal  art.  Tui- 
tion, $120  to  $150  for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  64. 

HOUSTON 

Rice  Institute,  Department  of  Architecture. 

William  Ward  Watkins,  director;  four  instructors.  Founded  1912. 
Architectural  design  and  construction;  rendering;  history  of  art. 
Five-year  course  in  architecture  which  leads  to  degree  of  A.B.  at 
end  of  fourth  year,  and  architectural  degree  at  end  of  the  fifth  year. 
Term,   nine   months.     Enrollment,  38. 

SHERMAN 

KiDD  Key  College  and  Conservatory  of  Music  and  Art. 

Evangeline  Fowler,  director  of  art ;  two  instructors.  Founded  1868. 
Industrial  art ;  design ;  fine  arts ;  history  of  art ;  normal  course. 
Tuition,  $80  for  nine  months ;  four-year  course.  Enrollment,  68  in 
technical ;  93  in  history  of  art. 


222  ART  SCHOOLS 


UTAH 

CEDAR  CITY 

Branch  Agricultural  College,  Art  Department. 

F.  C.  Braithwaite,  head  of  department;  one  instructor.  Founded  1908. 
Mechanical  drawing,  applied  design,  interior  decoration,  costume  design, 
crafts,  textile  work,  china  painting.  Tuition,  $11  for  term  of  nine 
months.     Enrollment,  350. 

LOGAN 

Utah  Agricultural  College,  Art  Department. 

Calvin  Fletcher,  professor  of  applied  art;  J.  S.  Powell,  professor 
of  fine  art ;  three  instructors.  Founded  1889.  Design,  crafts,  interior 
decoration,  painting,  drawing,  sculpture,  architectural  design;  theory 
and  history.  Tuition  free;  incidentals,  $20  for  nine  months.  Enroll- 
ment, 479. 

PROVO 

Brigham  Young  University,  Art  Department. 

Elbert  H.  Eastmond,  head  of  department ;  three  instructors.  Founded 
1905.  Normal  art,  costume  design,  drawing,  crafts.  Tuition,  $20  for 
term  of  nine  months.     Enrollment,  171. 

SALT  LAKE  CITY 

University  of  Utah,  Art  Department. 

Six  instructors.  Founded  1868.  Drawing,  painting,  design,  normal  art, 
commercial  art,  cartooning.  Day  and  evening  classes.  Tuition,  $22.50 
for  term  of  nine  months.     Enrollment,  200. 

VIRGINIA 

CHARLOTTESVILLE 

McIntire   School  of  Fine  Arts,  University  of  Virginia^  Department 
of  Art. 

Founded  1819  by  President  Jefiferson ;  re-established  1919  as  the 
McIntire  School  of  Fine  Arts  under  an  endowment  from  Paul  Good- 
loe  McIntire.  Drawing,  painting  and  the  history  of  art.  Tuition, 
residents  of  State,  $10;  non-residents,  $135.     Enrollment,  60. 

Department  of  Architecture. 

Fiske  Kimball,  head  of  department ;  eight  instructors.  Professional 
course  in  architecture  leads  to  Bachelor  of  Science  in  Architecture. 
Tuition,  residents  of  State,  $10;  non-residents,  $135.     Enrollment,  20. 

LYNCHBURG 

Lynchburg  Art  School,  700  Church  Street,  Lynchburg. 

Georgie  W.  Morgan,  director;  one  instructor.  Founded  1911.  Draw- 
ing, painting,  illustration,  poster,  history  of  art,  interior  decoration. 
Tuition,  $72.50  for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  30. 

Randolph-Macon  Woman's  College. 

Louise  J.  Smith,  head  of  art  department ;  one  instructor.  Founded 
1891.  History  and  practice  courses.  Tuition,  $54  for  ten  hours'  work, 
$90  for  "double  time"  for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  75;  special,  8. 

RICHMOND 

Atelier   Virginia   League  of   Fine  Arts   and   Handicrafts,   519   East 
Franklin  Street. 

Nora  Houston  and  Adele  Clark,  directors;  two  instructors.  Founded 
1917.  Drawing,  painting,  modeling,  handicraft.  Day  and  evening 
classes.    Tuition,  %2S  to  $100  for  eight  month.s.     Enrollment,  40. 


ART  SCHOOLS  223 


WASHINGTON 

PULLMAN 

State  College  of  Washington,  Department  of  Architecture. 

Rudolph  Weaver,  head  of  department;  four  instructors.  Department 
founded  1911.  Four-year  course  in  architecture  leads  to  B.S.  in 
Arch.;  two-year  special  course.  Tuition  free;  term  of  nine  months; 
day  classes  only.     Enrollment,  55. 

Department  of  Fine  Arts. 

William  T.  McDermitt,  associate  professor  in  charge;  three  instructors. 
Drawing,  painting,  design,  commercial  art,  crafts,  history  of  art. 
Tuition  free ;  term  of  nine  months.    Enrollment,  250. 

SEATTLE 

Gargoyle  Club,  512  Hinckley  Building. 

David  J.  Myers,  director ;  two  instructors.  Founded  1919.  Arch- 
itecture. Evening  classes  only.  Tuition,  $15  for  term  of  twelve 
months.     Enrollment,   12. 

University  of  Washington,  College  of  Fine  Arts. 

Irving  M.  Glen,  dean ;  twelve  instructors.  College  founded  1913, 
architecture  1914.  Architecture ;  design  and  drawing ;  pottery,  sculp- 
ture ;  normal  course.  Tuition,  $30  for  nine  months.  Enrollment,  50 
"major"  in  architecture;  140  "major"  in  design  and  drawing. 
Summer.  Five  instructors.  Tuition,  $10  for  eleven  weeks.  Enroll- 
ment, about  30. 


WEST  VIRGINIA 

HUNTINGTON 

Marshall  College,  Art  Department. 

E.  E.  Myers,  instructor.  Department  founded  1901.  Mechanical 
drawing,  free-hand  drawing,  color  and  design,  interior  decoration. 
Tuition,  $15  for  nine  months.     Enrollment,  165. 


WISCONSIN 

MADISON 

University  of  Wisconsin,  Department  of  Industrial  Education  and  Ap- 
plied Arts.  , 
William  H.  Varnum,  director ;  six  instructors.  Founded  1910.  Draw- 
ing, design,  crafts.  Tuition  free  to  Wisconsin  students,  $100  for  non- 
residents ;  nine  months.  Courses  leading  to  degree  of  B.S.  in  Applied 
Arts.     Enrollment,  360. 

Summer.  Five  instructors.  Founded  1912.  Art  practice,  art  theory, 
vocational  education,  crafts  and  drawing.  Tuition,  $20  for  six  weeks. 
Enrollment,  386. 

MENOMINIE 

Stout  Institute. 

L.  D.  Harvey,  president;  Mrs.  H.  W.  Cuthbertson,  head  of  art  de- 
partment; three  instructors.  Founded  1903.  Drawing  and  design; 
architectural  and  mechanical  drafting;  metal  and  wood 'working ; 
interior  decoration;  costume  design  and  art  needlework;  normal 
courses  leading  to  degree.  Tuition,  $100  for  nine  months.  Enroll- 
ment. 400. 


224  ART  SCHOOLS 


Wisconsin — {Continued). 

MILWAUKEE 

Layton  School  of  Art,  158  Mason  Street. 

Charlotte  Russell  Partridge,  director ;  seven  instructors.  Founded 
1920.  Industrial  and  costume  design,  commercial  art,  illustration,  in- 
terior decoration,  painting,  normal  art.  Day  and  evening  classes. 
Tuition,  $175  for  term  of  nine  months;  evenings,  $45.    Enrollment,  316. 

MiLV^AUKEE-DowNER  COLLEGE,  Department  of  Art. 

Charlotte  Russell  Partridge,  director ;  five  instructors.  Founded  1895. 
Fine  Arts,  crafts,  occupational  therapy.  Tuition,  $200  for  term  of  nine 
months.    Enrollment,  150. 

State  Normal  School,  School  of  Fine  and  Applied  Arts. 

Alexander  Mueller,  director ;  fourteen  instructors.  Affiliated  with 
State  Normal  School  1911.  Fine,  applied  and  normal  arts.  Day  and 
evening  classes.  Tuition,  $40  for  fine  and  applied  arts;  $10  for 
teachers'  courses,  for  nine  months.  Enrollment,  326. 
Summer.  Founded  1900;  fifteen  instructors.  Tuition,  $10  for  six 
v^eeks.     Enrollment,  98. 


EUROPE 

ROME,  ITALY 

American  Academy  in  Rome,  Porta  San  Pancrazio    (101  Park  Avenue, 
New  York,  N.  Y.). 

Gorham  P.  Stevens,  director  of  the  Academy;  Frank  P.  Fairbanks, 
professor  in  charge  of  the  School  of  Fine  Arts;  George  M.  Whicher, 
professor  in  charge  of  School  of  Classical  Studies;  Felix  Lamond, 
professor  of  Musical  Composition.  Founded  1894.  Competitive  fellow- 
ships awarded  in  architecture,  sculpture,  painting,  landscape,  music 
and  classical  studies,  including  archaeology  and  history  of  art.  The 
fellowships  in  the  School  of  Fine  Arts  pay  $1,000  annually  for  three 
years ;  the  fellowships  in  the  School  of  Classical  Studies  pay  $1,000 
annually  for  one  or  two  years.  The  recipients  are  required  to  reside 
at  the  Academy's  home  in  Rome,  and  work  under  the  director's  guid- 
ance. Enrollment,  51.  Application  must  be  made  to  the  secretary, 
101  Park  Avenue,  New  York,  N.  Y.,  between  January  1  and  March  1 
of  each  year. 


Abbott  H.  Thayer,  N.A. 
1849-1921 


Obituaries 

1920-1921 

ADAMS,  MRS.  CHARLES  F.— An  art  patron,  died  at  her  home  at  Hinsdale,  111.. 
October  1,  1921.  Through  her  efforts  an  art  salon  was  established  in  Chicago  from 
which   developed   the   annual  exhibitions   of   Chicago   artists  at   the  Art   Institute. 

BACHMANN,  MAX.— A  sculptor,  died  in  New  York  City,  January  13,  1921.  He  de- 
signed the  allegorical  figures  of  the  continents  for  the  Pulitzer  Building  in  New  York 
City. 

BEARDSLEY,  RUDOLPH.— A  painter  and  illustrator,  died  at  his  home  in  New  ^crk, 
August  IS,  1921.  He  was  born  in  1875.  He  was  a  captain  in  the  camouflage  division 
during  the  World  War,  and  trained  artists  in  camouflage  in  Washington  and  in 
France.      He   designed  the   stage   settings    for  "Scandals   of    1921." 

BIXBEE,  WILLIAM  JOHNSON.— A  painter,  illustrator  and  teacher,  died  at  his  home 
at  Lynn,  Mass.,  July  14,  1921.  He  was  born  at  Manchester,  N.  H.,  August  31,  1850, 
and  was  a  pupil  of  the  Lowell  Institute,  Tomaso  Juglaris;  S.  P.  R.  Triscott  and  Mar- 
cus Waterman  in  Boston.  He  was  a  member  of  the  Society  of  Independent  Artists, 
and  for  twenty-seven  years  was  secretary  of  the  Boston  Society  of  Water  Color 
Painters.  He  designed  the  seal  of  the  City  of  Lynn,  and  is  represented  by  "Morning" 
at  the  Poland   Spring  Art   Gallery,   South  Poland,   Me. 

BORKMAN,  GUSTAF.— A  wood  engraver,  died  in  Brooklyn,  February  19,  1921.  He  was 
born  in  Sweden  in  1842,  and  his  work  as  an  engraver  included  many  of  the  old-time 
illustrations   for  the   "Graphic,"   "Harper's   Weekly"  and   "Harper's   Monthly." 

BRADSTREET,  EDWARD  D.— A  painter,  died  at  Meriden,  Conn.,  January  14,  1921. 
He  was  born  at  Meriden  in  1878,  and  was  a  member  of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of 
Fine  Arts,  New  Haven  Faint  and  Clay  Club,  and  Arts  and  Crafts  Association  of 
Meriden. 

BRENNAN,  ALFRED  LAURENS.— A  painter  and  illustrator,  died  at  his  home  in 
Brooklyn,  June  14,  1921.  He  was  born  in  1853.  He  made  more  than  10,000  pen-and- 
ink  drawings  which  appeared  in  various  publications,  and  at  the  time  of  his  death  was 
working  on  a  series  of  water  colors  reminiscent  of  his  boyhood  days.  He  was  also  a 
poet  and  writer  of  art  and  literary   reviews. 

BURLIN,  MRS.  NATALIE  CURTIS.— A  painter,  and  wife  of  the  painter,  Paul  Burlin, 
died  in  Paris,  October  23,  1921.  She  was  a  sister  of  the  portrait  painter,  Constance 
Curtis. 

CHAMBERS,  FANNY  MUNSELL.— An  illustrator,  died  August  27,  1920.  She  was  born 
in  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  and  was  a  pupil  of  the  Chicago  Art  Institute  and  Art  Students' 
League  of  New  York.  She  was  an  associate  member  of  the  Society  of  Illustrators. 
She  illustrated  "Saints  Progress"  by  Galsworthy,  and  made  cover  designs  for  many 
magazines. 

COADY,  ROBERT  T. — A  painter  and  formerly  editor  of  "The  Soil,"  an  art  magazine,  died 
at  his  home  in  Brooklyn,  January  6,  1921.  He  was  born  in  New  York  in  1881,  and 
studied  painting  in  Paris. 

COHEN,  HARRY. — A  painter,  died  suddenly  at  his  home  in  New  York  City,  August 
22,    1921.      He   was  born   in   1891. 

COLL.  JO'SEPH  CLEMENT.— An  illustrator,  died  at  the  Presbyterian  Hospital,  Phila- 
delphia, October  19.  1921.  _  He  was  born  in  Philadelphia,  July  2,  1881,  and  began  his 
career  in  1900  on  The  Chicago  American.  He  illustrated  stories  by  A.  Conan  Doyle 
and   Sax  Rohmer,   and  was  frequently  represented   in   important   magazines. 

CONANT,  LUC^'  SCARBOROUGH.— A  painter  and  teacher,  died  in  Boston,  January 
2,  1921.  She  was  born  in  Brooklyn,  Conn.,  in  1867,  and  studied  art  in  Boston  and 
Paris.  She  was  a  member  of  the  Copley  Society,  1892;  Boston  Water  Color  Club, 
Philadelphia  Water  Color  Club,_  and  Boston  Society  of  Arts  and  Crafts.  In  1919-20 
she  gave  courses  at  the  University  of  California,  Berkeley,  in  dramatic  art,  and  in  the 
designing   and   directing   of   pageants. 

CONVERSE,  EDMUND  COGSWELL.— An  art  collector,  died  at  Pasadena,  Cal.,  April  4, 
1921.     He  was  born  in   1849. 

CORSON,  CHARLES  SCHELL.— A  painter,  died  June  18,  1921.  He  was  a  member  of 
the  Art  Club  of  Philadelphia.  In  1915  and  1917  he  was  awarded  honorable  mention 
by  the  Art  Club  of  Philadelphia. 

COXE,  MARY  BOWMAN.— A  painter,  died  in  Providence,  R.  I.,  October  16,  1921. 
At  the  time  of  her  death  she  was  connected  with  the  Rhode  Island  School  of  Design. 
She  had    formerly   tauglit  at   the   Art   Students'   League   of    Buffalo. 

DAVIS,  MRS.  CORNELIA  CASSADY.— A  painter,  died  at  her  home  in  Cincinnati, 
December  23,  1920.  She  was  born  at  Cleves,  Ohio,  December  18,  1870,  and  was  a 
pupil  of  the  Cincinnati  Art  Academy  under  Lvitz,  Noble  and  Duveneck.  Slie  was  an 
honorary  member  of  the  Cincinnati  Woman's  Art  Club.  Her  awards  included  the 
fourth  prize  in  the  Osborne  competition.  New  York,  1906;  first  prize,  Ohio  Suffrage 
poster.  1912.  She  is  represented  by  "Portrait  of  President  William  McKinley"  in 
Westminster  Central  Hall,  London;  "The  Hopi  Indian  Snake  Ceremony,"  El  Tovar 
Gallery,   Grand   Canyon,  Arizona. 

225 


226  OBITUARIES 

DAVIES,  DAVID. — A  painter,  died  suddenly  in  the  La  Salle  Station,  Chicago,  Septem- 
ber 20,  1921.     He  was  born  in   1876. 

DEIGENDESCH,  HERMAN  F.— A  painter,  etcher  and  teacher,  died  at  Southampton, 
Pa.,  May  9,  1921.  He  was  born  in  Philadelphia,  in  1858,  and  was  a  pupil  of  the 
Munich  Academy.  For  many  years  he  was  an  instructor  at  the  School  of  Industrial 
Art  in  Philadelphia.      He  was  a  member  of  the  Philadelphia   Society  of   Etchers. 

DEXTER.  WILSON  C— An  illustrator,  was  killed  in  New  York  City,  by  an  "L"  train 
on  February  6,    1921.      He   was  born   in    1881. 

EARLE,  LAWRENCE  CARMICHAEL.— A  painter,  died  at  his  home  at  Grand  Rapids. 
November  20,  1921.  He  was  born  in  New  York  City,  November  11,  1845,  and  studied 
in  Munich,  Florence  and  Rome.  He  was  an  Associate  of  the  National  Academy  of 
Design,  and  a  member  of  the  American  Water  Color  Society;  Artists'  Fund  Society; 
Art  Institute  of  Chicago  (honorary)  ;  and  the  New  York  Water  Color  Club.  He  was 
represented  in  the  Art  Institute  of  Chicago,  and  in  the  Chicago  National  Bank.  He 
made  a  specialty  of  portraits. 

EDDY,  AUGUSTUS.— A  painter,  died  in  Paris  during  the  summer  of  1921.  He  was 
born   in   1851.      He   studied   art   in   Paris,   and   had   lived   there   since    1909. 

EIDLITZ,  CYRUS  L.  W.— An  architect,  died  suddenly  at  his  summer  home  at  South- 
ampton, L.  I.,  October  5,  1921.  He  was  born  in  New  York  in  1853,  and  studied  in 
Switzerland  and  Germany.  Among  the  buildings  he  designed  were  the  Buffalo  Public 
Library,  and  the  Bar  Association,  Washington  Life  and  Liberty  Bank,  and  the  Civil 
Engineer  House  in   New  York. 

EVERETT,  MRS.  CAROLINE  MILLS.— A  portrait  painter  and  writer,  died  in  the 
American  Hospital  in  Paris,  July  14,  1921.  She  was  the  author  of  "The  House  Oppo- 
site"  and   "The   Privilege   of  Pain." 

FRY,  MRS.  GEORGIA  TIMKEN.— A  painter,  and  wife  of  the  painter  John  H.  Fry,  died 
in  Peking,  China,  September  8,  1921.  She  was  born  in  St.  Louis  in  1864, 
and  was  a  oupil  of  Harry  Thompson,  Aime  Morot,  Schenck  and  Cazin  in  Paris.  She 
was  a  member  of  the  National  Association  of  Women  Painters  and  Sculptors;  Society 
of  New  York  Artists;  Society  of  Women  Artists.  She  is  represented  by  "Return  of 
the  Flock"   at   the   Boston  Art   Club.      She  made   a   specialty   of    landscapes  with    sheep. 

HALLETT,  HENDRICKS  A.— A  painter,  died  at  his  home  in  Boston,  March  17,  1921. 
He  was  born  at  Charlestown,  Mass.,  in  1847,  and  studied  in  Antwerp  and  Paris.  He 
was  well  known  for  his  pictures  of  various  types  of  ships  and  notable  events.  He  was 
a  member  of  the  Boston  Art  Club  and  the  Boston  Society  of  Water  Color  Painters. 
He  was  awarded  a  bronze  medal  at  the  Massachusetts  Charitable  Mechanics'  Associa- 
tion,   Boston,    1892. 

HART,  MRS.  MARY  THERESA.— A  painter,  and  widow  of  artist  James  M.  Hart,  died 
at  her  summer  home  at  Lakeville,  Conn.,  September  19,  1921.  She  was  born  in _  1829. 
She  was  also  an  educator,  and  in  1906  was  a  member  of  the  Board  of  Education  in 
Brooklyn.  ••'     i     1     in^T^ 

HEALY,  AARON  AUGUSTUS.— An  art  collector,  died  suddenly  at  his  home  at  Cold 
Snrine-  Harbnr-on-the-Hudson,  September  28,  1921.  He  was  born  in  Brooklyn.  June 
26,  1850.  His  aid  to  Italian  immigrants  caused  the  King  of  Italy  to  make  him  a 
Knight  of  the  Crown  of  Italy.  For  twenty-five  years  he  was  the  President  of  the 
Board  of  Trustees  of  the  Brooklyn  Institute  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  and  it  was  under 
his  direction  that  the  institute  made  such  progress.  He  was  a  member  of  the  Muni- 
cipal Art  Commission  and  a  director  of  the  Brooklyn  Academy  of  Music,  and  a  mem- 
bef  of  the  National   Arts,   Century,   Rembrandt,   Hamilton   and   City   Clubs. 

HEINE,  F.  W. — A  painter  and  founder  of  the  Heine  Art  School  of  Milwaukee,  died 
August  27.  1921.  He  was  born  in  Leipzig,  Germany,  in  1845,  and  studied  art  in  that 
country.     He  came  to  America  in   1885. 

HENDERSON,  MRS.  JEANIE  H.  REID.— A  painter,  died  in  London,  September  15, 
1921.     'She  was  born  in   1835. 

HUNEKER,  JAMES  GIBBON'S.— A  well-known  critic  of  music,  drama,  art  and  literature, 
died  at  his  home  in  Brooklyn,  February  9,  1921.  He  was  born  in  Philadelphia  in 
1860.  He  was  the  author  of  numerous  books  and  had  been  connected  with  the  New 
\'ork  Recorder,  Advertiser,  Sun,   Times  and    World. 

KERIGAN,  MRS.  MILDRED  ANDERSON  POST.— A  painter  and  illustrator,  died  in 
July,  1921.  She  was  born  in  Wayne,  Pa.,  in  1892,  and  was  a  pupil  of  Walter  Everett 
and   Thornton   Oakley.      She   was   a   member   of  the    Philadelphia   Water   Color   Club. 

KLUTH,  ROBERT. — A  marine  and  landscape  painter,  died  at  his  home  in  Brooklyn, 
September  23,  1921.  He  was  born  in  Germany  in  1854,  and  came  to  America  at  the 
age  of  seven  years.  He  studied  art  in  America  and  in  Germany  and  Norway.  _  He 
was  one  of  the  founders  of  the  Brooklyn  Society  of  Artists.  Many  of  his  paintings 
of  Norwegian  fjords  were   purchased  by  Andrew   Carnegie   for  public  libraries. 

KURZ,   LOUIS.- — A   mural  painter  and   one  of   the   founders   of  the   Chicago  Art   Institute, 

died  at  his  home  in   Chicago,   March   21,   1921.      He  was  born   in   Austria   in   1834,   and 

.came   to    America   in    1848.      He    fought    for   the    North    in    the    Civil   War,   and    was    a 

personal  friend  of  Lincoln.     His  sketches  of  the  Civil   War  were  the  first  to   be  issued 

after  the   close   of  the  conflict. 

LAUB,  ALBERT  F.— The  secretary  of  the  Buffalo  Fine  Arts  Academy,  the  Albright  Art 
Gallery,  died  at  his  home  in  Buffalo,  March  7,  1921.  He  was  born  at  Buffalo  May  28, 
1870.     He  was   also   a   director   of  the   Buffalo   Fine   Arts   School. 


OBITUARIES  227 

LAUX,  AUGUST. — A  landscape  and  fresco  painter,  died  at  his  home  in  Brooklyn,  Jiily 
21,  1921.  He  was  born  in  Bavaria  in  1853,  and  .came  to  America  in  1863.  He  was 
a   pupil   of   the    National   Academy   of   Design. 

LONGFELLOW,  ERNEST  WADSWORTH.— A  painter,  and  son  of  the  poet,  Henry  W. 
Longfellow,  died  in  Boston,  November  23,  1921.  He  was  born  in  Cambridge  in  1845, 
and  was  a  pupil  of  Hebert,  Bonnat  and  Couture  in  Paris.  He  was  a  member  of  the 
Century  Association.  He  is  represented  by  "Marine"  in  the  Boston  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts. 

McAULIFFE,  JAMES  J.— A  painter,  died  August  22,  1921,  at  Medford,  Mass.  He  was 
born  in  St.  Johns,  N.  F.,  in  1848,  and  studied  at  the  Boston  Art  ^School.  He  made 
a  specialty  of  religious  and  marine  subjects.  His  "Ecce  Homo"  and  seventy-five 
life-size  figures  are  in  the  Roman  Catholic  Cathedral  in  St.  Johns;  he  is  also  repre- 
sented by   "The  Constitution,"   in   the  P'arlin  Library,    Everett. 

McDON'OUGH,   CHARLES   J.— An  art   dealer,   died   in   New   York   City,   March   14,    1921. 

McFADDEN,  JOHN  HOWARD.— A  collector  of  paintings,  died  at  Atlantic  City,  Feb- 
ruary 16,  1921.  He  was  born  in  1851.  For  several  years  he  was  president  of  the 
Philadelphia  Art  Club. 

MEEKEL,  CHARLES  HAVILAND.— A  dealer  in  stamps  and  writer  on  philatelic  sub- 
jects, died  suddenly  at  his  home  at  Bethlehem,  Pa.,  October  14,  1921.  He  was  born 
in  1863.  He  founded  various  periodicals  devoted  to  news  of  stamp  collecting,  and 
helped   to   organize   the   American   Philatelic   Society   in    1886. 

MIFFLIN,  LLOYD. — A  portrait  painter  and  author  of  lyrics,  died  at  his  home  at  Nor- 
wood, Lancaster  Co.,  Pa.,  July  16,  1921.  He  was  born  in  1846.  He  had  published 
more   than  500  sonnets. 

MILLER,  ELEAZER  H.— A  painter  and  etcher,  died  at  his  home  in  Washington,  D.  C, 
April  4,  1921.  He  was  born  at  Shepherdstown,  W.  Va.,  in  1831,  and  was  a  pupil 
of  Gibson  and  of  Healy,  and  was  the  first  artist  of  national  reputation  to  make  his 
home  in  Washington.  He  was  a  member  of  the  Society  of  Washington  Artists  and 
of  the  Washington  Water  Color  Club.  He  is  represented  by  "Moonrise  and  Twilight," 
Corcoran  Gallery  of  Art,   Washington. 

MITCHELL,  GUERNSEY.— A  sculptor,  died  in  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  August  1,  1921.  He 
was  a  graduate  of  the  Ecole  des  Beaux  Arts,  in  Paris,  and  made  his  home  in  that 
city  for  twenty-one  years.  Among  his  best  known  works  are  the  statue  of  Martin  B. 
Anderson,  former  president  of  the  University  of  Rochester,  which  is  at  the  Univer- 
sity;   "Aurora,"   "The  Young   Botanist"   and   "David   and   Goliath. 

MOSENTHAL,  ELIZABETH.— A  designer  and  illuminator,  died  suddenly  at  Segovia, 
Spain,  July  29,  1921.  F'or  many  years  she  was  an  instructor  at  the  New  York  School 
of  Applied  Design  for  Women,  and  was  a  member  of  the  Board  of  Directors  of  the 
New    York   Society   of    Craftsmen. 

MURPHY,  JOHN  FRANCIS,  N.A.— A  noted  landscape  painter,  died  at  Roosevelt  Hos- 
.pital,  New  \ork,  January  29.  1921.  He  was  born  in  Oswego,  N.  Y.,  in  1853.  In  1885 
he  was  made  an  Associate  of  the  National  Academy  of  Design,  and  in  1887  he  was 
made  an  Academician.  He  was  a  member  of  the  Society  of  American  Artists,  1901; 
American  Water  Color  Society;  Salmagundi  Club;  Rochester  Art  Club;  Brooklyn  Art 
Club,  1900;  Lotos  Club.  His  awards  included  the  second  Hallgarten  prize,  National 
Academy  of  Design,  1885;  Webb  prize,  Society  of  American  Artists,  1887;  medal, 
Columbian  Exposition,  Chicago,  1893;  Evans  prize,  American  Water  Color  Society, 
1894;  gold  medal,  Philadelphia  Art  Club,  1889;  honorable  mention,  Paris  Exposition, 
1900;  silver  medal,  Pan-American  Exposition,  Buffalo,  1901;  gold  medal,  Charleston 
Exposition,  1902;  Carnegie  prize.  Society  of  American  Artists,  1902;  silver  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exposition,  1904;  Inness  gold  medal,  National  Academy  of  Design,  1910;  Eyans 
prize,  Salmagundi  Club,  1911;  silver  medal,  Panama-Pacific  Exposition,  San  Francisco, 
1915.  He  is  represented  by  "October"  in  the  Corcoran  Gallery  of  Art,  Washington; 
"Neglected  Lands,"  Buffalo  Academy  of  Fine  Arts;  "The  Clearing,"  Worcester  Art 
Museum;  "The  Path  to  the  Village"  and  "Indian  Summer,"  National  Gallery,  Wash- 
ington; "The  Hill  Top,"  Chicago  Art  Institute;  "The  Old  Barn,"  Metropolitan  Museum 
of  Art,  New  York;  "Afternoon  Lights  on  the  Hills,"  Carnegie  Institute,  Pittsburgh; 
"■September  Noon,"  Montclair  Art  Museum;  "After  the  Rain"  and  "Landscape," 
Brooklyn   Institute    Museum;    "Evening,"   Rhode   Island   School   of   Design,   Providence, 

NELSON,  MRS.  WILLIAM  R.— Widow  of  the  founder  of  the  Kansas  City  Art  Institute, 
died  at  her  home  in  Kansas  City,  October  5,  1921.  She  was  always  much  interested 
in  the  development  of  the  Art  Institute. 

O'LEARY,  ANGELA.— A  painter,  died  in  Providence,  R.  I.,  Oct.  2,  1921.  She  was  born 
at  Providence,  October  29,  1879,  and  was  a  member  of  the  Providence  Art  Club  and 
of  the  Providence  Water  Color  Club.  She  had  studed  in  England,  and  later  on  the 
Continent,  and  painted   landscaiie  and  genre  pictures,  mainly   in  water  colors. 

PARKHURST,  HENRY  LANDON.— A  painter  and  instructor  in  architecture  at  Pratt 
Institute,  died  in  New  York  City.  January  31,  1921.  He  was  born  at  Oswego,  N.  Y., 
in  1867,  and  studied  at  the  New  "York  Academy  of  Fine  Arts.  He  was  also  formerly 
instructor  in  architecture  at  Cooper  Union  and  in  the  New  York  School  of  Applied 
Design  for  Women,  and   was  a  member  of  the   New   York   Sketch   Club. 


228  OBITUARIES 


PEABODY,  JOHN  ENDICOTT.— The  president  of  the  Boston  Society  of  Arts  and  Crafts, 
died  at  his  home  at  Brookline,  Mass.,  August  17,  1921.  He  was  born  in  Salem, 
Mass.,  January  6,  1853,  and  was  educated  at  Cambridge.  He  was  for  three  years 
one  of  the  park  commissioners  of  Brookline,  ana  was  keenly  interested  in  art  and 
literature.      He   was   a   member   of    the   Copley   Society    of   Boston. 

PECK,  ORIN. — A  painter,  died  in  Los  Angeles,  Cal.,  January  20,  1921.  He  was  born 
in  Delaware  County,  N.  Y.,  in  1860.  He  was  in  charge  of  the  artistic  work 
planned  for  the  ranch  of  W.  R.  Hearst  in  northern  California,  and  had  painted  several 
portraits  of  the  Hearst  family.  He  was  awarded  a  gold  medal  at  the  Columbian  Ex- 
position,  Chicago,   1893,   for  his  *'Scene  in  the  Garden  of  the   Santa  Barbara   Mission." 

PEIX,  CHARLES  H. — For  the  past  eight  years  connected  with  the  John  Levy  Galleries, 
died  February  1,   1921,  at  his  home  in  New  York  City.      He  was  born  in   1874. 

PERRIE,  BERTHA  EVERSF'IELD.— A  painter  and  teacher,  died  at  Gloucester,  Mass., 
September  16,  1921.  She  was  a  member  of  the  Washington  Water  Color  Club,  the 
Society  of  Washington  Artists,  Art  Students'  League  of  New  York,  and  the  Penn- 
sylvania Society  of  Miniature  Painters.  She  was  awarded  the  second  Corcoran 
prize,  Washington  Water  Color  Club,  1900;  first  Corcoran  prize,  Washington  Water 
Color  Club,  1904.  For  twenty  years  she  was  a  teacher  of  water  color  at  the  Corcoran 
Gallery  of  Art  in  Washington,  and  also  taught  in   many  private   schools. 

PETERS,  SAMUEL  T. — A  collector  of  Chinese  paintings,  porcelains  and  jades,  died  at 
his  home  at  Islip,  L.  I.,  October  21,  1921.  He  was  born  in  1854.  He  was  a  trustee 
of  the  Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art,  and  had  presented  the  Museum  with  two  collec- 
tions of  jades. 

PIERSON',  ALDEN. — An  illustrator  and  art  director  of  "The  American  Magazine,"  died 
May  3,  1921,  in  New  York  City.  He  was  born  in  Baltimore  in  1874,  and  was  a 
member  of  the   Society  of  Illustrators. 

REINHARDT,  HENRY.— A  well-known  art  dealer,  died  at  the  Ritz-Carlton  Hotel,  New 
York,  January  13,  1921.  He  was  born  in  1858,  and  had  been  prominent  in  art  circles 
for  thirty-five  years.  He  had  galleries  in  Milwaukee,  Chicago,  New  York  and  Paris, 
and  was  instrumental  in  organizing  and  building  some  of  the  best  known  art  museums 
in  the  West.  Through  him  the  Toledo  Museum  of  Art  acquired  the  famous  "Moon- 
light," by  R.  A.  Blakelock.  During  the  Great  War  he  donated  an  ambulance  to  the 
American  Ambulance  Service  in  France,  and  turned  his  galleries  in  Paris  over  to  the 
French  Red  Cross.     He  was  a  member  of  the  Lotos  Club  of  New  York. 

RICHARDS,  FREDERICK  THOMPSON.— A  cartoonist,  illustrator  and  writer,  died  sud- 
denly of  heart  disease  at  his  home  in  Philadelphia,  July  8,  1921.  He  was  born  in 
Philadelphia,  May  27,  1864,  and  was  a  pupil  of  the  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine 
Arts  under  Eakins  and  E.  B.  Bensell;  and  also  studied  at  the  Art  Students'  League 
of  New  York.  He  was  a  member  of  the  Philadelphia  Sketch  Club,  the  Fellowship 
of  the  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts,  and  of  the  Players  Club.  He  had 
been  on  the  staff  of  "Life"  since  1888,  and  had  made  cartoons  for  the  New  York 
Herald,  Times,  and  Philadelphia  North  American.  He  was  the  author  of  "Color 
Prints   from   Dickens"  and   "The   Blot   Book." 

ROGERS,  MARY.— A  painter,  died  in  New  York  City,  August  26,  1920.  She  was  born 
in  Pittsburgh  in  1882,  and  was  a  pupil  of  Robert  Henri,  and  of  Simon  and  Menard 
in  Paris.  She  was  a  member  and  also  a  director  of  the  Society  of  Independent 
Artists. 

ROHL-SMITH,  MRS.  SARA.— The  widow  of  the  Danish-American  sculptor,  Carl  Rohl- 
Smith,  died   in  Copenhagen,   Denmark,  June   19,    1921. 

SATTIG,  VIOLET  MILLER.— A  painter,  died  September  18,  1920.  She  was  a  member 
of  the   New   Haven  Paint  and   Clay   Club. 

SEEBOLD,  W.  E.— An  art  dealer,  died  June  25,  1921.  He  was  born  in  Hanover,  Ger- 
many, in  1833,  and  came  to  America  while  a  young  man.  He  fought  for  the  Con- 
federacy during  the  Civil  War.  For  over  half  a  century  he  had  been  a  prominent 
dealer  in  New  Orle(ans,  and  in  his  galleries  were  held  exhibitions  of  work  by  all  the 
local  artists  and  by  many  visiting  artists  of  note.  He  was  the  last  survivor  of  the  Art 
Union,  the  first  association  of  artists  in  New  Orleans.  His  son  H.  deB.  Seebold,  and 
his   daughter,    Mrs.   Andres    Molinary,    are   both    recognized    painters. 

SCHMITT,  HENRY.— A  sculptor,  died  in  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  May  1,  1921.  He  was  born 
in  Germany,  and  came  to  America  in  1884.  Most  of  his  work  is  in  Roman  Catholic 
churches   in    Buffalo. 

SEE,  MILTON. — An  architect,  died  October  27,  1920.  at  his  home  at  Mount  Vernon, 
N.  Y.  He  was  born  in  1854,  and  for  many  years  was  a  member  of  the  firm  of 
Cady,  Bird  &  See.  Among  the  important  buildings  for  which  Mr.  See's  firm  pre- 
pared plans  were  the  original  Metropolitan  Opera  House,  the  Museum  of  Natural  His- 
tory and  the  Presbyterian   Hospital.      He   also   helped   in  designing  many   churches. 

SHUMAN,  ANNA  M. — A  painter  and  teacher,  died  February  26,  1919.  She  was  born 
in  Pittsburgh  in  1890,  and  was  a  pupil  of  Hawthorne  and  Dow.  She  was  a  member 
of  the   Pittsburgh  Art  Association. 

SMILLIE,  GEORGE  HENRY,  N.A.— A  landscape  painter,  died  at  his  home  at  Bronxville, 
New  York,  November  10,  1921.  He  was  a  son  of  the  engraver,  James  Smillie.  and  a 
brother  of  the  etcher  and  painter,  James  D.  Smillie.  He  was  a  pupil  of  James  M.  Hart. 
In  1864  he  became  an  associate  of  the  National  Academy  of  Design,  and  became  an 
Academician  in  1882.  He  was  also  a  member  of  the  American  Water  Color  Society, 
Century  Association  and  Lotos  Club.  His  awards  included  a  first  prize  from  the 
American  Art  Association,  New  York,  1885;  bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exposition,  1904; 
silver    medal,    American    Art    Society,    Philadelphia,    1907.      He    is    represented    by    "A 


OBITUARIES  229 


Long  Island  Farm"  and  "Autumn  on  Massachusetts  Coast,"  Corcoran  Gallery,  Wash- 
ington; "Light  and  Shadow  Along  Shore,"  Union  League  Club,  Philadelphia;  "Autumn 
Afternoon,"  Metropolitan  Mviseum,  New  York;  "From  West  Mountain,  near  Ridge- 
field,"  Lotos  Club,  New  York;  "Hillside,"  Rhode  Island  School  of  Design,  Provi- 
dence;  "A   Group  of   Cedars,"   Public   Library,   Erie,   Pa. 

SMITH,  EDWARD  ROBINSON.— A  painter  and  sculptor,  died  at  Stamford,  Conn., 
March  21,  192L  He  was  born  at  Beyrout,  Syria,  in  1854,  and  was  a  pupil  of  William 
Rimmer  and  Duveneck.  He  was  a  former  librarian  of  Avery  Library,  Columbia  Univer- 
sity, and  was  a  member  of  the  New  York  Architectural  League,  New  York  Municipal 
Art  Society,  American   Numismatic  Society,  and  American  Library  Association. 

SMITH,  LETTA  CRAPO.— A  painter,  died  in  Boston,  March  17,  1921.  She  was  born 
in  Flint,  Mich.,  in  1862,  and  was  a  pupil  of  Chase  in  New  York;  Julius  Rolshoven, 
George  Hitchcock  and  Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  She  was  awarded  a  bronze  medal 
at   the    St.    Louis   Exposition   in    1904. 

SPRINGER,  CHARLES  HENRY.— A  painter,  craftsman,  sculptor,  illustrator,  designer 
and  teacher,  died  in  May,  1920.  He  was  born  in  Providence,  R.  I.,  July  15,  1857. 
He  was  a  pupil  of  the  Art  Students'  League  of  New  York,  Hugo  Breul  in  Provi- 
dence, F.  W.  Freer  in  New  York,  and  studied  architecture  in  Providence.  He  was  a 
member  of  the  Providence  Art  Club  and  of  the  Rhode  Island  School  of  Design.  He 
made   a   specialty   of   woodcarving   and    furniture   design. 

STEVENSON,  MRS.  CORNELIUS.— Curator  and  lecturer  of  the  Museum  and  School 
of  Industrial  Art,  died  in  Philadelphia,  November  14,  1921.  She  was  the  first 
president   of  the   Society  of   Little   Gardens,    and   was   greatly   interested   in   art   matters. 

S\'LVESTER,  HARRY  ELLIOTT.— A  painter  and  wood  engraver,  died  in  a  hospital  in 
Boston,  February  22,  1921.  He  was  born  at  North  Easton,  Mass.,  in  1860,  and  was 
a  pupil  of  John  A.  Eraser  and  Childe  Hassam;  engraving  under  George  E.  Johnson. 
He  was  a  member  of  the  Boston  Art  Club,  and  is  represented  in  the  Carnegie  Insti- 
tute,   Pittsburgh. 

SYMMONDS,  CHARLES  S.— An  art  patron,  died  at  his  home  in  Utica,  N.  Y.,  Septem- 
ber 21,   1921.     He  was  the  president  of  the  Utica   National  Bank. 

TAYLOR,  F'RANK  WALTER.— An  illustrator,  died  in  Philadelphia  during  the  summer 
of  1921.  He  was  born  in  Philadelphia  in  1874,  the  son  of  Frank  H.  Taylor,  and  was 
a  pupil  of  the  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts,  and  studied  in  Paris.  He 
was  a  member  of  the  Fellowship  of  the  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts; 
Society  of  Illustrators,  and  Philadelphia  Water  Color  Club.  His  awards  included  a 
medal  of  honor,  Panama-Pacific  Exposition,  San  Francisco,  1915.  His  best  known 
work  included  illustrations  for  "Fisherman's  Luck,"  by  Henry  Van  Dyck;  "Marriage 
a  la  Mode,"  by  Mrs.   Humphrey  Ward;  "The  Iron  Woman,"  by  Margaret  Deland. 

TAYLOR,  HORACE. — A  newspaper  illustrator  and  water  colorist,  died  at  Swamp  Lake, 
Wis.,    September    18,    1921.      He   was   born   in    1864. 

THAYER,  ABBOTT  HANDERSON,  N.A.— A  painter,  writer  and  discoverer  of  camou- 
flage, died  at  his  home  at  Monadnock,  N.  H.,  May  29,  1921.  He  was  born  in  Boston 
in  1849,  and  was  a  pupil  of  the  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  in  Paris  under  Gerome  and 
Lehmann.  He  was  made  an  Associate  of  the  National  Academy  of  Design  in  1898, 
and  an  Academician  in  1901,  and  was  a  member  of  the  Society  of  American  Artists, 
1879;  National  Academy  of  Arts  and  Letters;  Societa  delle  Belle  Arti  Denominata  de 
San  Luca,  Rome.  He  is  represented  by  "Florence  Protecting  the  Arts,"  mural  deco- 
ration in  Bowdoin  College,  Brunswick,  Me.;  Paintings — "Young  Woman"  and  "Win- 
ter Sunrise  on  Monadnock,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York;  "Caritas,"  Museum 
of  Fine  Arts,  Boston;  "Winged  Figure,"  Smith  College,  Northampton,  Mass.;  "Por- 
trait of  a  Lady,"  Cincinnati  Museum;  ten  oil  paintings  and  one  water  color.  National 
Gallery,  Washington;  "Portrait  of  a  Young  Girl"  and  "Roses,"  Worcester  Art  Mu- 
seum. Discoverer  of  the  laws  of  concealing  coloration  in  the  animal  kingdom  which 
gave   rise    to   the    system   of   camouflage    in   military   practice. 

THEVENAZ,  PAUL. — A  painter,  died  at  the  Greenwich  Hospital,  New  York,  July  6, 
1921.  He  was  born  at  Geneva,  Switzerland.  February  22,  1891,  and  was  of  Italian 
descent.  He  came  to  the  United  States  at  the  age  of  twenty-six,  and  served  in  the 
American   Army    during   the   World    War. 

TOWNSEND,  JAMES  BLISS.— An  art  critic  and  editor  of  "The  American  Art 
News,"  died  suddenly  at  his  home  in  New  York  City,  March  10,  1921.  He  was  born 
in^  New  York  in  1855.  As  an  art  critic  he  had  been  connected  with  the  New  York 
World  and   Herald  and   had  also   written   for  various  other   publications. 

TURNER,  EMERY  S. — At  one  time  head  of  the  Anderson  Art  Galleries,  died  at  Saranac 
Lake,  N.  Y.,  October  11,  1921.  He  was  born  in  1841  and  was  a  major  in  the  Federal 
Army   during   the    Civil    War. 

UPTON,  ETHELWYN.— A  painter,  died  in  the  spring  of  1921.  She  was  a  member  of 
the   National   Association    of   Women    Painters   and    Sculptors. 

WATROUS,  MRS.  ELIZABETH  SNOWDEN  NICHOLS.— A  painter  and  writer,  and 
wife  of  the  painter,  Harry  W.  Watrous.  died  at  her  home  in  New  York  City,  October 
4,  1921.  She  was  born  in  New  York  in  1858,  and  studied  with  Henner  and  Carolus- 
Duran  in  Paris.  She  was  a  member  of  the  New  York  Woman's  Art  Club,  the  Pen 
and  Brush  Club,  Society  of  Women  Painters  and  'Sculptors,  the  Professional  Women's 
League.      She  was  the  author   of    two   novels,    "Ti"   and   "It." 


230  OBITUARIES 


WEBER,  CARL.— A  landscape  painter,  died  at  Ambler,  Pa.,  January  24,  1921.  He  was 
born  at  Philadelphia  in  1850,  and  was  a  pupil  of  his  father,  Paul  Weber,  Becker  in 
Frankfort,  Steinle  in  Vienna,  Raupp  in  Munich,  and  also  studied  in  Paris.  He  was  a 
member  of  the  Philadelphia  Artists'  Fund  Society;  American  Art  Society,  Philadel- 
phia; Philadelphia  Art  Club.  His  awards  included  medal,  London,  1873;  hon.  men- 
tion, Columbian  Exposition,  Chicago,  1893;  hon.  mention,  Atlanta  Exposition,  1895; 
gold   medal   for  water  .color,   American   Art   Society,    Philadelphia. 

WHEELER,  MAR^'  C— A  painter,  died  in  March,  1920.  She  was  a  member  of  the 
Providence   Art    Club. 

WILLET,  WILLIAM. — A  well-known  mural  painter,  craftsman,  lecturer  and  writer, 
died  at  his  home  in  Philadelphia,  March  29,  1921,  He  was  born  in  New  York  City 
in  1868,  and  was  a  pupil  of  Mechanics'  and  Tradesmen's  Institute,  New  York;  Van 
Kirk,  Chase,  John  La  Farge;  studied  in  France  and  England.  He  was  a  member  of 
the  Mural  Painters;  New  York  Architectural  League,  1910;  Boston  Society  of  Arts 
and  Crafts;  St.  Dunstan's  Club,  Boston;  Fellowship  of  the  Pennsylvania  Academy  of 
the  Fine  Arts;  Philadelphia  Alliance.  His  work  included:  Sanctuary  Window,  West 
Point  Military  Academy;  window  in  Proctor  Hall,  Princeton;  Mather  Memorial, 
Trinity  Cathedral,  Cleveland;  Guthrie  Memorial,  St.  John's  Church,  Locust  Valley, 
L.  I.;  St.  Paul's  Cathedral,  Pittsburgh;  Harrison  Memorial,  Cavalry  Church,  Ger- 
mantown;  mural  paintings  in  St.  Alvernia's  Convent,  Pittsburgh;  Presbyterian  Hospital 
Chapel,  Pittsburgh;  Thaw  Memorial,  Third  Presbyterian  Church,  Pittsburgh;  memorial 
in  Greenwood  Cemetery  Chapel,  New  York;  Trinity  Church,  Syracuse;  St.  Paul's 
Church,  Halifax,  N.  S.  He  was  the  author  of  "Stained  Glass  in  Our  Churches"  and 
other  articles  on   stained  glass. 

WILSON,  MELVA  BEATRICE.— A  sculptor,  mural  painter,  poet  and  lecturer,  died  in 
New  York  City,  June  2,  1921.  She  was  born  in  Madiscn,  Ind.,  in  1866.  Her  work 
is  in  the  Farley  Memorial  Chapel  at  Calvary  Cemetery,  L.  I.,  N.  Y.,  and  in  the  St. 
Louis  Cathedral,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 


Art   Magazines 


A.   for  annual;    M.   for   monthlies;   W.   for  weeklies;   Q.   for  quarterlies. 

Single         Yearly 

Academy    Notes    (Semi-A.) — Cornelia    B.    Sage    Quinton,    Editor;    Albright 

Art    Gallery,    Buffalo,    N.    Y $0.75 

All  the  Arts. — ^Official  organ  of  Detroit  Orchestral  Association,  N.   T.  Corey, 

Editor-in-chief;    292    Woodward   Ave.,   Detroit,    Mich 

American     Architect,     The     (Fortnightly). — William     H.     Crocker,     Editor; 

243    West   39th    St.,    New   York .' 35  6.00 

American    Art    Annual. — American    Federation    of    Arts,    Publishers,    1741 

New   York  Ave.,   Washington,    D,    C 7.50 

American  Art  News  (W.,  October  15  to  July   1;  M.,  July  15  to  September 

15).      Peyton    Boswell,    Editor,    786    Sixth    Ave.,    New    York 15  4.00 

American    Art    Student.— W.    W.    Hubbard,    Editor;    21    Park    Row,    New 

New  York,   N.   Y 25  2.50 

American  Institute  of  Architects,  Journal  of  the  (M.) — 313   East  23rd  St., 

New   York 50  5.00 

American    Magazine   of   Art    (M.),    Organ   of    The    American    Federation    of 

Arts. — Leila  Mechlin,  Editor;  1741  New  \brk  Ave.,  Washington,  D.  C.        .25  2.50 

Antiques    (M.). — Homer  Eaton   Keyes,   Editor;   683   Atlantic  Ave.,    Boston, 

Mass ... 

Architect  and   Engineer   (M.) — Frederick  W.  Jones,    Editor;   The  Architect 

and  Engineer,  Inc.,  Publishers,  627  Foxcroft  Bldg.,  San  Francisco,  Cal.        .50  2.50 

Architectural   Forum    (M.). — A.  J.   MacDonald,    Editor;    Rogers   &   Hanson 

Co.,   Publishers;    142   Berkeley   St.,   Boston,   Mass 60  6.00 

Architectural     Record     (M.).— Michael    A.    Mikkelsen,    Editor;     119     West 

40th    St.,    New    York    35  3.00 

Architecture    (M.). — J.    B.    Carrington,   Editor;    Scribner's,    Publishers,    599 

Fifth    Ave.,    New    York    1.00  5.00 

Architecture    and     Building     (M.).— W.     F.     Comstock,     Managing     Editor; 

William  T.  Comstock  Co.,  Publishers,  23   Warren  St.,  New  York 30  3.00 

Art    and    Archaeology    (M.). — Mitchell    Carroll,    Editor;    Archaeological    In- 
stitute,  The    Octagon,    Washington,    D.    C 50  5.00 

Art  in  America  and  Elsewhere   (Bi-M.). — Frederic  Fairchild  Sherman,   Edi- 
tor and   Publisher,   8  West  47th   St.,   New   York. 1.00  6.00 

Arts,   The    (Ten  times  a   year). — Hamilton    Easter   Field,    Editor    and   Pub- 
lisher, Ardsley  Studios,  110  Columbia  Heights,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y 40  3.00 

Arts  and    Decoration    (M.). — Matlack   Price,    Editor;   Joseph   A.   Judd   Pub- 
lishing Co.,  Inc.,  Publishers;    50  West  47th  St.,  New  York 40  5.00 

Bookplate  Booklet  (Q.).— Alfred  Fowler,  Editor;   17  Board  of  Trade  Bldg., 

Kansas    City,    Mo 50  2.00 

Bookplate    Chronicle    (M.). — Alfred    Fowler,    Editor;    17    Board    of    Trade 

Bldg.,   Kansas   City,    Mo 10  1.00 

Boston    Museum    of    Fine   Arts   Bulletin    (Bi-M.). — B.    I.    Oilman,    Editor; 

Huntington    Ave.,    Boston     10  .50 

Brooklyn     Museum    Quarterly. — W.    H.     F'ox,     Editor,     Eastern    Parkway, 

Brooklyn,   New  York,  N.   Y 

Buffalo   Magazine  of  Arts   (M.). — Carl  L.  Bredemeier,   Editor;   56  Bedford 

Ave.,    Buffalo,    N.    Y 20  2.00 

Builder,  The  (M.).— J.  B.  Johnston,  Editor;  Lyceum  Bldg.,  Pittsburgh,  Fa.        .50  3.00 

Building   Review      (M.). — Harris  Allen   and   Henry  H.    Gutterson,    Editors, 

50   Main   St.,   San   Francisco,    Calif 25  2 .  00 

Chicago   Art   Institute   Bulletin    (M.,    September  to    May) 05  .50 

Cleveland   Museum   of  Art   Bulletin    (Ten   times  a  year). — F.   A.  Whiting, 

Editor,  East  Boulevard,  Wade  Park,   Cleveland,  Ohio 10  1.00 

College    Art   Association   Bulletin    (Q.). — Prof.  John    Shapley,    Brown    Uni- 
versity,   Providence,    R.    1 1.00  3.00 

Decorative    Furnisher    (M.). — James    P.    Rome,    Editor;    T.    A.    Cawthra    & 

Co.,  Publishers,   381    Fourth  Ave.,   New  York,   N'.  Y 30  3.00 

Detroit    Institute   of   Arts    Bulletin    (M.,    except   June   to    October). — Clyde 

H.    Burroughs,    Editor;    Detroit,    Mich ... 

El   Palacio,   Journal    of   the    Museum   of    New    Mexico    (W.). — Paul   A.    F. 

Walter,   Editor ;   'Santa   Fe,   New   Mexico 05  2.00 

Good   Furniture    (M.). — Henry   W.    Frohne,    Editor;    Dean-Hicks   Co.,    Pub- 
lishers,   Grand    Rapids,    Mich 25  3.00 

Herron   Art   Institute    Quarterly. — Indianapolis,    Ind ... 

House   and    Garden    (M.). — Richardson    Wright,    Editor;    Conde    Nast    and 

Co.,   Publishers,   19  West  44th   St.,  New  York 35  3.50 

231 


232  ART  MAGAZINES 


Single        Yearly 
House    Beautiful,    The    (M.).— Charlotte    Lewis,    Editor;    8    Arlington    St., 

Boston,    Mass $0.35  $4.00 

Industrial   Arts   Magazine    (M.). — Bruce   Publishing   Co.,    Milwaukee,   Wis.        .30  2.50 

Jnternational    Studio    (M.). — Peyton    Boswell,    Editor,    786    Sixth    Avenue, 

New   York    60  6  .  00 

Keramic  Studio  (M.,  except  July  and  August,  published  as  single  num- 
ber).— Keramic  Studio  Co.,  Publishers;  543  South  Clinton  St.,  Syra- 
cuse,   N.    Y. 50  5.00 

Landscape    Architecture     (Q.). — Landscape     Architecture,    Inc.,     Publisher, 

Crescent    and    Mulberry    Sts.,    Harrisburg,    Fa 75  3.00 

Los   Angeles   Museum   of  History,    Science   and   Art   Bulletin    (Q.) .50 

Manual    Training    Magazine    (M.). — Charles    A.    Bennett,    Editor;    Manual 

Arts   Press,   Peoria,    111 25  1.50 

Metropolitan    Museum    of    Art    Bulletin    (M.). — Henry    W.    Kent,    Editor; 

New    York 20  2.00 

Milwaukee    Art    Institute    Bulletin    (Eight    times    a    year). — Mrs.    William 

Mayhew,    Editor,'  456   Jefferson    St.,    Milwaukee,    Wis 10  .80 

Minneapolis  Institute  of  Arts  Bulletin  (M.,  October  to  June). — Minne- 
apolis,     Minn 10  .75 

Municipal    Art    Society    of    New    York    Bulletin    (Q.). — Mrs.    H.    B.    Keen, 

Secretary;   119  East  19th   St.,  New  York,  N.  Y 

Museum  Work  (Bi-M.). — Organ  of  American  Association  of  Museums, 
Harold  L.  Madison,  Editor,  Cleveland  Museum  of  Natural  History, 
Cleveland;  Josephine  M.  Lansing,  Art  Editor,  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New    York    25  2.00 

Museum    Journal    (Q.). — -University    Museum,    Philadelphia,    Pa 50  2.00 

National     Architect      (M.). — National     Architect     Co.,     Publishers,     Crozer 

Building,    Philadelphia.    Pa.. 50  5.00 

Needle    and    Bobbin    Club    Bulletin    (Semi-annual). — Richard    C.    Greenleaf, 

Editor,   Lawrence,   L.   I.,   N.   Y 1.50  3 .  00 

Newark  Museum  Bulletin   (occasional). — J.  C.  Dana,  Editor;  Newark,  N.  J. 

Numismatic     Notes    and     Monographs     (M.). — The     American     Numismatic 

Society,   West   156th    St.,    New  York,   N.   Y 

Numismatist   (M.). — Frank   G.   Duffield,   Editor;   The  American  Numismatic 

Association,    Publishers,    Baltimore,    Md 15  1.50 

Old  Time  New  England  (Q.). — Bulletin  of  the  Society  for  the  Preserva- 
tion of  New  England  Antiquities;  Harrison  Gray  Otis  House,  2  Lynde 
St.,    Boston,    Mass 

Park  and  Cemetery  and  Landscape  Gardening  (M.). — O.  H.  Sample, 
Editor;  Allied  Arts  Publishing  Co.,  114  South  Carroll  St.,  Madison, 
Wis 50  3.00 

Pencil  Points  (M.). — Eugene  Clute,  Editor;  Pencil  Points  Press,  Inc.,  Pub- 
lishers,   1    Madison    Ave..    New    York 15  1 .  00 

Pennsylvania  Museum  Bulletin  (Q.). — Langdon  Warner,  Editor;  Fairmount 

Park,    Philadelphia,    Pa 25  1 .  00 

Picture  and  Gift  Journal  (M.).— W.  W.  Raleigh,  Manager,  537  S.  Dear- 
born   St.,    Chicago,    111 20  2.00 

Poster  (M.).— Roy  O.  Randall,  Editor;  1620  Steger  Bldg.,  28  East  Jack- 
son   Blvd.,    Chicago,    111 25  3.00 

Print   Connoisseur    (M.).— W.   P.   Truesdell,   Publisher,    154    East  38th    St., 

New    York    5.00 

Rhode    Island     School     of    Design     Bulletin     (Q.).— L.     E.     Rowe,     Editor; 

Providence,   R.   I ... 

Saint   Louis   Art  League   Bulletin    (Bi-M.). — Syndicate   Trust   Bldg 25  1.00 

St.   Louis   City  Art   Museum   Bulletin    (Q.). — 15 

Saint   Paul  Institute   Bulletin    (M.,   Nov.   to   April). — St.   Paul,   Minn 10 

School   Arts    Magazine    (M.,    except    July    and    August). — Pedro   J.    Leraos, 

Editor;   Davis  Press,  Inc.,   Publishers,  25   Foster  St.,   Worcester,   Mass.        .35  3.00 

Smith   College  Bulletin   (A.). — Northampton,   Mass 

Student's  Art    Magazine    (Bi-M.).— G.   H.   Lockwood,    Publisher;    124    West 

Main   St.,    Kalamazoo,    Mich 20  1.00 

Syracuse    (N.  Y.)    Museum   of  Fine  Arts   Bulletin    (Q.) 

Three  Arts  Club  Journal  (M.). — Mrs.  A.  Elliott  Mullinier,  Editor;  pub- 
lished  by  the  Three   Arts   Club,   250   South    17th    St.,   Philadelphia,   Pa. 

Toledo   Museum  Bulletin   (M.). — George  W.   Stevens,   Editor;   Toledo,    Ohio        .10  .50 

Upholsterer    and    Interior    Decorator    (M.). — John   W.    Stephenson.    Editor; 

Clifford  and  Lawton,  Publishers,  373  Fourth  Ave.,   New  York,  N.  Y.  .         .30  3.00 

Western  Architect  (M.). — Robert  Craik  McLean,  Editor;  Western  Archi- 
tect,   Inc.,    Publishers,    215    S.    Market    St.,    Chicago,    111 50  5.00 

Wayside    Tales    and    Cartoons    Magazine    (M.). — H.    H.    Windsor,    Editor; 

6   North   Michigan  Ave.,   Chicago,   111 25  3  .  00 

Worcester  Art  Museum  Bulletin    (Q.). — Raymond   Wyer,   Worcester,   Mass. 


ress 


List 


Daily   and    weekly   papers   that    devote   space   to  art;    all   are   dailies   unless   otherwise   noted. 
Art  critic's  name  is  given  in  parentheses. 
ALBANY,  N.  Y.— Daily  and  Weekly  Herald. 

BALTIMORE,     MD. — Baltimore    Evening    Sun     (John    Oldmixon    Lambdin). 
BOSTON,    MASS.— Herald    (Frederick    VV.    Coburn) ;    The   Evening    Transcript    (Wm. 

H.    Downes) ;    Sunday    Advertiser    (Jean    Nutting    Oliver);    Boston    Post    (Sidney 

Woodward);    Christian   Science   Monitor    (Sidney   Woodward). 
BUFFALO,    N.    Y.— News    (W.    F.    O'Connell) ;    Sunday    Times. 
BURLINGTON,   lA.— Saturday   Evening   Post    (W.)    (J.   W.    Murphy). 
CAMDEN,   N.   J.— Camden  Daily  Courier   (Mrs.  Juliet  Lit   Stern). 
CHARLESTON,    S.    C— Charleston   Evening   Post. 
CHICAGO,  ILL.— Chicago  Evening  Post    (Lena  M.    McCauley) ;  The  Chicago  Tribune 

(Eleanor  Jewett) ;   Chicago   Herald   and   Examiner    (Henriette   Weber). 
CINCINNATI,    O. — Cincinnati    Enquirer    (W.    L.    Brilmayer;    Mrs.    Alice    C.    Swain); 

Cincinnati   Erie   Presse    (Carl   Pletz)  ;   Times-Star    (Mrs.   Mary   L.   Alexander). 
CLEVELAND,    O.— Sunday    News-Leader    (Benjamin    Karr) ;    Cleveland    Plain    Dealer 

(Jessie  C.  Glasier). 
COLUMBUS,  O.— Dispatch   (H.  E.  Cherrington). 
DENVER,  COL.— Denver  News  (Mrs.  M.  R.  F.  Valle) ;  Denver  Post;  Rocky  Mountain 

News  (Mrs.  M.  R.  F.  Valle). 
DETROIT,    MICH.— Free  Press    (Mary   Humphrey);    News    (Leonard   Lanson   Cline) ; 

Journal    (Ralph    Holmes). 
HARTFORD,    CONN.— Courant    (William  D.   Freer). 

INDIANAPOLIS,  IND.— News   (Adolph  Schmuck);    Star   (Lucille   E.   Morehouse). 
KANSAS   CITY,   MO.— Kansas  City   Star   (Mrs.   Minna  Powell). 
LAGUNA   BEACH,   CAL.— Laguna   Life   (Antony  Anderson). 

LOS  ANGELES,  CAL. — Evening  Express   (Alma  May  Cook);  Times   (Antony  Ander- 
son). 
LOUISVILLE,  KY.— Herald   (C.  A.    Segner) ;   Evening  Post   (Adele  Brandeis). 
MILWAUKEE,   WIS.— Free   Press    (Alvin   Otis    Royse). 
MINNEAPOLIS,    MINN.— Journal;    Tribune    (Miss   Hamblin). 
NEWARJv,  N.  J.— Evening  News. 

NEW  HAVEN,  CONN.— The  New  Haven  Evening  Register. 
NEW     ORLEANS,     LA.— The     Times-Picayune     (W.)     (Robert     Mayfield     and     Lyle 

Saxon). 
NEW  YORK,  N.  Y.— 

Brooklyn   Eagle    (Hamilton  Easter  Field),   Eagle  Bldg.,   Brooklyn. 

Brooklyn  Standard-Union   (John   Brockway),  292  Washington   St.,   Brooklyn. 

Brooklyn   Daily   Times    (Arthur   Wakeling),   Fourth   and   Atlantic   Aves.,    Brooklyn. 

Evening  Mail    (Maurice  Joy),   25   City   Hall   PL,    Manhattan. 

Evening  Post  (David  Lloyd),  20  Vesey  St.,  Manhattan. 

Evening  World    (W.    G.    Bowdoin),    liJS?    East   39th   St.,    Brooklyn. 

New  York  Globe   (Mrs.   G.   L.  Nelson),   751   Dey   St.,   Manhattan. 

New  York  Herald   (Henry   McBride),   Sun   Bldg.,    150   Nassau   St.,   Manhattan. 

New   York  Times    (Elisabeth   L.   Gary),   Broadway   and   42d   St.,   Manhattan. 

New  York  Tribune    (Royal   Cortissoz),    154   Nassau   St.,    Manhattan. 

New  ^ork  World   (Henry  Tyrrell),  63  Park  Row,   Manhattan. 

Staats-Zeitung    (Julius   Krause),   P.    O.   Box   1207,   Manhattan. 

Sun   (T.   Ccan),   Sun   Bldg.,   Manhattan. 
OAKLAND,    CAL.— Oakland   Tribune    (Mrs.    Laura   Bride   Powers). 
OMAHA,  NEB.— Omaha  World-Herald. 
PHILADELPHIA,  PA.— Item  (James  J.  Wray) ;  Philadelphia  Gazette-Democrat   (Max 

Heinrici)  ;    North   American    (F.    Cresson   Schell) ;   Philadelphia  Inquirer    (Bushnell 

Dimcnd);    Public  Ledger    (Harvey   M.   Watts);   The   Record, 
PITTSBURGH,  PA.— Dispatch   (E.  W.   Lightner). 

PORTLAND,    ME.— Evening   Express   Advertiser    (Mrs.    Emma    Mosley);. 
PROVIDENCE,  R.  I.— Providence  Journal   (Grace  L.   Slocum) ;  Tribune    (Mrs.  N.   B. 

Pettis). 
QUINCY,   ILL.— The   Herald    (Helen   B.    Osborn). 
RICHMOND,   IND.— The  Richmond  Item   (Esther   Griffen   White). 
ROCHESTER,    N.    Y.— Post    Express    (S.    B.    Sabin)  ;    Rochester    Herald    (Howard    S. 

Ruddy);   Times    (Annie   Croughton). 
SAN    FRANCISCO,     CAL.— Argonaut     (W.)      (Sidney     Coryn) ;     Bulletin;     Chronicle 

(Margaret  Medbury);   News-Letter    (W.). 
SPRINGFIELD,  ILL.— News  Record. 

SPRINGFIELD,    MASS.— Springfield   Republican    (Louise  Mace). 
ST.   LOUIS,   MO.— Globe   Democrat    (Emily   G.   Hutchings) ;    Post   Dispatch;    St.    Louis 

Star   (Mary  Powell);   St.   Louis  Times   (Harry  L.   Burke). 
ST.   PAUL,   MINN.— Dispatch-Pioneer   Press    (Arthur   L.   Wilhelm). 
SYRACUSE,  N.  Y.— Herald. 

TOLEDO,   O.— Toledo  Blade    (Harry  L.   Hewes). 
WASHINGTON,   D.   C— Evening  Star   (Leila   Mechlin). 
WILMINGTON,   DEL.— Morning   News;    Star    (W.)    (Mary   Russell). 
WORCESTER,   MASS.— Worcester  Telegram. 

233 


List  of  Sales — Season  of  1  920- 1  92 1 


The  words  set  in  heavy  face  type  in  the  following  index  of  the  sales 
held  during  the  past  season  are  used  in  the  tabulated  list  to  indicate  the 
name  of  the  sale. 

These  lists  have  been  compiled  with  the  co-operation  of  the  various 
auction  firms.  All  sales  were  held  in  New  York  City  unless  otherwise 
stated.  The  record  includes  1,395  paintings  sold  for  $50  and  over  for  a 
total  of  $724,852,  106  drawings  sold  for  $25  and  over  for  a  total  of  $49,906, 
1,502  prints  sold  for  $25  and  over  for  a  total  of  $212,311,  and  260  pieces 
of  sculpture  sold  for  $50  and  over  for  a  total  of  $82,061. 
A.  A.  A. — American  Art  Association: 

November  17,  18,  1920. — Collection  of  paintings  sold  with  furniture 
and  objects  of  art  belonging  to  Charles  of  London,  for  $511,307. 

December  2,  3,  1920.— 302  etchings,  "The  Men  of  1830"  and  other  artists, 
belonging  to  John  Boland,  sold  for  $3,944.50. 

December  10,  1920. — Etchings  and  engravings,  including  the  collec- 
tion of  Mrs.    Eben  Sutton  of   Baltimore. 

December  10,  1920. — 63  modern  etchings  after  famous  paintings  from  the 
estate  of  Helen  C.  Bostwick  sold  for  $2,305. 

January  20,  21,  1921. — 167  paintings  collected  by  the  late  JuHus  E.  French, 
of  Cleveland,  Ohio;  John  G.  Holmes,  of  Pittsburgh,  Pa.;  Helen  C. 
Bostwick,  and  from  the  collections  of  Mrs.  F.  S.  Smithers  and  a 
New  York  collector,   deceased;   sold  for  $139,240. 

January  27,  1921, — 71  paintings  and  pastels  by  the  late  Hilaire  Germain 
Edgar  Degas,  the  private  collection  of  Jacques  Seligman,  of  Paris, 
sold  for  $226,800. 

January  27,  28,  29,  1921. — Sculpture  and  paintings  from  the  collection  of 
the  late  Henry  C.  Lawrence,  sold  with  objects  of  art  for  $451,057.50. 

February  3,  1921. — 91  paintings  from  the  collections  of  Martin  Beck; 
Albert  E.  Smith;  Mrs.  William  H.  Burgess;  Fernand  Goossens,  Pro- 
fessor of  Fine  Arts,  University  of  Brussels ;  Charles  Prentiss  Noyes  ; 
and  from  the  estates  of  Edward  Wasserman,  of  New  York,  and 
Royal  C.  Taft,  of  Providence,  R.  L,  sold  for  $88,855. 

February  3,  4,  5,  1921. — Oriental  paintings  and  sculpture  sold  with  objects 
of  art,  belonging  to  Yamanaka  and  Company,  for  $100,017.50. 

February  10,  11,  12,  1921. — Rare  Japanese  color  prints  belonging  to  Carl 
Schraubsfadter  sold  for  $20,474.50. 

February  14,  1921. — 88  old  and  modern  paintings  belonging  to  Radcliffe 
Baldwin,  Edwin  H.  Fricke,  and  from  the  estate  of  Mary  Hutchinson 
and  from  other  private  owners,  sold  for  $7,457.50. 

February  16,  1921. — Italian  paintings  and  sculpture  sold  with  objects  of 
art  from  the  collection  of  Luigi  Orselli  for  $170,532.50. 

February  17,  1921. — 113  paintings  belonging  to  Fernand  Goossens,  Pro- 
fessor of  Fine  Arts,  University  of  Brussels,  and  from  the  estate  of 
Royal  Taft  and  from  other  estates  and  private  owners,  sold  for 
$3,958.50. 

February  24,  1921. — 66  paintings  by  old  and  modern  masters  from  the 
collections  of  Fernand  Goossens,  Professor  of  Fine  Arts,  University 
Brussels;  Col.  Leon  Ost'errcith,  of  Antwerp;  Harriet  Williams,  J.  S. 
Aron,  V.  Winthrop  Newman,  Victor  Harris,  and  from  the  estate  of 
Mary  A.  Robbins,  and  from  other  estates  and  private  owners,  sold  for 
$28,550. 

234 


LIST  OF  SALES  235 


March  7,  1921. — 66  paintings  belonging  to  Fernand  Goossens,  Professor 
of  Fine  Arts,  University  of  Brussels,  other  private  collectors,  and 
from  the  estate  of  Mrs.  Franklin  Bartlett,  sold  for  $4,750.50. 

March  9,  10,  1921. — 444  etchings,  the  collection  of  Trowbridge  Hall,  of 
New  York  City,  sold  for  $20,180. 

March  21,  1921. — Mezzotints  printed  in  colors  and  drawings  belonging 
to  Mrs.  Lucille  Flanagan,  Trowbridge  Hall,  Eleanor  Fitzgibbons, 
Arthur  Whitney,  a  New  York  collector,  and  by  order  of  Richard  Ely, 
Armond  Apol,  and  from  the  estate  of  Col.  Leon  Osterreith,  sold  for 
$6,982. 

March  29,  1921. — 98  paintings  belonging  to  W.  G.  Peckham,  of  Westfield, 
N.  J.,  sold  for  $11,405. 

April  5,  1921. — Ancient  paintings  and  sculpture  sold  with  objects  of  art 
from  the  collection  of  Senor  Laureano  Medina,  of  Spain,  for  $5,084. 

April  13,  14,  15,  16,  1921. — Paintings  and  sculpture  sold  with  objects  of  art 
from  the  Cattadori  Art  Galleries  for  $114,054.50 

April  19,  1921. — 51  paintings,  the  works  of  Alexander  Harrison,  N.A., 
and  his  brother,  Birge  Harrison,  N.A.,  sold  with  one  piece  of  sculp- 
ture for  $6,505. 

April  26,  27,  28,  29,  30,  1921.— Spanish  paintings  and  sculpture  with  ob- 
jects of  art  from  the  Almoneda  Collection,  owned  by  Herbert  P. 
Weissberger,  of  Spain,  sold  for  $99,599.50. 

G. — Anderson  Galleries: 
October    30,    1920. — Early    American    paintings    and    prints    belonging 

to  Edward  A.  Housman,  of   Brookfield  Centre,  sold   for  $4,485.50. 
November  9,  1920. — Collection  of  French  engravings  and  drawings  of 

the  XVIII  Century  belonging  to  Ellis  Parker,  sold  for  $36,465. 
November  26,  1920. — Collection  of  paintings  belonging  to  Walter  Kerr 

and  other  private  owners  and  estates,  sold  for  $8,023. 
January  14,  1921. — 62  old  masters  gathered  in  Europe  during  the  last 

year  sold  for  $23,287.50. 
January  26,  27,  28,  29,  1921. — Collection  of  Greek  and  Roman  marbles, 

Gothic    sculpture,    primitive    paintings,    formed   by    a    well-known 

European  connoisseur,  sold  with  objects  of  art  for  $203,606. 
February   3,    1921. — Prints   and   drawings   from   the   stock   of  the   late 

George  D.  Smith  sold  for  $5,164. 
February    4,    1921. — 294    etchings,    engravings,    drawings    and    prints, 

duplicates    from    the    Museum    of    Fine    Arts,    Boston,    selections 

from    the    collections    of    the    late    Russell    W.    Moore,    and    from 

other  collections,  sold  for  $4,517. 
February  5,   1921. — Paintings  from  the  collection  of  Emil  Pares  sold 

with   furniture  and   objects   of   art  for  $91,671.50. 
February  18,  1921. — Paintings,  drawings,  sculpture,  the  collection  of  a 

New  York  gentleman,  sold  for  $51,127. 
March  28,  29,  1921. — 282  etchings,  the  collection  of  Hcrschel  V.  Jones, 

Minneapolis,  Minn.,  sold   for  $42,555.50. 
March   28,   29,  30,   1921. — Paintings   belonging  to   Richard   W.    Lehne 

sold  with  antiques  for  $176,288. 
April   5,    1921. — 64  paintings    from    the   collection   of   Holger   Ferlov   and 

other  collections,  sold  for  $3,622.50. 
April  18-23,  1921   (Part  I). — 2  bronzes  sold  with  furniture  and  objects 

of  art  belonging  to  Louis  V.  Bell,  of  New  York,  for  $50,006.50. 
April    21,    1921    (Part    II). — Engravings    and    drawings,    English    and 

French   color  prints   collected   by   Louis   V.    Bell,   of   New   York, 

sold  for  $2,721.50. 
April  29,  1921. — 113  paintings,  the  private  collection  of  the  late  William 

H.   Cummings,  of  Brooklyn,   sold  for  $6,639. 


236  LIST  OF  SALES 


May  12,  13,  14,  1921. — Far  Eastern  paintings  and  sculpture  sold  with 
rugs  and  objects  of  art  for  $32,909. 

May  17,  1921. — 117  paintings  by  Marsden  Hartley  sold  with  75  by 
James  N.  Rosenberg,  for  $5,959.50. 

May  19,  1921. — Lithographs,  paintings,  aquatints  of  coaching,  hunt- 
ing and  racing  scenes,  belonging  to  William  Brewster,  of  New  York 
City,  sold  for  $1,769.25. 

May  20,  21,  1921. — Bronzes  and  sculpture  collected  by  Azeez  Khayat,  of 
New  York  and  Palestine,  sold  with  objects  of  art  and  Italian  and 
French  brocades  collected  by  Charles  Pollacek,  of  New  York, 
sold  for  $8,168. 

Apol — Water  color  drawings  sold  by  order  of  Armond  Apol,  with  mezzo- 
tints belonging  to  private  collectors,  sold  for  $6,982;  American 
Art  Association,   March  21,   1921. 

Aron — 66  paintings  by  old  and  modern  masters  from  the  collection  of 
J.  S.  Aron  and  from  other  private  owners  and  estates,  sold  for 
$28,550;  American  Art  Association,  February  24,   1921. 

Baldwin — 68  old  and  modern  paintings  belonging  to  Radcliffe  Baldwin 
and  other  private  owners  and  estates,  sold  for  $7,457.50;  American 
Art  Association,  February  14,   1921. 

Bartlett — 66  paintings  from  the  estate  of  Mrs.  Franklin  Bartlett  and  other 
private  collectors,  sold  for  $4,750.50;  American  Art  Association, 
March  7,  1921. 

Beck — 91  paintings  owned  by  Martin  Beck  and  other  private  owners  and 
from  several  estates,  sold  for  $88,855;  American  Art  Association, 
February  3,  1921. 

Bell,  Part  I — 2  bronzes  sold  with  furniture  and  objects  of  art  belonging 
to  Louis  V.  Bell,  of  New  York,  for  $50,006.50;  Anderson  Gal- 
leries, April  18,  23,   1921. 

Bell,  Part  II — Engravings  and  drawings,  English  and  French  color  prints 
collected  by  Louis  V.  Bell,  of  New  York,  sold  for  $2,721.50; 
Anderson   Galleries,  April  21,   1921. 

Boland —  302  etchings  belonging  to  John  Boland,  sold  for  $3,944.50;  Amer- 
ican Art  Association,  December  2,  3,  1920. 

Boston  Museum — 294  etchings,  engravings,  drawings,  prints,  duplicates 
from  the  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Boston,  selections  from  the  col- 
lection of  the  late  Russell  Moore  and  from  other  collections,  sold 
for  $4,517;  Anderson  Galleries,  February  4,  1921. 

Bostwick — 63  modern  etchings  after  famous  paintings,  from  the  estate 
of  Helen  C.  Bostwick,  sold  for  $2,305 ;  American  Art  Association, 
December  10,   1920. 

Brewster — Lithographs,  paintings,  aquatints  of  coaching,  hunting  and 
racing  scenes,  belonging  to  William  Brewster,  of  New  York, 
sold  for  $1,769.25;  Anderson  Galleries,  May  19,   1921. 

Burgess — Paintings  belonging  to  E.  G.  Burgess  and  others  sold  at  the 
Fifth  Avenue  Auction  Rooms,  December  11,  1920. 

Burgess — 91  paintings  from  the  collection  of  Mrs.  William  H.  Burgess, 
and  from  other  collectors  and  several  estates,  sold  for  $88,855; 
American  Art  Association,  February  3,  1921. 

Cattadori — Paintings  and  sculpture  from  the  Cattadori  Art  Galleries,  sold 
with  furniture  and  other  objects  of  art  for  $114,054.50;  American 
Art  Association,  April  13,  14,  15,  16,  1921. 

Charles — Collection  of  paintings  sold  with  furniture  and  objects  of  art 
belonging  to  Charles  of  London,  for  $511,307;  American  Art  Asso- 
ciation, November  17,  18,  1920. 

Cummings — 113  paintings,  the  private  collection  of  the  late  William  H. 
Cummings,  of  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  sold  for  $6,639;  Anderson  Gal- 
leries, April  29,  1921. 


LIST  OF  SALES  237 


C^^ster — Paintings  from  the  estate  of  E.  A.  Custer  and  other  estates  and 
private  owners,  sold  at  the  Fifty-seventh  Street  Galleries,  May 
5,  6,  1921. 

Ely — Colored  engravings  sold  by  order  of  Richard  Ely,  with  mezzotints 
and  drawings  belonging  to  private  collectors,  sold  for  $6,982; 
American  Art  Association,  March  21,  1921. 

F.  A.  A.  G. — Fifth  Avenue  Art  Galleries: 

November  26,  27,  1920. — 308  paintings,  modern  and  antique. 

F.  A.  A.  R. — Fifth  Avenue  Auction  Rooms: 

December  11,  1920. — Paintings  belonging  to  E.  G.   Burgess,  Mary  A. 

Robbins   and  others. 
February   9,    10,    1921. — Paintings    from   the   estates   of   the   late   Hon. 
Charles  Hazen  Russell  and  William  A.  Warnock,  and  also  from 
private  consignors. 
March  18,   1921. — Paintings  from  private  owners  and  estates. 
April   9,    1921. — Paintings   from   the   estate   of   John    J.    Sullivan,   with 

additions  from  other  estates  and  owners. 
May  7,  1921. — Paintings  belonging  to  Mrs.  Anna  Cleveland  James  and 
others. 

Ferlov — 64  paintings  from  the  collection  of  Holger  Ferlov  and  other 
collections,  sold  for  $3,622.50;  Anderson  Galleries,  April  5,  1921. 

Fitzgibbons — Mezzotints  and  drawings  belonging  to  Eleanor  Fitzgibbons 
and  others  sold  for  $6,979;  American  Art  Association,  March  21, 
1921. 

Flanagan — Mezzotints  printed  in  colors  and  drawings  belonging  to  Mrs. 
Lucille  Flanagan  and  others,  sold  for  $6,982;  American  Art  Asso- 
ciation,  March  21,   1921. 

Fifty-seventh   Street   Galleries: 

February  23,  24,  1921. — Paintings  formerly  owned  by  Edwin  G.  Hodg- 
kins  and  family  portraits  from  the  estate  of  Eugenie  A.  Heylyn, 
Hartford,   Conn. 
May  5,  6,  1921. — Paintings  from  the  estate  of  the  late  E.  A.  Custer. 

French — 167  paintings  collected  by  the  late  Julius  E.  French,  of  Cleve- 
land, Ohio;  John  G.  Holmes,  of  Pittsburgh,  Pa.;  Helen  C.  Bost- 
wick,  and  from  the  collections  of  Mrs.  F.  S.  Smithers  and  a  New 
York  collector,  deceased,  sold  for  $139,240 ;  American  Art  Asso- 
ciation, January  20,  21,    1921. 

Fricke — 68  old  and  modern  paintings  belonging  to  Edwin  H.  Fricke  and 
other  private  owners  and  estates,  sold  for  $7,457.50;  American 
Art  Association,  February  14,   1921. 

Goossens — 91  paintings  from  the  collection  of  Fernand  Goossens,  Pro- 
fessor of  Fine  Arts,  University  of  Brussels,  and  from  other 
private  collections  and  from  several  estates,  sold  for  $88,855; 
American   Art  Association,   February  3,   1921. 

Goossens — 66  paintings  by  old  and  modern  masters  from  the  collection 
of  Fernand  Goossens,  of  Brussels,  and  from  other  collections, 
sold   for  $20,180;  American  Art  Association,  March  9,  10,   1921. 

Goossens — 66  paintings  belonging  to  Fernand  Goossens,  of  Brussels,  and 
belonging  to  other  collectors  and  an  estate,  sold  for  $4,750.50; 
American  Art  Association,  March  7,  1921. 

Hall — 444  etchings,  the  collection  of  Trowbridge  Hall,  of  New  York  City, 
sold  for  $20,180;  American  Art  Association,  March  9,  10,  1921. 

Hall — Mezzotints  and  drawings  belonging  to  Trowbridge  Hall  and  others 
sold   for  $6,982;   American   Art  Association,   March  21,    1921. 

Harris — 66  paintings  by  old  and  modern  masters  from  the  collection  of 
Victor  Harris  and  from  other  private  owners  and  estates,  sold 
for  $28,550:  American  Art  Association,   February  24,   1921. 


238  LIST  OF  SALES 


Harrison — 51  paintings,  the  works  of  Alexander  Harrison,  N.A,,  and  his 
brother,  Birge  Harrison,  N.A.,  and  one  piece  of  sculpture,  sold  for 
$6,505;  American  Art  Association,  April  19,  1921. 

Hart — Paintings  and  engravings  from  the  estate  of  Reginald  L.  Hart,  of 
Wayne,  Pa.,  and  from  other  estates,  sold  at  the  Henkels  Gal- 
leries, Philadelphia,  March  28,  29,   1921. 

Hartley — 117  pictures  by  Marsden  Hartley  sold  with  75  by  James  N. 
Rosenberg  for  $5,959.50;  Anderson  Galleries,  May  17,  1921. 

Henkels    Galleries,    Philadelphia: 

December  14,  1920. — Collection  of  early  American  miniatures  and 
small  oil  portraits  belonging  to  Albert  Rosenthal,  including  the 
collection  of  miniatures  painted  by  James  P.  Smith  and  belonging 
tO'  his  estate. 
March  28,  29,  1921. — Paintings  and  engravings  from  the  estates  of 
Charles  F.  Warwick,  late  Mayor  of  Philadelphia;  Charles  H. 
Swan,  of  Germantown,  Pa.,  and  Reginald  L.  Hart,  of  Wayne,  Pa. 
April  11,  12,  1921. — Old  miniatures  and  oil  portraits  from  several 
collections  with  furniture  and  objects  of  art  sold  for  $30,000. 

Hodgkins — Paintings  formerly  owned  by  Edwin  G.  Hodgkins  sold  with 
family  portraits  from  an  estate,  at  the  Fifty-seventh  Street  Gal- 
leries, February  23,  1921. 

Holmes — 167  paintings  from  the  estate  of  John  G.  Holmes,  of  Pittsburgh, 
Pa.,  and  from  other  estates  and  private  owners,  sold  for  $139,240; 
American  Art  Association,  January  20,  21,  1921. 
■Housman — Early  American  paintings  and  prints  from  the  collection  of 
Edward  A.  Housman,  of  Brookfield  Centre,  Conn.,  sold  for 
$4,485.50;  Anderson  Galleries,  October  30,  1920. 

Hutchinson — 68  old  and  modern  paintings  from  the  estate  of  Mary 
Hutchinson  and  belonging  to  private  owners,  sold  for  $7,457.50; 
American  Art  Association,  February  14,  1921. 

James — Paintings  belonging  to  Mrs.  Anna  Cleveland  James  and  others 
•sold  at  the  Fifth  Avenue  Auction   Rooms,   May  7,   1921. 

Jones — 282  etchings,  the  collection  of  Herschel  V.  Jones,  Minneapolis, 
Minn.,  sold  for  $42,555.50;  Anderson  Galleries,  March  28,  29,  1921. 

Kerr — Paintings,  the  collection  of  the  late  Walter  Kerr,  of  East  Orange, 
N.  J.,  sold  with  other  collections  for  $8,023 ;  Anderson  Galleries, 
November  26,  1920. 

Khayat — Ancient  bronzes  and  paintings  collected  by  Azees  Khayat,  of 
New  York,  and  Haifa,  Palestine,  sold  with  objects  of  art  and 
Italian  and  French  brocades  collected  by  Charles  Pollacek,  of 
New  York,  for  $8,168;  Anderson  Galleries,  May  20,  21,  1921. 

Lawrence — Sculpture  and  paintings  from  the  collection  of  the  late  Henry 
C.  Lawrence,  sold  with  furniture  and  objects  of  art  for  $451,057.50, 
American  Art  Association,  January  28,   1921. 

Lehne — Paintings  belonging  to  Richard  W.  Lehne  sold  with  antiques  for 
$176,288;  Anderson   Galleries,  March  28,  29,  30,   April   1,  2,   1921 

Medina — Ancient  paintings  and  sculpture  from  the  collection  of  Senor 
Laureano  Medina,  of  Spain,  sold  for  $5,084;  American  Art  Asso- 
ciation, April  5,  1921. 

Metzgar — Japanese  prints,  mainly  the  work  of  Hiroshige,  belonging  to 
Judson  D.  Metzger,  sold  at  the  Walpole  Galleries,  April  4,  5,  1921. 

Moore — 294  etchings,  engravings,  drawings,  prints,  selections  from  the  col- 
lection of  the  late  Russell  W.  Moore,  from  the  Boston  Museum 
of  Fine  Arts  and  from  other  collections,  sold  for  $4,517;  Ander- 
son  Galleries,   February  4,   1921. 

Newman — 66  paintings  by  old  and  modern  masters  from  the  collection 
of  V.  Winthrop  Newman  and  from  other  private  owners  and 
estates,  sold  for  $28,550;  American  Art  Association,  February  24, 
1921. 


LIST  OF  SALES  239 


Noyes — 91   paintings   from  the  collection  of   Charles   Prentiss   Noyes   and 

from  other  private  collections  and  from  several  estates,  sold  for 

$88,855;  American  Art  Association,   February  3,  1921. 
Osterreith — 66  paintings  by  old  and  modern  masters  from  the  collection  of 

Col.  Leon  Osterreith,  of  Antwerp,  and  other  private  ow^ners  and 

estates,    sold    for    $28,550;    American    Art    Association,    February 

24,  1921. 
Osterreith — Mezzotints  and  draw-ings  from  the  estate  of  Col.  Leon  Oster- 
reith and  from  private  owners,  sold  for  $6,982 ;  American  Art  Asso- 
ciation, March  21,  1921. 
Orselli — Italian  paintings  and  sculpture  from  the  collection  of  Luigi   Or- 

selli  sold  with   objects   of   art   for  $170,532.50;    American   Art  Asso- 
ciation, February  16,  1921. 
Pares — Paintings  from  the  collection  of   Emil  Pares,  sold  with  furniture 

for  $91,671 ;  Anderson  Galleries,  February  5,   1921. 
Parker — 88  French  engravings  and   drawings  of  the  XVIII   Century,  the 

collection    of    Ellis    Parker,    Esq.,    sold    for    $36,465;    Anderson 

Galleries,  November  9,  1920. 
Peckham — 98  paintings  belonging  to  W.  G.  Peckham,  of  Westfield,  N.  J., 

sold  for  $11,405,  American  Art  Association,  March  29,  1921. 
Plaza — Plaza  Art  Rooms: 

October  9,  1920. 

October  23,  1920. 

November  5,  1920. 

November  20,  1920. 

January  6,  1921. 

Paintings    from    the    estate    of    Anna    Weiler    and    belonging    to 

Henry  O.  Havemeyer,  Jr.  and  others. 
Ramsay — Paintings  collected  by   Mrs.   C.   Sears   Ramsay  of  James   River, 

Virginia,    sold    with    furniture    and    objects    of    art    for    $29,632; 

American   Art  Association,   March  9,   1921. 
Robbins — Paintings    belonging   to    Mary   A.    Robbins    and    others    sold   at 

the  Fifth  Avenue  Auction  Rooms,  December  11,  1920. 
Robbins — 66   paintings    from    the   estate   of    Mary   A.    Robbins   and    from 

other  estates  and  private  owners  sold  for  $27,955;  American  Art 

Association,  February  24,  1921. 
Rockwell,    Part    V — Japanese    paintings    and    prints    collected    by    George 

T.  Rockwell,  of  Cedar  Grove,   N.  J.,  sold  with  objects  of  art  for 

$2,286;  Walpole  Galleries,  May  4,  5,  1921. 
Rosenberg — 75    paintings    by    James    N.    Rosenberg,    sold    with    117    by 

Marsden  Hartley  for  $5,959.50;  Anderson  Galleries,  May  17,  1921. 
Rosenthal — Collection   of   early   American   miniatures   and    small   oil    por- 
traits belonging  to   Albert  Rosenthal,  including  the  collection  of 

miniatures  painted  by  James   P.   Smith,   and  belonging  to  his   estate, 

Henkels  Galleries,   December   14.   1920. 
Ruiz — Paintings  and  sculpture  collected  by  Senor  Luis   Ruiz,  of  Madrid, 

Spain,  sold  with  furniture  and  objects  of  art  for  $70,165;  Clarke's 

Galleries,  May  17-21,  1921. 
Ruiz,   Raimondo — Paintings  and  sculpture   belonging  to   Senor  Raimondo 

Ruiz,  of  Madrid,  Spain,  sold  at  the  Clarke  Galleries,  April  4-14,  1921. 
Russell — Paintings  from  the  estate  of  the  Hon.  Charles  Hazen  Russell  and 

another    estate    and    private    owners,    sold    at    the    Fifth    Avenue 

Auction  Rooms,  February  9,  10,  1921. 
Schraubstadter — Japanese  color  prints  belonging  to  Carl   Schraubstadter, 

sold    for    $20,474.50;    American    Art    Association,    February    10,    11, 

12,  1921. 
Seligmann — 71   paintings  and  pastels  by  the  late  Hilaire   Germain   Edgar 

Degas,    the    private    collection    of    Jacques    Seligmann,    of    Paris, 

sold  for  $226,800;  American  Art  Association,  January  27,  1921. 


240  LIST  OF  SALES 


Smith — Miniatures  painted  by  James  P.  Smith  and  belonging  to  his  estate, 
sold  with  a  collection  of  early  American  miniatures  and  portraits 
belonging  to  Albert  Rosenthal,  Henkels,  Phila.,  December  14, 
1920. 

Smith — 91  paintings  from  the  collection  of  Albert  E.  Smith  and  other  col- 
lectors and  estates,  sold  for  $88,855,  American  Art  Association, 
February  3,  1921. 

Smith — Prints  and  drawings  from  the  stock  of  the  late  George  D.  Smith, 
sold  at  the  Anderson  Galleries,  February  3,  1921. 

Smith  &  JafTe:— 

May   18,   19,  20,  and  21,   1921.— Paintings   from  the  estate   of  the 
Baroness  Von ,  sold  with  furniture  and  objects  of  art. 

Smithers — 167  paintings  from  the  collection  of  Mrs.  F.  S.  Smithers  and 
other  private  owners  and  estates,  sold  for  $139,240,  American  Art 
Association,  January  20,  21,  1921. 

Sutton — Etchings  and  engravings,  including  the  collection  of  Mrs.  Eben 
Sutton,  of  Baltimore,  Maryland,  American  Art  Association,  De- 
cember 10,  1920. 

Swan — Paintings  and  engravings  from  the  estate  of  Charles  H,  Swan,  of 
Germantown,  Phila.,  and  from  other  estates,  sold  at  the  Henkels 
Galleries,  March  28,  29,  1921. 

Taft — 91  paintings  from  the  estate  of  Royal  C.  Taft  and  from  other  estates 
and  private  owners,  sold  for  $91,455;  American  Art  Association, 
February  3,  1921. 

Taft — 113  paintings  from  the  estate  of  Royal  C.  Taft  and  from  other 
estates  and  private  owners,  sold  for  $3,958;  American  Art  Associ- 
ation, February  17,  1921. 

Walpole — Walpole  Galleries: 

January    20,    21,    22,    1921. — 692    Japanese    color    prints    collected    by 

a  distinguished  French  connoisseur,  sold  for  $72,858. 
March  2,  3,  1921. — 331  Japanese  color  prints,  including  the  collection 

of  Julio  Van  Caneghem,  sold  for  $18,495. 
April  4,  5,  1921. — Japanese  prints,  mainly  the  work  of  Hiroshige,  be- 
longing to  Judson  D.  Metzgar. 
April  13,  1921. — 309  etchings,  engravings,  and   drawings  belonging  to 
Mrs.    Frank    J.    Sprague,    Edgar    C.    Riebe,    the    estate    of    James 
Stillman  and  others. 

Warnock — Paintings  from  the  estate  of  William  A.  Warnock  and  from 
another  estate  and  private  owners,  sold  at  the  Fifth  Avenue 
Auction  Rooms,  February  9,  10,  1921. 

Warwick — Paintings  and  engravings  from  the  estate  of  Charles  F.  War- 
wick, late  Mayor  of  Phila.,  and  from  other  estates,  sold  at  the 
Henkels  Galleries,  Phila.,  March  28,  29,  1921. 

Wasserman — 91  paintings  from  the  estate  of  Edward  Wasserman,  of 
New  York,  and  from  other  estates  and  private  owners,  sold  for 
$91,455;  American  Art  Association,  February  3,  1921. 

Weissberger — Spanish  paintings  and  sculpture  from  the  Almoneda  Col- 
lection, owned  by  Herbert  P.  Weissberger.  of  Madrid,  Spain,  sold 
with  furniture  and  objects  of  art  for  $99,592.50;  American  Art 
Association,  April  26,  27,  28,  29,  30,  1921. 

Whitney — Mezzotints  printed  in  colors  and  drawings  belonging  to  Arthur 
Whitney  and  others,  sold  for  $6,979;  American  Art  Association, 
March  21,  1921. 

Williams — 66  paintings  from  the  collection  of  Harriet  Williams  and  others, 
sold  for  $27,955,  American  Art  Association,  February  24,  1921. 

Yamanaka — Oriental  paintings  and  sculpture  belonging  to  Yamanaka 
&  Co.,  sold  by  the  American  Art  Association,  February  4,  5,  1921. 


Paintings,  Drawings,  Prints  and  Sculpture 
Sold  at  Auction 


Season  of  1920-1921 


All   paintings   and   pieces   of   sculpture   sold   for   $50   and   over,   all   prints   and   drawings 
sold  for  $25  and  over   are  here  classified  under   the  name  of  the  artist. 

_  Facts  are  given  in  the  following  order:  Name  of  artist,  followed  by  R.  A.  or  N.  A., 
indicating  member  of  the  Royal  Academy  of  England  or  National  Academy  of  Design  of 
the  United  States;  date  of  birth  and  death;  nationality.  On  following  line,  name  of 
sale  (list  of  which  with  details  will  be  found  on  page  234)  ;  en  third  line,  catalogue 
number,  title  of  painting,  drawing,  print,  or  piece  of  sculpture;  size  in  parentheses; 
buyer;   and  price. 

Paintings  Sold  at  Auction 

Abbey,    Edwin   Austin,    N.   A.,    R.   A.;    1852-1911,   American. 
Feckham,   March  29,   1921. 

11.     Baron   Steuben    (12^x734),    V.    Harris $50 

Abbott,    Lemuel   Francis;   1760-1803,   British    (After). 
A.  G.,  Jan.   14,   1921. 

45.  Portrait  of   Lord   Nelson   (34x251/^),   h.   Edwards 100 

Achenbach,   Oswald;  1827-1905,  German. 
A.   A.   A.,   Jan.  20,    1921. 

82.  The   Bay  of  Naples    (28x39),   J.   Frank 200 

Adams,   Charles    Partridge;    1858-         ,   American. 

F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

287.  Landscape    (40x60),    Ellis 70 

Adam,   Julius;   1852-         ,   German. 
Holmes,   Tan.  20,   1921. 

1.   Kittens   (5i^x7^),   R.  H.  Wallach 130 

Alexander,   Francis;   1800-1880,  American. 
A.  G.,  Nov.  26,  1920. 

60.  Portrait    of    Daniel    Webster     (30x25) 100 

Alvarez,  Don  Luis;  1841-1901,  French. 

Beck,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

61.  The    Christening    (25x47),    H.    W.    Goddard 750 

American    School,   XIX  Century. 

A.    G.,   Nov.   26,    1920. 

42.   Landscape    (23x28),    Dr.    A.    Kahanoinez 57 

American  School;  XIX  Century. 
Cummings,   April   29,    1921. 

83.  Panoramic    View    (10x18)     92 

American  School,   Early. 

Rosenthal,  Dec.   14,   1920. 

69.  Charles    Gordon    Patterson,    M.D 70 

70.  Catherine    B.    Wainwright    (3i^xlH) 70 

Andreotti,    Frederico;    1847-        ,   Italian. 

Rcebling,  Jan.   20.    1921. 

80.  Promenade  dans  le  pare  (24^x43 1^),  J.  M.  Heatherton 190 

Andalusian  School;  XVII  Century. 
Weissberger,   April   27,    1921. 

435.      Mater   Dolorosa    (4i/^x3^),    E.    T.    Hargrove SO 

Appel,  Charles  F. 

Clarke,    Ian.    12,    1921. 

87.  Sunset  Landscape    (15x21),   S.   A.   Powel •. .  60 

Asselyn,   Jan;    1610-1652,  Dutch. 
Gocssens,   Feb.    17,    1921. 

1 04.      Landscape    (23x28) ,   J.    Phipps 80 

241 


242  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Atkins,   Samuel;    1787-1808,  British. 
Parker,   Nov,  9,   1920. 

5.  Dutch  Boats  in  a  Seascape   (14x183^)    (water  color),   Palmer  Campbell..      $180 

6.  Dutch  Boats  Lowering   Sails    (14xl8->4)    (water   color) ISO 

7.  Dutch  Man-of-War    (14xl8fO    (water  color) 175 

8.  Dutch   Man-of-War  Leaving  Harbor    (14x18^4)    (water  color) 160 

Aved,  Jacques  Andre  Joseph;   1702-1766,  French. 

A.   G.,  Jan.   14,   1921. 

52.  Portrait  of  a  Gentleman   (39i4x31^),  H.  Edwards 3,000 

Averkamp,    Hendrik   Van;  about   1585-1663,  Dutch. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

64.     Group   of    Three   Men    on   the   Ice    (4J4x3^),    M.    Sloog 60 

Backhuysen,  Ludolf;  1631-1708,  Dutch. 
A.   G.,    Tan.   14,   1921. 

17.  the  Fish  Wife    (10^x10^),   F.   Klein 615 

20.  Marine   (26^x36^),   H.   Edwards    120 

Plaza,   Jan.  6,   1921. 

Shipwrecked    (28x38) ,   H,  H.    Smith 100 

Ball,  Joseph  Claude;  1862-        ,  French. 
French,  Jan.  21,    1921. 

158.  Making  Pickles    (36^x29),   H.    Markam 950 

Baker,   George,   N.A.;   1821-1880,  American, 
Rosenthal,  Dec.   14,   1920. 

13.  General    Andrew    Jackson     (4x3 J^) 130 

Bakker-Korff,  A.   H.;   1824-1882,  Dutch. 
A.  G.,   Nov.  26,   1920. 

28.  The  Pinch  of  Snuff  (8x6^),   McDonough  Galleries 170 

Barbatelli,  Bernardino  (called  Poccetti),  School  of;  XVIII  Century,  Italian. 
Orselli,  Feb.   16,   1921. 

275.     Ceiling     (96x144),    S.    F.     Carnavan 800 

Barker,  Samuel. 

Charles,   Nov.    18,   1920. 

886.  Flowers    (48x34),    Mrs.    A.    Kridel 140 

Barker,  Wright:  XIX  Century,  British. 
F.  A.   A.   G.,   Nov.   27,    1920. 

303.  Highland    Cattle    (40x50),    McDonough 110 

Barosso,    Girolamo;    1378-1409,    Catalcnian. 
Orselli,    Feb.    16;    1921. 

269.      Saint   George  and   the    Dragon    (52x37),   W.    R.    Hearst 875 

Bartolozzi,   Francisco;  1727-1815,  Italian. 
Henkels,   April    11,    1921. 

26.     Memorial   Medallion    (on    ivory) 60 

Barye,  Antoine  Louis;  1795-1875,  French. 
Wasserman,   Feb.   3,   1921. 

2.  The  Bear    (103/^x14^)    (water  color),  D.   J.   R.    Ushikubo 260 

3.  Tiger  and  His  Prey   (15^x18^),  R.  C.  &  N.  M.  Vose 300 

Orselli,    Feb.    16,    1921. 

Battoni,    Pompeo;    1708-1787,    Roman. 
Orselli,  Feb.   16,  1921. 

267.     Portrait  of  a  Lady   (28x24),  Mrs.   L.   D.  Armstrong 60 

Beale,    Mary,    1652-1697,   British. 
Charles,   Nov.    16,   1920. 

857.   Peahen   and    Flowers    (7^x26),    Mrs.    Band 60 

Beauquesne,  Wilfred  C;  1847-1913,  French. 
A.   G.,   Nov.   26,   1920. 

45.   Scene    During    the    Franco-Prussian    War    (21x25),    Chas.    Oberwalder's 

Sons    80 

F.  A.  A.   R.,   March    18,   1921. 

315.      Military    Faggot    Gatherers.      P.    F.    Murphy 57 

Beechey,   Richard;   1808-1895,  British. 
Lehnc,    April    \.    1921. 

918.     Battle  of  Trafalgar,   October   21,    1805    (10^x15^^), Williams 100 

Beechey,   Sir  William,   R.  A.;   1753-1839,  British. 
Bartlett,    March    7,    1921. 

43.     Baron  Serdobin    (29x233/^),  Mrs.   M.   Glynn 80 

Ram.say,    March   9,    1921. 

323.     Portrait   of    George   IV    (36x22i^),    W.    H.   Vanderpoole 85 

Becker,  Carl   Ludwig  F.;  1820-1900,  German. 
Plaza,   Jan.    6,    1921. 

Flower  Girl  (19x27),  Bonaventure   75 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  243 

Beham,    Hans    Sebald;    1500-1550,   German. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,    March   19,    1921. 

507.     The   Pieta.     W.   R.   Hearst $105 

Belle,   Alexis  Simon;   1674-1734,   French. 
Charles,   Nov.    17,   1920. 

676.  A   Daughter   of    Louis   XV    (49^x39^),   I.    Rosenfield 800 

Benedito-Y-Vives;    Contemporary,    Spanish. 
Peckham,    March   29,    1921. 

29.     A  Belle  of  Seville   (16x15),  A.  Babcock 85 

Benner,  Emmanuel  Michel;  1873-        ,  French. 
F.  A.   A.    G.,    Nov.    27,    1920. 

261.  Marie  Antoinette    (after   Virgee  le   Brun)    (44^x34^),   Ellis 120 

Beraud,  Jean;   1849-        ,   French. 

Freeman  Gal.,  Phila.,  Feb.  26,  1921. 

753.     Le     Havre     (18i^x22) .• SO 

Berghem,    Nicholas;    1620-1683,   Dutch. 
Bartlett,    March   7,    1921. 

34.      Gipsy    Encampment     (21i4x28),    F.     K.     Richards 90 

Berchem,  Nicholas;  Dutch. 
Clarke,    Tan.    12,    1921. 

139.  Foliage   Landscape    (31^x243^),  Brittain 110 

Berchere,  Narcisse;  1819-1891,  French. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,   May  7,   1921. 

864.     River  Bank  and  Figures   (12x17),  P.  Thompson 75 

Bergen,   Dirk  Van;   1645-1689,  Dutch. 
French,    Jan.    20,    1921. 

52.  At  the  Fountain   (20^x24^),  C.  Thompson 300 

Berne-Bellecour,   Etienne  Prosper;   1838-1910,  French. 
Kerr,   Nov.   26,    1920. 

27.  The    Sign    Board     (15x10),    McDonough    Galleries 100 

Berruguete,  Pedro;   ?-l503,  Spanish. 
Ruiz,    April    9,    1921. 

1113.     The  Last  Supper   (5  ft.   10  in.  x  3  ft.  8  in.),  H.  C.  Mathews 725 

1191.     Birth   of  the  Virgin  and  Visit  of  the   Virgin  to  'St.   Joachim    (4   ft  x 

2   ft.    10   in.),  W.   R.  Hearst 500 

Beyschlag,  Robert;  1838-1903,  German. 
F.  A.  A.   R.,  May  7,   1921. 

866.     Walking  in  the  Woods  (15x21),  Thos.  Grace _. 65 

Bierstadt,   Albert,    N.A.;   1829-1902,   American. 
Clarke,    Jan.    12,    1921. 

151.  Rainbow  at  Falls,  Italian  Alps  (29x38) SO 

Plaza,   Jan.   6,    1921. 

Scene  in  California   (26x36) ,  J.  J.  Wilson 62 

Birch,  William;   1755-1834,  American. 
Rosenthal,    Dec.    14,    1920. 

15.  George  Washington   (3x2J/^)    (enameled  on  copper) 750 

16.  Mrs.   Whitaker,    of    Baltimore    (3x2>^ ) 80 

Birney,  W.  Verplank,  A.    N.   A.;    1858-1909,  American. 
Plaza,  Feb.   19,   1921. 

249.     Interesting    Story     (18x24),    S.     Sprague 130 

Blakelock,   Ralph  Albert,    N.  A.;  1847-1919,  American. 
Cummings,   April   29,    1921. 

63.  The   Mountain   Stream    (12x22) 60 

F.   A.   A.   R.,    May   7,    1921. 

877.     Autumn  Landscape   (11x9),  Dr.   La  Porte 60 

Fifty-seventh   St.   Gal.,   May   6,   1921. 

139.     Landscape.   S.   G.  Rains    84 

French,  Jan.   20,   1921. 

14.   Autumnal  Landscape   (6^x5^4).  A.  L.  Sinsheimer 320 

Plaza.   Jan.   6,    1921. 

Indian   Encampment    (8x10),  J.    J.    Wilson 70 

Plaza,   Feb.    19,   1921. 

202.     Landscape   (8x10),  J.  S.  Read 70 

Blenner,   Carle   J.;    1864-         ,  American. 
A.  A.  A.,   Feb.    14,    1921. 

7.     Lavender  and  Rose   (14x12),  M.  B.  Bernstein 80 

Smith,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

64.  Contentment    {521/2x38),    George    Utassy 310 


244  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 


Blommers,    Bernhardus   Johannes;   1845-1914,  Dutch. 
Holmes,  Jan.   21,    1921. 

91.  At  the  Window    (13j4xl0j^),   C.   W.   Kraushaar $535 

Blum,   Maurice;   1832-         ,  French. 
F.  A.   A.   R.,    May   7,    1921. 

876.     Birthday  Party   (25x21),  B.  Voss 75 

Plaza,    Jan.    6,    1921. 

The  Birthday  Party   (22x25),  H.  Rosenberg 85 

Bock,  Theophile  de;  1850-1904,  Dutch. 
A.   A.   A.,   Feb.    17,    1921. 

69.      Moonlight    Marine    (16^4x12^4),    McCarthy 50 

A.   A.    A.,    Feb.    24,    1921. 

6.     Cattle  at   the   Pool    (8^x14^),    Robert   Anderson 470 

Bogert,  George    H.,    N.   A.;    1864-         ,   American. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,   1921. 

62.  Evening    Glow    of    Gold    (37^x48),    A.    H.    Harlow 260 

Cummings,   April   29,    1921. 

55.     Dutch  Landscape    (26x31)    150 

F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

221.  Landscape     (25x30),    Lounes 130 

Plaza,  Jan.   6,   1921. 

Sunset    (28x36),    F.    Grunewald 350 

Boggs,    Frank    M.;    1858-         ,   American. 
F.    A.   A.    G.,    Nov.    27,    1920. 

308.  La    Place   St.    Germain    (70x96),    Devany 60 

Bol,   Ferdinand;    1611-1691,  Dutch. 
Charles,   Nov.    17,   1920. 

675.  Portrait  of  a  Burgomaster's  Wife    (381^x30),  M.  House 650 

Boldini,  Giovanni;  1844-         ,  Italian. 
A.    A.    A.,    Jan.    20,    1921. 

59.  Teasing  the  Parrot  (18x13),  Dr.   E.   Cadgene 800 

French,    Jan.    20,    1921. 

94.  In   the   Garden    (11^4x20^),    Seaman,   Agent 725 

Bologna,    Simone    Da;    active    about    1370,    Bolognese. 
A.  G.,   Feb.    18,  1921. 

104.     The    Crucifixion    with     Saints    and    Angels     (14^x8),     F.     Kleinberger 

Galleries     560 

Bolognese  School;  XVIII  Century. 
Cattadore,   April    15,    1921. 

542.  Portico    and    Entrance   Courtyard   of   an  Ecclesiastical   Edifice    (66x79), 

Mrs.    F.    Raineri    140 

543.  Facade  and  Portico  of  a  Palladian  Palace   (66x79),  Mrs.  F.   Raineri...         140 

Bonheur,  Rosa;  1822-1899,  French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Jan.   20,   1921. 

63.  Stag  Around  (23^x28^),  Miss  M.  H.  Dodge 3,100 

Bostwick,   Jan.    21,    1921. 

101.  A  King  of  the  Forest   (13xl6J4),  Miss  M.  Dodge 900 

Goossens,   Feb.   3,   1921. 

13.     A   French  Farmyard    (12J4x24),  A.   Rudert,   Agent 325 

Goossens,  Feb.   17,   1921. 

112.     Before  the  Storm   (25j4x41),  F.  K.   Richards 100 

Borel,   Antoine;  1742-1810,  French. 
Charles,    Nov.    17,    1920. 

650.  The    Mountebanks    (I7^x2]i'9,    P.    Thompson 55 

Lehne,    March   30,    1921. 

442.     Infant's  Amusement.     J.    Graham 110 

Borthnep,    IVIilh.;    Contemporary. 
A.    G.,    Nov.    26,    1920. 

103.  Venetian    Scene    (39x23),    Chas.    Oberwalder's    Sons 70 

Boskerck,  Robert  Ward  Van,  N.  A.;  1855-        ,  American. 
Holmes,  Jan.   20,   1921. 

23.  The  Old  Oaks   (18x15),  Mr.   Sterling 150 

Boucher,   Francois;   1703-1770,  French. 
Cattadori,   April    16,    1921. 

678.     La  Comtesse  de  Chastelard   (21^x18) 380 

Plaza,    Feb.    19,    1921. 

232.     Women  with  Flowers  (27x36),  D.  G.  Carmichael 55 

Boucher,   School   of. 

Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

877.  Sportive   Cupidons    (2)    (2534x33i4) 100 

879.  Sportive   Cupids    (37j4x52j4),   Keeble 70 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  245 

Boudin,   Eugene;   1824-1898,   French. 
A.   G.,    Nov.    26,    1920. 

101.  Venice    (20x29i^),    McDonough    Galleries $550 

Fiftv-seventh    St.    Gal.,    F'tb.    24,    1921. 

287.     On  the   Shore  at  Antwerp    (HJ/^xlS),   Frederick  Sherman 125 

Fifty-seventh   St.   Gal.,   May  6.    1921. 

133.     The  French   Coast.     H.  C.  Ryon 140 

Bounetheau,   Henry   Brintwell;  American. 
Rosenthal.    Dec.    14,    1920. 

18.      Henry    Heyward    Manigault    (4l4->i334) 85 

Both,  Jan;  1610-1652,  Dutch. 
Ferlov,   April   5,    1921. 

•43.     The  Herdsman   (33x19),  A.  Pope 100 

Orselli,   Feb.    16,    1921. 

264.     Sunset     (35x40),    McCarthy 110 

Boughton,  George    Henry,    N.  A.,    R.  A.;   1834-1905,  American. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.    14,   1921. 

12.      Beside   the   Blue   Sea    (13x21),   Thos.    Footer 50 

Bouguereau,   William    Adolphe;    1825-1905,  French. 
A.  A.  A..   Feb.   3,    1921. 

69.     L'Aurore    (82x421^),  M.   J.  Rougeron 1,700 

A.  G.,  Nov.  26,   1920. 

59.  Far-Away    Thoughts     (24x19^),     McDonough    Galleries 220 

Beck,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

60.  Innocence   (37^x23^),   John   Levy 1,250 

Bostwick.    Tan.    20,    1921. 

79.  The  Shepherdess    (46x29),  Peter   Van  Veen 850 

Smith,   Feb.   3,   1921. 

66.     La  Chanson  Rossignol   (54x35),  J.   F.  Albee 2,500 

Bradford,    William;    1830-1892,   American. 
F.  A.  A.   R.,   Feb.   9,    1921. 

9.     Marine   (28x44) ,  J.  R.  Collins 60 

Brakenburgh,   Richard;   1660-1702,  Dutch. 
A.   G.,   Tan.    14,   1921. 

16.  the  Doctor's  Visit    (13x11^4),   F.   A.   Lawlor 120 

Breitner,  George   Hendrick;   1857-         ,  Dutch. 
A.   A.   A.,    March   7.    1921. 

31.     A    Dutch    Corner    (27^x19),    A.    A.    Boon 150 

Brendel,  A.;    1827-1895,   German. 
Smith   &   Taffe,   May   20,    1921. 

1236.     Sheepfold     65 

Bressot,    F. 

Fifty-seventh    St.    Gal..   Feb.    23,    1921. 

29.     The  Young  Shepherdess   (12i^xl5),  P.  Thompson 50 

Breton,   Jules   Adolphe;    1827-1906,  French. 
Goossens,    Feb.    24,    1921. 

25.     Landscape    (14x21^)    300 

Taft,   Feb.    3,    1921. 

65.     The  Lookout    (323/4x46^).    Mrs.    M.   H.    Dodge 775 

Breughel,   Peter,   the    Elder;    1530-1569,   Flemish. 
Charles.   Nov.    17,    1920. 

692.  Landscape    (403/^x52),   C.    S.    Wilson 125 

Bricher,  A.   T.;   1873-1908,  American. 
Plaza.   Tan.   8.    1921. 

Seascape  (17x38),  John  Slattery 190 

BrII,   Paulus;   1556-1626,  Flemish. 
A.   G.,    Tan.    14,   1921. 

21.  Rest  on  the  Flight  to  Egypt   (63/^x93,4),  F.  A.  Muschenheim 135 

Briscoe,    F.    D.;    1844-1903,  American. 
F.  A.  A.   R.,  Feb.  9,   1921. 

25.     Coast    Scene    (33x50),    A.    Janssen 110 

Brissot  de  Warville,  Felix  Saturnin;  1818-1892,  French. 
A.  A.   A.,   Feb.    17,    1921. 

65.      Return  of   the  Flock    (13xl6i4),  Arlington   Galleries 57 

British   School. 

Peckham,   March   29,   1921. 

69.      Portrait  of  a  Lady    (36x27^4),  McCarthy 200 

Bronscombe,  Jennie. 

Plaza,    Nov.    5,   1920. 

Mother  of  the  Revolution,  Dr.  J.   Dorr 70 


2^6  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Brooks,  Maria;  1827-1913,  British. 
Smithers,   Jan.   20,   1921. 

3.  Candies   (10x7),   R.  H.   Wallach ^150 

5.  Little  Treasures   (10x7),  M.  E.  Keim 70 

30.  Disappointed    (16x10),    C,   Thompson 110 

Brown,    George    Lewis;    Contemporary,   American. 
A.  A.  A.,    March   7,    1921. 

61.     Naples    from   the    Sea    (34x50),    B.    R.    Kittredge 55 

Brouwer,  Adriaen;  1605  or  6-1638,  Flemish. 
Osterreith,   Feb.   24,    1921. 

15.     Le    Buveur    (8j4x7^),    Harrison 800 

Brown,   J.   G.,    N.A.;    1831-1913,  American. 
F.  A.  A.  G.,   Nov.  27,    1920. 

239.  Waiting    (25x36),    E.    J.    Ellsworth 75 

302.  Leisure   Moments    (24x1 6) ,    McDonough 330 

Kerr,   Nov.   26,    1920. 

51.  The   Flower   Girl   (21x17),   A.  J.   Houston 260 

Smithers,   Jan.   20,   1921. 

44.  Pals    (24x16),   Holland   Galferies 470 

Brucli,    Hans;   Contemporary,   German. 
Peckham,  March  29,   1921. 

92.     Saint  Hubert  Preaching  to  the   Deer    (5lx45>^),    Robert   Hyman 105 

Bruegiiel,  Jan,  The  Elder;  1568-1629,  Flemish. 
French,   Jan.   20,   1921. 

10.  A  Village  Festival   (7^x9j4),   Mr.   E.   Kein 70 

12.  Travellers  on  the  Road.     J.   C.   Willever 90 

122.  Holy   Family  and  Wreath  of   Flowers   (25xl9i^),    Mrs.   Coler 125 

Brun,    Cliaries    Le;    1619-1690,   French. 
Ramsay,   March  9,   1921. 

325.  Peace   (71x65),  A.  McCrea 200 

326.  Plenty   (71x65),  A.   McCrea 200 

Brunery,   Francois;   Contemporary,  French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   14,   1921. 

25.     Youth  and  Age  (213^x18^),  J.  C.  Leslie 105 

Brunet-Newville. 

F.  A.  A.   R.,   March   19,   1921. 

501.     A    Basket  of    Fruit.      R.    L.    Titus 65 

Bruyn,  Barthel,  The  Elder;  1492-553,  Dutch. 
A.   G.,   Jan.    14,   1921. 

55.  Diptych:     Donors  with   Saints    (32x9^),  Dr.   A.    Hahanoinecz 510 


Bunce,  William   Gedney,    N.  A.;   1840-1916,  American, 
A.   A.  A.,   Feb.   24,   1921. 

1.     Apples    (10x14^),  A.   Shilling 55 

Butterworth,  J.  E.;  1839-1854,  British. 
Lehne,  April   1,   1921. 

923.     Yacht  Race  off  Sandy  Hook  (9^x13^^) SO 

Butterworth,   Thomas;   active   1813-1827,   British. 
Lehne,  April   1,    1921. 

913.     Battle  of  the  Nile,  Ten  O'clock  at  Night   (20x28),  W.  E.  Kemble 190 

919.     Battle  of  Copenhagen,  April  2,  1810   (11x17),  Shoyer 100 

Castilian   School;  XV  Century. 
Weissberger,   April   27,    1921. 

438.     Four  Altar  Panels   {llxTyi),  Mrs.   W.  L.   Engle 50 

Caille,   Leon;   1836-1907,  French. 
F.  A.  A.   G.,   Nov.   27,    1920. 

274.  Mother   and    Children    (36x25),    McDonough 67 

Calame,  Alexandre  De;  1810-1864,  Swiss. 
French,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

36.  A  Winter  Afternoon    (18x25 J^),  C.   Thompson 190 

Callot,   Jacques;    1592-1635,  French. 
Osterreith,    Feb.    24,    1921. 

48.      La    Foire    d'Imprimeta    (21 3^:^x35^),    A.    Rudert,    Agent 210 

Canaletto,  Antonio;  1697-1768,  Venetian. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   14,  1921. 

48.     Venice    (25^x3514),  A.   Olivetti  &  Co 125 

French,   Jan.   21,    1921. 

121.  Venice    (24x39),    W.    R.    Hearst 1,100 

Goossens,   Feb.  24,   1921. 

57.     Church  of  St.  George  the  Greater,  Venice  i22x33H),  Towne 200 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  247 

Canaletto,   School   of. 

Charles,   Nov.   18,   1920. 

868.  The    Grand    Canal    (21^x27^),    H.    L.    Adams,    Jr $380 

Carabain,   Jacques  Francois;   1834-        ,  Dutch. 
Colton,  Feb.   4,   1921. 

51.     In  the  Netherlands  (29i^x37),  A.  Olivetti  &  Co 70 

Carlsen,    Emil,    N.A.;   1853-         ,  American. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   24,   1921. 

4.     Still   Life   (17x14),   J.   W.    Lynde 95 

Carolus-Duran,    Emile   Auguste;    1837-1917,   French. 
Peckham,    March    29,    1921. 

57.     Ennui     (28xl5>^),     A.     Babcock 105 

Carpione,  Giulio;  1611-1674,  Venetian. 
A.   G.,  Jan.   14,   1921. 

27.  Symbolical    Subject:     The    Apparition   of    the    Christian    Virtues    to    the 

Heathen  (42^x54),  Miss  I.  Taylor    400 

Carracci,    Lodovico;    1555-1619,   Italian. 
Bartlett,   March   7,   1921. 

41.     Portrait  of  a  Lady  (28x20),  B.  R.  Kittredge 125 

Caruson. 

Henkels,    April    11,    1921. 

84.     Miniature    of    Eliza    Kortright     Monroe,    daughter    of    President    James 

Monroe.  Bert   900 

Casanova,  Francesco;  1727-1802,  Italian. 
A.   G.,  Jan.    14,    1921. 

11.   Courtyard   Scene    (14^x18)     80 

11a.  Starting  for  the  Hunt    (14^x18) 55 

Casanova  y  Estorach,  Antonio;  1847-1896,  Spanish. 
Bostwick,    Tan.   20,    1921. 

38.  Strolling  Players   (18x24),  W.  T.  Heniot 200 

Holmes,   Jan.    20,   1921. 

23.  A  Cup  of  Chocolate   (20x15^^),  S.  T.  Hubbard 426 

Cassana,   Giovanni   Battista;   1658-1720,  Neapolitan. 
Orselli,   Feb.   16,   1921. 

260.     Still  Life   (24i^x30),  M.  J.  Rougeron 225 

Casteels,   T.;   XVIII    Century,   Dutch. 
Charles,  Nov.   18,  1920. 

895.   Flowers   (40Mx5lH),  H.  A.  James 60 

894.  Fruit   and   Flowers    (40Hx5lp<),   Ben    Ernstein 160 

Castiiian  School;  Late  XV  Century. 
Ruiz,   April   9,    1921. 

1117.     Bust  of  Christ  (2  ft.   10  in.  x  1   ft.  10  in.),  J.  J.  Murray 240 

Castiiian   School;   Renaissance   Period. 
Ruiz,   April   9,    1921. 

1119.     Bust  of  Christ  (3  ft.  8  in,  x  2  ft.  2  in.),  H.  C.  Brown 250 

Catlin,  Georges;   1762-1872,  American. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,  Feb.   10,  1921. 

130.     Portrait    of    De   Witt   Clinton.      W.    L.    Washington 60 

Cazin,  Jean  Charles;  1841-1901,  French. 
AAA      Tan    20     1921 

'  72'.  A  Village  in  Holland  (26x18^),  W.  R.  Hearst 1,950 

A.   A.   A.,   Jan.   21,    1921. 

149.  Windmill    near    Dunkerque    (25^x21j4),    J.    Levy 3,100 

Beck,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

55.     Windmill  and  Cornfield   (25^x311^) 10,000 

F.   A.   A.   G.,   Nov.   27,   1920. 

275.  French    Village    (12x18),    P.    Tartoue 100 

F.  A.  A.  R.,   May  7,   1921. 

867.     Landscape    (21x25),    Clapp  &   Graham 1,100 

Holmes.  Jan.  21,   1921. 

141.  Early    Evening    (22x18),    H.    Buhl 1,500 

Wasserman,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

29.     Paysage   (15 J4xl8j^),  M.  B.   Philipp 625 

Ceulen,  Cornells  Janssens  Van;   1593-1664,  Flemish  (Attributed  to). 
Peckhaci,   March  29,    1921. 

68.     Portrait    of    a    Boy    (30>4x24)^),    L.    J.    O'Reilly 390 

Chao   Tzu-Chao;    Chinese,   Yuan    (Attributed   to). 
Yamanaka,   Feb.   4,    1921. 

452.     Landscape   and    Figures    (59}^x42),   J.    L.    Gilchrist 70 


248  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUQTION 

Chardin,  Simon;   1707-1799,  French. 
A.   A.   A.,   Feb.    14,    1921. 

38.     Still  Life  (24x28),  F.  K.  Richards $105 

French,    Jan.    21,    1921. 

116.  Still   Life    (14^x18),   R.    C.    Vose 700 

Chase,   William    M.,    N.    A.;    1849-1916,  American. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,   1921. 

41.     Fish    with    Still    Life    (29x36),    H.    Thole 500 

Peckham,   March  29,    1921. 

44.     The   Red   Gown    (20x16),    D.    Calo   &    Sons 75 

Chatain,  A.;  Contemporary,  American. 
French,   Jan.   21,    1921. 

86.  Head  of  a  Little  Girl   (16^x14),  A.   Chatain 230 

Chinese   School;   Sung. 

Yamanaka,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

434.  Portrait  of  the  Emperor  Chao  Lieh  Ti   (65x38),   P.   C.   Carter 320 

435.  Composition  of  Horses  and   Men    (11^x26^),   C.   Daniels 70 

Chinese  School;  Early  Yuan. 
Yamanaka,   Feb.   4,   1921. 

443.  Painted    Screen    (50x24^),    W.    C.    Clark 150 

Chinese    School;    Yuan. 

Yamanaka,   Feb.   4,   1921. 

438.  Portrait  of  a  Priest   (34^x26^),  E.  Takamine 60 

439.  Figure    of    Monju    (36^x205^),    O.    F.    Roberts 120 

440.  Birds    and    Flowers     (40x21]^),    O.    F.     Roberts 55 

442.     Ancestral    Portrait     (41x24i4),    J.     M.     Lane 100 

444.  Kuan-yin    (54x27),    Miss    I.    M.    Lane 125 

447.  Portrait    of    a    Mandarin    (54^x31^),    P.    Carter 225 

448.  Still    Life    (68x363/^),    J.    Morris 50 

449.  Portrait   of   a    Nobleman    (54x31  J^),    P.    C.    Carter 950 

450.  Lohan    at    Worship    (57^x27^4),    P.    C.    Carter 300 

451.  Portrait  of  a  Priest   (55^x32^),  O.  F.   Roberts 210 

453.  Willow    and    Birds    (63^x39),    W.    C.    Adams 130 

454.  Ducks   and    Blossoms    (72^x38>4),    W.    C.    Fanning 140 

455.  Pheasants    (72x3834),    C.    H.Brown 15C 

456.  Birds    (77x45)     425 

Chinese   School;   Ming. 

Yamanaka,   Feb.  4,   1921. 

470.  Cats  and  Flowers   (25x20),  Dr.  A.   Gently 55 

471.  Portrait    of    the    Ancestors    (28^x28^4) 50 

472.  Religious  Portrait    (34^x16),    O.    F.    Roberts 55 

474.     Ancestral   Portrait   of  a  Coronetted  Lady    (29i^xl9>0,   C.   Se  Feo 70 

476.  Falcon    (39i/2x21^),   F.   Kelly 50 

477.  Three    Fu-Lions     (40>4x38>i ) ,    Towne 100 

480.     Lohan   and    Fu-Lions    (43^^x21),    C.    H.    Walton 80 

482.     Portrait    of    a    Lohan    (47x23),    C.    H.    Brown 50 

485.  Figure    Composition     (11^x49^),    J.    Walker 85 

486.  Infant  Learning  to  Walk    (48^x21^),   H.   H.   Phipps 70 

487.  The  Five  Gods  of  Philosophy   (57x31),  F.   Keally 50 

488.  Tree  and   Birds    (56^x38^^),   L.   A.    Oliver 60 

489.  Portrait    of    a    Priest    (58x36^ ),C.    H.    Walton 100 

490.  Portrait  of  a   Mandarin    (59;^x3534),    O.   F.   Roberts 95 

491.  Buddha    Enthroned    (60x31),    J.    L.    Gilchrist 55 

492.  Portrait  of  a  Noble   Lady    (60^x37^),   C.  H.   Walton 70 

495.  Pheasants    (62^x29^),   R.   Glendenning 120 

496.  Portrait    of    the    Priest    Peifeng    (64x425^),    P.    C.    Carter 375 

497.  Portrait  of  a  Nobleman    (733/^x40^),   P-    C.    Carter 575 

498.  Portrait  of  a   Nobleman   (67^x40),   C.    H.    Walton 160 

499.  Lotus     (76J^x483/4),     C.    F.     Meyer 130 

500.  Flowers     and     Birds     (79x36^ ) 220 

501.  Flowers    and    Birds     (83^x86^),    J.     L.     Gilchrist 125 

Chinese    School;    Ch'ien-lung. 

Yamanaka,   Feb.  4,   1921. 

507.  Seaport    (on    leather)    (82x107),    Mrs.    Hugh 100 

508.  Landscape  and  Figures   (38x22 1^:^),   C.   H.   Brown    50 

Chinese   School;    K'ang-hsi. 

Yamanaka,   Feb.  4,   192l. 

504.  Portrait  of   a  Young  Lady    (19^x11^),  H.   Fay 55 

505.  Peacock   and    Peonies    (49x21^),    E.    E.    Spitzer 60 

502.  Album    of    Eight    Paintings    on    Sycamore    Leaves     (8^x5^4),     D.    F. 

Roberts    70 

503.  Portrait   of  a   Lady    of   the    Nobility    (19^x11^),    H.    Fay 60 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  249 

Church,  F.   E.;  1826-1900,  American. 

F.  A.   A.  R.,  Dec.   11,   1920. 

784.  On  the  Magdelena  River    (24x36),   Chas.   F.   Clark $425 

Church,   F.   S.,   N.  A.;  1842-         ,  American. 

Cummings,    April    29,    1921. 

62.  Shooting  Star   (33x16)    130 

Kerr,   Nov.   26,    1920. 

79.  Woodland    Vaudeville    (21x36),    A.    J.    Houston 75 

Cione,     Nardo    Di;    active    1340-1365,    Florentine. 
A.   G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

106.     The   Crucifixion    (28x12^),   F.   Kleinberger   Galleries 1,175 

Clark,   Alvan;    1804-1887,   American, 
Rosenthal,    Dec.    14,    1920. 

22.  Mrs.  Alvan  Clark   (3x2^) 80 

Clays,   Paul   Jean;   1819-1900,  Belgian. 
A.   A.  A.,    Jan.   21,    1921. 

26.     Calme:     Mer   due  Nord    (22x16),   R.   G.    Caldwell 250 

A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   3,    1921. 

161.  Dutch   Fishing   Boats    (29i/4x43j4),    M.    H.    Goldblatt 750 

Cleefs,  Joos  Van;  1520-1556,  Dutch. 
A.  G.,  Jan.    14,   1921. 

36.  Madonna  and  Child   (10^x8),  E.  Collins 820 

A.   G.,  Jan.   28,    1921. 

681.  Virgin  and  Child    (height  22,  width  3,  panels  34),  Baer 8,000 

A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

110.     St.  Jerome    (15x11),  J.   C.   H.  Helding 1,500 

Cochin,  Charles   Nicholas  Le  Jeune;   1715-1790,  French. 
Charles,   Nov.   17,   1920. 

667.  A    Spanish    Carnival    (251^x4254),    Sam    Weisberger 225 

Coello,  Alonso  Sanchez;   1531-1588,  Spanish. 
Weissberger,   April   27,    1921. 

470.     Portrait  of  Don  Carlos,  Infante  of  Spain   (12^xl0f^),  Heckser .  ..         250 

Coffin,  William   Anderson,   N.  A.;   1855-        ,  American. 
Holmes,  Jan.   21,    1921. 

145.  The  Old  Stage  Tavern  (20x30),  W.  B.  Goodwin 425 

163.  Clearing  After  a  Thunderstorm   (25x30),  F.   Steinberg 275 

Coiman,   Samuel,   N.  A.;   1832-1920,  American. 
A.  A.   A.,   Feb.    14,   1921. 

33.     Saw  Mill   River    (16x30) 65 

Cologne,  School  of. 

Osterreith,   Feb.   24,   1921. 

51.     Martyrdom   of   St.   Thomas   of  Canterbury    (23^x1634),    R.    B.    Bowler        350 
Coman,  Charlotte   B.;   1833-         .  American. 
F.  A.   A.    G.,   Nov.   27,    1920. 

268.  Landscape    (16x20),    McDonough    Galleries 80 

Comerre,   Leon;   1850-        ,  French. 
Clarke,  Jan.    12,    1921. 

Nautch  Girl    (46x28)    150 

Constable,  John;  1776-1837,  British. 
French,    Jan.    20,    1921. 

155.  English    Landscape    (18x25),    Seaman,    Agent 2,100 

Conroy,    George. 

Plaza,   Nov.   5,   1920. 

Landscape,    Mrs.   Watkins    50 

Constant,  Jean  Joseph  Benjamin;  1845-1902,  French. 
Hutchinson,   Feb.    14,    1921. 

63.  Judith    (48x31),   N.   B.   Bernstein 300 

Cooper,  Thomas   Sidney;   1803-1902,   British. 

F.  A.  A.   G.,   Nov.   27,   1920. 

295.  Sheep   in   the   Mountains    (31^x39^),   Martin 80 

Copal. 

Parker,  Nov.   9,    1920. 

27.   Sale  of  Emigree's  Effects  in  France  During  the  Revolution   (15^^x22^) 

(water  color) 210 

Cornelisz,  Jacob;   (Follower  of),  about  1510,  Dutch. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,    1921. 

109.     The  Entombment    (28^^x20),   H.   L.    R.    Lear 2,400 

Corot,  Jean  Baptiste  Camille;  1796-1875,  French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.    17,   1921. 

50.     Landscape   (11x14)    (water  color),  Dessart 80 

53.     Florence  (8J4xl63^),  F.  K.  Richards 90 


250  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Co-rot — Continued. 

A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,  1921. 

10.     The    Pasturage    (ll^xl9>^),    Mrs.    Johnson $925 

30.     Landscape    (16x12^),    Mrs.    H.    F.    Boardsman 950 

23.     Glade    in    Pierre    Woods,    in    Evaux,    near    Chateau-Thierry    (18x13^), 

J.    Aron     1,800 

Bostwick,  Jan.   21,    1921. 

137.  Danseuses  des  Bois    (26x32),  A.  A.   Healy 6,300 

F.  A.  A.  R.,  March   19,  1921. 

499.     A   River    Windstorm.      W.    D.    Hunter. 75 

Fifty-seventh   St.   Gal.,   Feb.  25,   1921. 

147.     Landscape  with  Figures   (18^x11  H),  J-    C.   Leslie 70 

French,   Jan.    21,    1921. 

134.  Landscape  in  France  (12j/^xl7i^),  Knoedler  &  Co 3,000 

Noyes,  Feb.  3,   1921. 

47.     Landscape  with  Figure:    Ville  d'Avray   (16^x32),  J.  F.  Albee 5,200 

Taft,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

45.  The  Woodland  Road  (23^4x1 73.^),  Holland  Galleries 875 

Wasserman,   Feb.   3,   1921. 

36.     Landscape    (15^x23),   J.    C.    Leslie 250 

Corrodi,    H.;    1844-         ,   Italian. 
F.  A.   A.    R.,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

101.  Turkish    Landscape    with    Figures    (34x65),    J.    R.    Collins 105 

102.  Napoleon  on  the  Island  of  St.   Helena    (40x66),   M.    Maggi 55 

103.  On  the  Banks  of  the  Tigris   (40x25),  J.  J.   Laughlin. 80 

Cosway,    Richard;    1740-1821,    British. 
Peckham,    March   29,    1921. 

64.     Mrs.    Fitzherbert    (27^/^x23^) 220 

Cottet,   Charles;    1863-        ,  French. 
Peckham,    March   29,    1921. 

63.     Breton  Sailor   (29x21  J^ ) ,  Kraushaar  Galleries 110 

Courbet,  Gustave;  1819-1877,  French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,  1921. 

32.     The   Blacksmith's   Shed    (23i^x29),    F.    Spencer 400 

Goossens.   Feb.   3,   1921. 

52.     Landscape  (32x25^),  R.  C.  &  N.  M.  Vose 750 

Craesbeeck,  Joost  Van;  1605-1662,  Dutch. 
A.  A.  A.,  Jan.   20,   1921. 

35.  The    Quack    Doctor    (21xl7j^),    Bernet,    Agent 220 

A.   G.,  Jan.   14,   1921. 

32.  Peasant  Inn    (14^x20)    80 

Craig,  Thomas   B.;  1849-         ,  American. 
F'.  A  A.  G,  Nov.   27,   1920. 

155.  Evening    Sunlight     (18x26),    Widemeyer 60 

Cranach,   Lucas,  The  Elder;   1472-1553,  German. 
A.  G.,  Jan.  28,   1921. 

682.  Mother   and    Child    (26x14^),    Agent 1,850 

Fares,   Feb.    5,    1921. 

182.     Hercules    and  the    Maidens    of   Omphale    (33x48) 1,500 

Crane,    Bruce,    N.   A.;   1857-         ,  American. 
Cummings.    April   29,    1921. 

26.     Autumn  Landscape    (8x10)    155 

66.     Autumn  Scene   (17x12)    280 

F.  A.  A.   G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

243.  Near    Newport    (14x20),    Lounes 103 

Smithers,  Jan.  21.   1921. 

144.  Country  Near  the  Sea  (20x30),  J.  Woodward 575 

Creifelds,  D.;  Contemporary,  American. 
Cummings,   April    29,    1921. 

38.     The  Dogs  (30x24)    62 

46.  Portrait  of   an   Indian  Chief    (34x26) 65 

51       Autumn  Landscape    (36x48)    oO 

54.     Indian  Chief   (33x25)    55 

60.     Woodland    Scene   (38x50)    70 

Cropsey,  J.  F.;   1823-1900,  American. 
Plaza,  Jan.   6,   1921. 

River  Scene,   Orange   County,   N.  J.    (24x43),   Mrs.   Rolphs 70 

Cubells-Y-Ruiz,    E.     M.;    Contemporary,    Spanish. 
Peckham,   March   29,   1921. 

85.     Landing    the    Fishing    Boat    (32i^x41),    H.    C.    Lowenstein 210 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  251 

Curran,  Charles  Courtney,  N,  A.;  1861-         ,  American. 
A.   A.   A.,   Feb.    14,    1921. 

34.  Girl  with   Violin    (36xl6i4),  W.  B.   Dickson $70 

A.  G.,  April  5,  1921. 

21.     The   Tanagra   Statuette    (22x22),   Rohlf 67 

Dagnan-Bouveret,  Pascal  Adolphe  Jean;  1852-         ,  French. 
French,   Jan.   21,    1921. 

99.   Girl  with  Cherries   (16^x13),  F.  M.  Donohue 275 

Dagnan-Bouveret,    Pascal   Adolphe   Jean;   1852-        ,   French. 
Peckham,    March    29,    1921. 

36.     The  Midday  Rest   (19x15^),   H.    S.   Labey 125 

Dalmau,    Luis;   XV  Century,   Catalonian. 
Weissberger,   April   27,    1921. 

503.     Virgin  of  Mont  Serrat   (44x25),    E.   S.  Heniot 130 

Damme,    Frans   Van;    1849-         ,  Belgian. 
Goossens,    March    1,    1921. 

35.  Le    Cimetier   des    Becassines    (21f^x3lM),    R-    Stillivagen 50 

Daniels,  Sanford. 

F.  A.  A.   R.,   April   9,    1921. 

858.     Lady   Bountiful   (28x36),  P.   Rinelli $70 

Dannat,  William  T.;  1853-         ,  American. 
Smithers,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

32.  The   Smuggler   (13x9i^),  W.  T.   Heniot 135 

D'Arthois,  Jacques;   1613-1686,  Flemish. 
A.  G.,  Jan.    14,    1921. 

24.  Landscape   (30x39^),  Chas.    Morgan    800 

Daublgny,  Charles   Francois;   1817-1878,  French. 

AAA      Tan    21     1921 

"l28.  On  the'  Ois'e  (7^x15^),  C.  W.  Kraushaar 925 

A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,   1921. 

59.     Landscape    (24x39i^)    390 

A.  A.  A.,  March  1,  1921. 

10.     Summei:  The   Deserted  Village    (9^x16^4),  W.   F.   Laporte 60 

F.  A.   A.  G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

300.  Landscape    and    River    (9x16^),    Tartoue 80 

French,  Jan.   21,    1921. 

135.  La  Chaumiere   (12x20^),  Knoedler  &  Co 3,300 

Plaza,  Jan.   6,   1921. 

River  Oise   (17x24),  J.  J.  Wilson 125 

Taft,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

44.  The   Stream   in  the   Meadows    (9^x16),   Robert  Anderson 900 

Wasserman,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

46.     The   Harbor    (11^x24),    C.    S.    Baldwin 1,500 

David,   Jacques   Louis;    1748-1825,   French. 
Goossens,  March  7,  1921. 

46.     La    Duchesse    de    Rovigo    (28x23-K),    J-    F.    McCarthy 55 

Davies,  Arthur   B.;    1862-         ,  American. 
Peckham,   March   29,   1921. 

25.  In   the   Wood    (10x16),    Ferargil   Galleries 70 

Dearth,  Henry  Golden,   N.  A.;  1864-1918,  American. 

Smithers,    Jan.    20,    1921. 

81.  Grey    Twilight    (30x40),    Folsom   Galleries 300 

De  Bock,  Theophile;  1851-1904,  Dutch. 
F.  A.  A.   G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

297.  Landscape    and    River     (13^x25),    P.    Tartoue 66 

Freeman  Gal.,  Feb.  26,    1921. 

765.     Fishing    Village    (15x10) 72 

De   Braekeieer,   Ferdinand,  The   Elder;  1792-1883,  Flemish. 
Goossens,   Feb.   24,    1921. 

45.  Antwerp    After    the    Bombardment    in    1832     (23^x28^),    William    F. 

Laporte    60 

Decamps,   Alexandre   Gabriel;    1803-1860,   French. 
F.  A.  A.   G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

305.  The    Puppet    Show    (38x50),    P.    Tartoue.. 120 

Beck,    Feb.   3,    1921. 

42.     The  Bay  of  Algiers    (131^x19^),   Prendergast 125 

Degas,   Hilaire  Germain    Edgar;   1834-1917,  French. 
Seligmann,  Jan.   27,   1921. 

1.  Cafe  Apres  le  Bain  (42i^x23H)    (drawing),  Reinhardt  &  Son 550 

2.  Studies   of  the  Nude    (2354x29)    (pastel),   Durand-Ruel 800 

3.  La  Toilette  Apres  le  Bain   (22^^x25)    (pastel),  Durand-Ruel 1,100 

4.  Group  of  Dancers:  A   Study  (27^x28^)    (pastel),  Durand-Ruel 650 

5.  Etude  de   Danseusr    (221^x27^)    (pastel),    Durand-Ruel 800 

6.  After  the  Bath   (21^x24^)    (pastel),  H.   Bernheim 1,450 


252  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Degas — Continued. 

7.  Le  Bain:  Femme,  Vue  de  Dos  (25^x32),  Durand-Ruel $1,750 

8.  Danseuse    Les  Cheveux  en  Tresse   (253/^x201^)    (pastel),   Durand-Ruel..  1,550 

9.  Femme  a  sa  Toilette    (23xl8>^)    (pastel),  Vollard 1,600 

10.  The  Pet    (26^x20]^),    Mrs.  W.    B.    Force 850 

11.  Buste   de   Femme    (18^x15),    Mrs.   Lathrop   Brown 1,650 

12.  Apres  le   Bain    (32i/^x24),   C.   Daniels 1,650 

13.  Groupe  de  Danseuses   (25x20)    (pastel),   Durand-Ruel 850 

14.  Groupe  de  Danseuses   (22^x16)    (pastel),  Durand-Ruel 1,600 

15.  Greenroom    Rest   (29x23)    (pastel),    Vollard 1,700 

16.  Trois  Danseuses    (26x20^/^)    (pastel),    Durand-Ruel 1,100 

17.  Drying  Her  Hair   (19^x28^)    (pastel).   J.   Bernheim 2,200 

18.  Landscape  and  Dancers    (25^x20)    (pastel),  H.  Reinhardt  &  Sons 2,250 

19.  Corsages  Violettes,   Jupes   Bleues    (29^x24^4  ,   Vollard 2,000 

20.  At  the  Theatre   (93^x12^),   C.  W.   Kraushaar 2,000 

21.  Deux   Femmes   et  un   Homme   vus  en  Buste  et  de   Profil    (12^x16),   J. 
Bernheim    2,300 

22.  Portrait  of  a  Man  (13^x8^^),  Durand-Ruel 1,450 

23.  At  the  Milliner's  (24x29),  Mrs.  L.  Brown 1,750 

24.  Femme  se  Coiffant   (18^x12^),  Vollard 2,850 

25.  Lovers  of  Music:  The  Violinist   (18>4x21M),  Durand-Ruel 7,700 

26.  Scene  de  Ballet    (183^x24^),  Durand-Ruel 5,600 

27.  Three  Jockeys    (19i^x25>^)    (pastel),  Vollard 1,850 

28.  The    Milliners    (23i4x2834),    J.    Bernheim 2,400 

29.  Les  Corsages  Verts  (29x23j4)    (pastel),  Durand-Ruel 3,500 

30.  Femme  S'Epongeant  le  Dos    (27^x2334),  Durand-Ruel 1,300 

31.  Quittant  le  Cuveau  (34^x29^^)    (pastel),  J.  Bernheim 1,600 

32.  Femme  au  Tub    (28^x28)    (pastel),   Durand-Ruel 4,500 

33.  The  Chat    (27x27)    (pastel),  J.   Bernheim 1,150 

34.  Femme  en  Chapeau   Rose    (33>^x29j4)    (pastel),   Durand-Ruel 4,500 

35.  Portrait  of  a  Man   (33Hx25>^),  Brooklyn  Museum 2,750 

36.  At  the  Museum  (35^x26^^),  C.  W.  Kraushaar 4,850 

37.  The  Morning  Hour   (29^4x33^)    (pastel),  Mr.  Vollard 1,900 

38.  Before  Breakfast    (39^x23^)    (pastel),    Mr.    Vollard 2,700 

39.  Two  Dancers  (29x29)    (pastel),  A.   S.  Rosenbach 2,000 

40.  Dancers   in  the   Greenroom    (16^x34^),   Henry  Reinhardt 10,500 

41.  La  Promenade  des  Chevaux  (15^x35^),  Miss  Lorenz,  Agent 11,800 

42.  At  Her  Toilette   (32^x30),  Durand-Ruel 6,100 

43.  Danseuses:  Jupes  Saumon   (35x25j/2)    (pastel),  Mr.  Vollard 1,900 

44.  Deux  Hommes    (36j4x265^),   Durand-Ruel 2,500 

45.  Portrait  of  a  Lady  (32x25]^),  Scott  &  Fowles 6,500 

46.  Quatre   Danseuses  en  Scene  (29x36^),  Durand-Ruel 7,100 

47.  Three  Dancers   (37i^x31^)    (pastel),  Vollard. 2,300 

48.  Les    Modistes    et    le    Chapeau    de    Paille   d'ltalie    (30x32J^),    Dundensing 
Galleries     1,750 

49.  Femme   s'Epongeant   la  Poitrine    (25x23)    (pastel),  J.   Bernheim 1,000 

50.  The  Ride  (28x35>4),  Bernet,  Agent 3,000 

51.  Portrait  in  White   (29x36),  Knoedler  &  Co 17,000 

52.  Danseuses:    Decor   d'Arbres    (42x25)    (pastel),    Mrs.   Lathrop   Brown....  1,300 

53.  Danseuses  a  la  Barre  (43i/^x23^)    (pastel),  Mr.  Vollard 1,650 

54.  Drying  Her  Hair  After  the  Bath    (33x41 1^)    (pastel),   Brooklyn   Museum  2,250 

55.  L'  Entree  en  Scene  (29^x42^)    (pastel),  Mr.   Vollard 1,050 

56.  Portrait  de  Femme    (251^x21),   Henry   Reinhardt 3,050 

57.  Scene  de  Ballet   (30x43^)    (pastel),  Scott  &  Fowles 3,000 

58.  Le  Petit  Dejeuner  apres  le  Bain   (41i^x27i^)    (pastel),   Durand-Ruel...  2.500 

59.  Deux  Femmes  Assises   (32x38),  Henry  Reinhardt $3,800 

60.  Danseuses  en   Repos    (30^x42^^)    (pastel),   Durand-Ruel 2,500 

61.  Madame  est  Servie   (47x41)    (pastel),   Mrs.  Lathrop  Brown 3,200 

62.  Two  Dancers  Practicing  at  the  Bar  (43^x38)    (pastel),  Scott  &  Fowles..  3,200 

63.  Le   Peignoir   Jaune    (43^x40)    (pastel),    Mrs.    Lathrop   Brown 3.200 

64.  Children  and  Ponies  in  a  Park    (40x35),   Miss  Lorenz,  Agent 3,200 

65.  Danseuse  a  la   Barre    (51x3834),   Miss  Lorenz,  Agent 2,600 

66.  Arranging  Flowers    (39x54) ,   Vollard 3,600 

67.  Young    Spartans    at    Wrestling    Exercise    (43x61),    Durand-Ruel 3,300 

68.  M'lle  Fiocre  dans  le  Ballet  de  la   Source    (51x57),  Durand-Ruel 13,000 

69.  La   Danseuse   aux   Bouquets    (70^4x59),    Vollard 7,600 

70.  Aux  Courses:   Le  Jockey  Blesse   (71x59i4),   Seaman,  Agent 3,800 

71.  La  Fille  de  Jephte  (77x118),  C.  Baca-Flor 17,000 

De    Haas,    M.    F.    H.,    N.A.;    1832-1895.    American. 

F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  27,  1920. 

270.  Cattle     (21x27),     McDonough 6S 

Freeman  Gal.,    Phila.,   Feb.   26,    1921. 

75L.   Morning    (21x15)     105 

Hutchinson,   Feb.   14,   1921. 

35.     Marine:     The   Storm    (27x22) 75 

Plaza,   Nov.   20,    1920. 

Marine,   Mrs.   Campbell    55 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  253 

De    Haven,    Frank,   A,    N.   A.;    1856-         ,   American. 
A.  A.   A.,   Feb.  24,    1921. 

44.     Landscape  at    Sunset    (28x36]/^),    F.    Spencer $70 

Cumminps,   April   29,    1921. 

36.      Dawn,   Coast  of  Main   (24x31)    80 

De   Hoog,   Bernard;   1866-        ,  Dutch. 
A.   A.   A.,    Tan.  21,    1921. 

120.   Mother  and  Child  (40x32),  Levy  Galleries 625 

Delort,    Charles    Edouard;    1814-1894,    French. 
Kerr,    Nov.    26,    1920. 

78.  The    Trysting    Place     (33x25) ,    McDonough    Galleries 75 

Delpy,  Hippolyte;  1841-1910,  French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   14,    1921. 

56.     Bords  de  Riviere    (24x39^),    M.   B.   Bernstein 150 

Denner,   Balthasar;   1685-1749,  German. 
Ferlov,   April   5,    1921. 

44.     Portrait  of   an  Elderly  Lady    (15x11^),  A.   Pope ISO 

Deschamps,  Louis;  1846-         ,  French. 
F.  A.  A.   R.,  May  7,   1921. 

873.     Girl  with  Basket   of  Cherries   (13x17),  S.  Heller 52 

Dessar,  Louis  Paul,  N.  A.;  1867-        ,  American. 
Smithers,   Jan.   20.    1921. 

54.  Rising    Moon    (29x24).    W.    Stimmel 275 

Detaille,    Jean    Baptiste    Edouard;    1848-1912,    French. 
A.  A.  A.,   Feb.   24,    1921. 

64.      Sentry    on    Patrol    (59i^x43),    M.    B.    Bernstein 775 

F.  A.  A.   G.,   Nov.   27,   1920. 

269.  Ecole    de    St.    Germain,    1st    Empire    (7x5)     (black   and    white),    McDon- 
ough   50 

Kerr,   Nov.    26,    1920. 

29.  A   Hussar    (11x8^),    G.   C.    Smith,    Jr 200 

Smithers,   Tan  21,   1921. 

87.  Soldier  at  Rest    (13x8^),  Parke,  Agent 210 

Detti,   Cesare;    1847-1915,  Italian. 
Taft,   Feb.    17,    1921. 

74.     A  Game  of   Cards   (13^x19^^)    (water  color),  Brancoto 100 

De  Voss,  Simon. 

Clarke,  Jan.   12,   1921. 

124.  Descent   from   Cross    (2.5x3.11),   H.   L.   Brittain 475 

Dewey,  Charles   Melville,   N.  A.;  1851-         ,  American. 

A.  A.  A.,   Feb.    24,    1921. 

43.     Sunset    (29x36),    E.    A.    Seasongood 310 

Dewing,  Thomas  W.,    N.  A.;   1851-         ,  American. 
Smithers,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

31.  The    Faun    (16x10),    T.    H.    Russell 120 

Diaz  de   La  Pena,   Narcisse  Virgile;  1807-1876,  French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   17,  1921. 

52.     Still  Life:    Flowers  (16x13),  T.  E.  Finger 55 

Beck,  Feb.  3,   1921. 

48.      Cupid's    Festival    (23^x29) 1,100 

Bostwick,  Jan.   21,    1921. 

125.  Les   Smyrniotes   (14x11),  Seaman,  Agent 800 

139.  A   Bather    (16^x20^),   P.  J.   Higgs 2,200 

French,   Jan.   21,   1921. 

129.  Reverie    (105^x8),   Mr.   Fox 650 

130.  Girl  and  Pet   (16xl2j4),  R.  C.  Vose 950 

Plaza,    Nov.    5,    1920. 

Landscape.      Mrs.    D.    Aldersen 125 

Plaza,  Feb.    19,   1921. 

184.     Barbizon    Landscape     (13x17),    Wm.    M.    K.    Olcott 65 

229.     Women   with   Children   (12x16),   Wm.   M.   K.   Olcott 65 

Smithers,   Jan.  21,   1921. 

133.  Moonlight  Concert  (16x20),  G.  Fuerth 625 

Taft,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

Zl.     Repose  in  the  Forest    (12-Kx8^),   C.   W.    Kraushaar   Galleries 500 

40.     The    Bohemians    (12^x934) 525 

43.     In   the   Forest   of   Fontainebleau    (I5i4x21i^) 700 

Wasserman,   Feb.  3,   1921. 

50.     Venus   and    Cupids    (39^x32)    C.    S.    Baldwin 1,100 

DIeterle,  Marie;  1860-         ,  French. 
Roebling,    Tan.   21,    1921. 

160.  Cows  in  Meadow  and  Stream   (31x40),  R.  C.  Vose 1.300 


254  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Dodd,  Robert;  1748?-1810?,  British. 
Lehne,  April   1,   1921. 

916.  The  Hermione  Towed  out  of  the  Harbor  (17x27),  P.  M.  Hooper $380 

917.  Admiral   Hawkes'  Action  off  Ushant,  November  20,  1799   (15x20) 60 

Domingo,  Jose;  1843-         ,  Spanish. 

Bostwick,  Jan.   20,    1921. 

27.  A  Cavalier   (203^x133^),  W.  T.   Heniot 200 

Smithers,   Jan.  21,   1921. 

143.  Spanish  Courtyard   (15i4x24J4),  P.  Thompson 450 

Dou,    Gerard;    1613-1675,    Dutch. 
A.    G.,    Feb.    18,    1921. 

111.     Christ  Among   the    Doctors    (30x42^),    Dr.    T.    Turck 1,500 

Doughty,  Thomas,   N.  A.;   1793-1856,  American. 
Fifty-seventh    St.    Gal.,   Feb.   23,    1921. 

140.     Hudson  River  Valley   (26x35),  Jerome  Buck 52 

Dougherty,  Paul,  N.  A.;  1877-         ,  American. 
Smithers,   Jan.  21,   1921. 

165.  The  Breaker   (36x48),  E.  A.  Milch 650 

Duffill,    J.;    XVIII    Century. 
Charles,   Nov.   17,    1920. 

681.  Mademoiselle  du  Plessis    (49^x40),  J.   Kelekian 290 

Dunlap,   William;    1766-1839,  American. 
Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,    1920. 

24.  John   Tylor   (2^x2^^)    85 

27.  William  Charles  Cole  Claiborne    (3?4x3) 180 

Dupont,   Gainsborough;    1767-1797,  British. 
Peckham,    March    29,    1921. 

66.     Lord     Kinnaird     (30x25),    Armstrong 310 

Duprat,  Alfred  G.;  1882-1913,  French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.    14,    1921. 

44.     At  Venice   (25^x36),  M.  B.  Bernstein 125 

Dupre,  Jules;   1812-1889,  French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Jan.  21,   1921. 

136.  The  Farm  by  the  River  (28^x233^),  C.  Haskins 1,800 

Beck,   Feb.  3,   1921. 

39.     A  Brittany  Farm:  Isle-Adam    (18x15)   P.  Jackson  Higgs 1,900 

French,   Jan.   21,    1921. 

127.  Landscape:  The  Great  Oak  (8)^x12^),  D.  Clarence 1,100 

Dupre,    Julien;    1851-1910. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  3,   1921. 

S3.     Harvesters    (28x19)     C.    B.    Stevens 400 

Dutch   School. 

A.  A.  A.,  Feb.    17,    1921. 

56.  Portrait  of  a  Gentleman    (13^x111^),  J.   S.  Berliner 85 

Dutch   School,   XVII  Century. 
Charles,   Nov.    18,    1920. 

859.  Vase  of  Flowers  (22^x175^),  H.  A.  James 50 

Ruiz,  May  21,   1921. 

839.     Figures  and   Dogs.     J.  Thomson 60 

Weissberger,   April   27,   1921. 

496.     The   Senses    (273^x41  J/$),    (3  panels) 255 

Dutch  School;  Early  XVIII  Century. 
A.  A.  A.,   March  7,   1921. 

57.  Fruit   and    Flowers    (28^^x38),    J.    Earns 55 

Weissberger,    April    27,    1921. 

472.     Pair  of  Landscapes    (153^x113/2),   Richardson 55 

Eaton,  Charles  Warren;   1857-         ,  American. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   14,   1921. 

37.     Evening:    Belgium    (24x30),   Calo  Art  Galleries 82 

Eck,    B. 

Freeman  Gal.,  Feb.  26,   1921. 

761.     The  Grand   Canal,   Venice    (65x29) 105 

Eicholz,   Jacob;   1776-1842,  American. 
Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,   1920. 

91.  James  P.  S-rith   (30^x2534) 375 

Elserman,   H.;   Cont.;mporary. 
Smithers.   Jan.    20,    1921. 

2.  Portrait  of  a  Lady  (9^x7^),  R.  H.  Wallach 150 

Eksergian,   C. 

F.  A.  A.   R.,   March  18,   1921. 

314.     The  Music  Lessons.     J.  Callahan 52 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  255 

Entraygues,  Charles   Bertrand    D';   XIX  Century,  French. 
F.  A.  A.   G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

272.  Address   of    Welcome    (23x33),    McDonough $125 

Ellinger,  Abbe  de  Tergemsee;  1019-1056,  German. 
Fifty-seventh  'St.   GaL,   Feb.    23,    1921. 

Still  Life   (25x181^),  W.  T.   Stern 65 

English    School;   Late  XVTI    Century. 
A.  A.  A..   March   7,   1921. 

60.     Fruits    and    Flowers    (49x37i4),    B.    R.    Kittredge 55 

English   School;   Early  XVII-XVIII  Century. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

882.  Still    Life    (four)     (27^x35^),    Di    Salvo    Bros 60 

English   School;  XVIII  Century. 
A.  G.,  Nov.  26,   1920. 

113.  Landscape  with   Figures    (33x47),   Chas.    Oberwalder's  Sons 300 

A.  G.,  Jan.   14,   1921. 

43.  Mrs.  Harrison  and  Child    (36x28),   Chas.   Morgan 950 

44.  Mr,  Harrison   (35>^x27^),  F.  Frazer 950 

57.  Portrait  of  a  Man    (22i^xl7^),  Dr.   V.   G.  Simkovitch 110 

F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

186.  Landscape   and    Cattle    (37x45),    Noel 80 

Smith,   Feb.   Z,   1921. 

72.     Portrait   of  a   Girl   Leaning   on   a  Basket    (30x25)    R.    A.    Reader 275 

English  School;  About  1800. 
A.  G.,   Tan.   14,   1921. 

59.  Portrait  of  a  Boy   (17x13^), Miss  I.  Taylor 150 

English   School;  XIX  Century. 
A.  G.,  Nov.  26,   1920. 

97.  Portrait   of   a    Lady    (31x25),    Chas.    Oberwalder's    Sons 70 

Enneking,    John    J.;    1841-         ,    American. 
Harris,   Feb.  24,   1921. 

42.     Sudden   Rain:   A   Summer  Shower    (22x30),   H.   Victor 100 

Epp,  Rudolph;  1834-1910,  German. 
Hutchinson,    Feb.    14,    1921. 

53.     The   Old   Beau    (39x32) 155 

Ernst,    Rudolf;    1854-         ,    German. 
A.   A.  A.,   Feb.   24,   1921. 

27.     Oriental    Interior   with    Figure    (24x19),    Mrs.    Johnson 130 

Etty,  George,   R.  A.;   1787-1819,  British. 
Peckham,    March   29,    1921. 

75.     Lady  Ellenborough    (26x21^^),  F.   Baumeister 135 

Evans,    De   Scott;    Contemporary,    American. 
Smith,   Feb.   3,   1921. 

23.     The    Lamp    Glow     (24x20)     Prendergast 100 

Fabbi,   F.;   1861-         ,  Italian. 
A.  G.,  Nov.  26,   1920. 

96.  The   Dancing   Girl    (31x22),    Chas.    Oberwalder's    Sons 105 

Fabrlanl,  Gentile   Da;  early  XV  Century,  Italian   (School  of). 
A.   G.,   Ian.   28,   1921. 

680.   Madonna  with    Saints    (20>4x31),    Jaxon 1,300 

Fath,  Rene. 

Clarke,  Jan.   12,   1921. 

56.  The    Path    Thro'    the    Woods    (36x26) 65 

Field,    E.    Loyal;   1856-1914,   American. 
Plaza,    Feb.    18,    1921. 

211.     Landscape    (20x30),    P.    D.    Kerriscn 50 

Flemish   School,   Early  XVIII  Century. 
■     Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

892.  The    Four    Seasons    (49j^x45H),    Lans    Co 180 

Francken,   Jerome. 

Clarke,  Jan.    12,    1921. 

143.  Transfiguration    (42x293^)     130 

Escosura,    Ignacio    Leon    Y;   Contemporary,    Spanish. 
Taft,   Feb.   17,    1921. 

110.     Surprised    (25 J^ x32 1^ ),    Calo  Art  Galleries SO 

Field,  Robert;    ?-1819,  American. 
Rosenthal,    Dec.    14,    1920. 

29.  George  Washington   (3x2)^) 725 


256  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Fichel,   Eugene   Benjamin;  1826-1895,  French. 
French^    Tan.    20,    1921. 

6.  With   Pipe  and   Glass    (4^x3%),  Rudert,    Agent $60 

16.  An  Appreciated   Solo    (7^x954),  J.   C.  Willever 55 

Flameng,   Francois;  1856-         ,  French. 
Rose,bline,    Tan.    20.   1921. 

57.  The  Next  Move  (15x18),  Dr.  E.  Cadgene 450 

Flemisli.  School;    XV  Century. 
Orselli,   Feb.    16,    1921. 

248.      Madonna   and    Child    (17^x12^),    M.    J.    Rougeron 200 

255.     Pair    of    Still    Life    Pictures    (23x19),    S.    Schepps 100 

Ruiz.  April   19,   1921. 

599.  The  Annunciation.     W.    R.  Hearst 450 

600.  Saint  Elena  Uncovering  the  Cross.     E.  K.  Brauch 700 

Flemish  School;  Late  XV  Century. 
Ruiz,  April  9,    1921. 

1103.     Descending    of    Christ    from    the    Cross    (2    ft.    6    in.    x    1    ft.    10    in), 

H.   Burrows    450 

Flemish   School;  Early  XVI  Century. 
Ruiz.  April   9,   1921. 

1075.  St.  Jeronime   (2  ft.  7  in.  x  2  ft.  2  in.),  H.  H.  Plate 70 

1125.     The  Virgin,  Christ  and  St.  John  (1  ft.  10  in.  x  1  ft.  5  in.),  H.  Fair.,         150 
1134.     Virgin   Mary  and  Christ  Baby  with  a  Parrot  in  His  Hand   (3  ft.   4   in. 

X  2  ft.  6  in.),  C.   Moran 650 

1136.     The  King's  Adoration  of  Christ  (1   ft.  x  8  in.)    (triptych),  J.  Torrance         450 
1153.      Virgin  Mary  and  Child.     J.  J.  Murray 80 

Flemish  School;  XVI  Century. 
Ruiz.  April   9,   1921. 

1107.     The  Shepherd's  Adoration  (4  ft.  x  2   ft.   10  in.),  C.  Moran 200 

Ruiz,   May  21,   1921. 

883.     The  Virgin,  The  Annunciation.      J.   Bartlett 300 

Flemish  School;  Late  XVI  Century, 
Ruiz,  April   9,   1921. 

1076.  Portrait  of  a  Young  Lady  (1  ft.  11   in.  x  1  ft.  7  in.),  H.  H.  Plate 85 

Flemish   School;  XVII   Century. 
Orselli,   Feb.    16,    1921. 

261.      Still  Life   (22x34),   S    Schepps 90 

Weissberger,   April    27,    1921. 

514.     Flowers  (36^x49),  J.  F.  Carlisle 100 

Florentine  School;  early  XV  Century. 
A.   G.,    Tan.    28,    1921. 

678.  Head  of  the  Saviour    (18^x12),  Da  Costa 100 

Florentine  School;  about  1450. 
A.   G.,    Tan.    28,    1921. 

672.  Virgin,   Child,  and  Angels    (24x14^),   Pope 200 

673.  The  Crucifixion   (I5i^xl0^),   Da  Costa 110 

Fortuny  y  Carbo,  Mariano;  1838-1874,  Spanish. 
A.  G.,  Feb.  18,   1921. 

30.     Figures  in  Repose   (8x10)    (water  color),  Scott  &  Fowles 55 

Fragonard,  H.;   1806-1876,  French. 

Fifty-seventh   St.   Gal.,   Feb.   24,    1921. 

263.     Une  Vestale   (23J^x30),  Eugene   Borass 125 

Francais 

F.   A,   A.   R.,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

106.     Italian  Ruins   with   Figures    (38x51),   W.    Randell 100 

Fraser,   Charles;  1782-1860,  American. 
Rosenthal,   Dec.   14,    1920. 

30.  Mr.   Strong  of  New  York   (3x2^^) 80 

31.  Captain  Charles  Bertody   (334x3) 85 

32.  James   Knox   Polk    (25^x254) 70 

33.  Mr.   Schley    (23^x2^) 52 

French  School;  XVII  Century. 
Orselli,   Feb.    16,    1921. 

271.      Portrait    of    a    Lady    (52x36),    M.    J.    Rougeron ; 125 

French   School;   Late  XVII   Century. 
A.   G.,  Jan.    14,    1921. 

7.  The    Judgment    of    Paris    (Hj^xlSJ^) 60 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  257 

French   School;   XVIII   Century. 
A.   G.,  Nov.   26,    1920. 

57.   Portrait   of   a   Bey    (18x15),    Mrs.    J.    E.    Jenkins $72 

93.  The    Letter    (31x25),    Chas.    Oberwalder's    Sons 70 

95.  Portrait   of    a    Prince    (32x26),    Chas.    Oberwalder's    Sons 125 

Cattadori,  April   15,    1921. 

535.      (a)    Sunset  at  Venice,    (b)  'Storm  near  a  Rocky  Coast  (overdoor  panels) 

(40x235^)    McCarthy    50 

Charles,   Nov.    18,    1920. 

893.  Flowers    (49^x44),    Mrs.    M.    J.    SchoUi 150 

Fifty-seventh   St.    Gal.,   Feb.   24,    1921. 

267.  Still   Life    (32x52^),    S.   G.   Rains 70 

268.  Still  Life    (32x52^/^),   S.    G.   Rains 70 

Peckham,    March    29,    1921. 

17.     La  Duchesse  de  Mcntbazon    (14x11),   B.   R.   Kittredge 80 

Weissberger,   April   27,    1921. 

467.     Six  Views  of  Ruins   (MxlSj/^),  W.  H.  Thompson 120 

508.  View    of    the     Pack    of    Beagles    of    Empress    Catherine    II    of    Russia 

32^x49H),    C.    Erlanger 125 

French   School. 

Plaza,   Feb.    19,    1921. 

195.     Portrait  of  a  Lady    (25x30),   Leo  Elwyn 50 

Frere,   Edouard;  1819-1886,  French. 
Holmes,    Jan.    20,    1921. 

7.  Evening  Prayer  (14J^xll^)    (drawing  in  chalk),  Mr.  Fox 1,575 

Fromentin,    Eugene;    1920-1876,  French. 
Freeman   Gal.,   Phila.,   Feb.   26,   1921. 

754.     Oriental     Figures     (24x1 7) 60 

French,  Jan.  21,   1921. 

92.  Rendezvous  of  Arabs  in  Algiers   (lO^ixSy^),   Mr.   Fox 1,575 

Goossens,   Feb   3,   1921. 

7.     Environs  of  Sidi-bel-Abbes    (8^4x15^)    M.   B.   Philipp 150 

Fuller,    George;    1822-1844,  American. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,   March   19,   1921. 

509.  The  Field  Walk.     F.  R.  Kaldenberg 50 

Fungal,    Bernardino;    1460-1516,   Flcrentine. 

Orselli,   Feb.   16,    1921. 

259.     Adoration      (37x20),      McCarthy 400 

Fyt,  Jan;    1625-1671,   Flemish. 
Bartlett,   March    7,    1921. 

18.     Fancy  Roosters   (20x15^),  J.  C.   H.   Weldring 65 

Herring,    J.    F.,    Senior;    1795-1865,    British. 
Bartlett,   March    7,    1921. 

3.     The    Old    Barn    (1534xl4i^),    Mrs.    W.    K.    Dick 140 

Gabriel,  Paul  Joseph  Constantine;  1825-1903,  Dutch. 
Rcebling,    Jan.    20,    1921. 

68.  Landscape  with  River    (15x23).  Olivetti 150 

Gallait,  Louis;  French. 
Clarke,    Ian.    12,   1921. 

135.   Mother  and   Child    (l5i4xl9H),   Brittain 95 

Gay,    Edward,    N.    A.;    1837-         ,    American. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   24,   1921. 

40.     Golden   Harvest    (20^x30^),    E.    H.    Manning 210 

F.  A.  A.  R.,  Feb.   10,   1921. 

107.     Swamp  Pasture    (24>^x40H),  W.    Randell 55 

109.     Pelhamdale    (35x59),    W.    Randell 67 

Plaza,   Jan.   6,    1921. 

Landscape  (20x25) ,  J.  J.  Wilson 72 

Geddes,    Andrew;    XVIII    Century,    British. 
Smith,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

86.      Children   in  the  Forest   (40x50)    C.   W.   Kraushaar   Galleries 400 

Gelder,    Lucien;   XIX  Century,  German. 
A.   G.,   April   5,   1921. 

61.     Playing  Doctor   (36x27),   Calo 55 

Gerard,  Francois  Pascal;  1770-1837,  French. 
Henkels,    April    11,    1921. 

80.  Eugene   de    Beauharnais    (28x22),    Bert 1,000 

81.  Hortense   Eugenie    Beauharnais    (25^x21^),    Bert 1,000 

82.  Madame   Jeanne  Louise   Henriette  Genest    Campan    (25^x211/^),   Bert..      1,000 

Gerard,   Thomas. 

Plaza,   Jan.   6,    1921. 

Dutch  Interior    (31x50),    Bernard  Devine 70 


258  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 


German  School;  XVI  Century. 
A.  G.,  Jan.   14,    1921. 

14.  Christ  on  the   Cross    (12J4xl0j^) $80 

German  School;  late  XVI  Century. 
A.   G.,   Jan.   28,    1921. 

675.  The   Mocking  of  Christ    (29x41),   Weyhe 100 

German  School;  XVIII  Century. 
Ruiz,  April  9,   1921. 

1074.     A  Young  Man   (3  ft.  11  in.  x  3  ft.  2  in.),  C.  Thomson 300 

Gerome,  Jean   Leon;   1824-1904,  French. 
A.  A.   A.,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

61.  The  Butcher  Boy  (13x1 1^),  Mrs.  C.  F.  Darlington 500 

Ghirlandaio,  School  of. 
Smith,   Feb.    3,    1921. 

16.     Portrait  of  a  Woman    (17x1134)    M.  J.  Rougeron 210 

Giachi,    E.;   Contemporary,   Italian. 
A.   A.  A.,   Feb.   14,    1921. 

65.     Chant   d'Amour    (35x51),   M.   B.   Bernstein 120 

Gimbrede,  Thomas;  1781-1832,  American. 
Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,   1920. 

33.     Mr.    Schley    (2^x2^) 52 

GIminez,   F.   Fernandez;   1891-         ,  Spanish. 
Freeman  Gal.,   Phila.,   Feb.   26,    1921. 

756.     Mergiate    en    la   Alhambra    (50x40) 52 

Smith  &  Jafife,   April    1,   1921. 

400.     Flowers  in  a   Brass  Bowl.     Kobler 65 

Glaize,   Pierre  Paul   Leon;  1842-        ,  French. 
Clarke,   Tan.    12,    1921. 

53.  The    Swing    (4.3x2)     120 

Goodridge,  Sarah;  American, 
Rosenthal,    Dec.    14,    1920. 

34.  Portrait  of   a  Revolutionary  Officer    (2§'gx2) 75 

35.  Portrait  of  a  Girl   (2^x2) 70 

Gordon,  Sir  John  Watson,  R.  A.,  P.  R.  S.  A.;  1790-1864,  British. 

Peckham,    March    29,    1921. 

67.     Portrait   of   a    Lady    (30^x25),    McCarthy 150 

Gorter,  A.   H. 

Clarke,   Jan.    12,    1921. 

57.  Dutch    Sunset    (39x28>^)     160 

Goya  y  Lucientes,  Francisco  Jose  de;  1746-1828,  Spanish. 
Wasserman,   Feb.   3,   1921. 

79.     Portrait  of  Don   Alonso   Munoz    (2534x21i^)    J.   C.   Heldring 275 

Goya  y   Lucientes,  Francisco  Jose  de;  1716-1828,  Spanish  (Attributed  to). 
Ruiz,    May   21,    1921. 

859.     Gentlemen.     J.   Bartlett    200 

Greaves,   Walter;    Contemporary,   British. 
Smith,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

21.     Portrait  of  Whistler   (20x24),  Dr.  Rosenbach 45 

Greenhlll,    John;    1649-1672,.  British. 
Charles,    Nov.    17,    1920. 

682.  James   II    (50x40),    H.    L.    Adams,    Jr 230 

Greuze,  Jean   Baptiste;  1725-1805,  French. 
Fifty-seventh    St.    Gal.,    Feb.   24,    1921. 

295.     Portrait  of  a  Young  Girl    (21^x16-14),  C.   Mullen 135 

Osterreith,   Feb.    24,    1921. 

16.     Portrait    Study     (10x8^^),    O.    Bernet,    Agent 200 

Peckham,    March    29,    1921. 

23.     Head   of  a  Young  Girl    (16i^xl2K),  F.   K.   Richards 60 

Grimaldi,  William;  1751-1830,  British. 
Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,    1920. 

35a.  George  Washington   (3x2^)    2,600 

Groll,  Albert  F.,   N.  A.;  1866-         ,  American. 
A.   G.,   April    5,    1921. 

55.     Gathering  Potatoes   (25x35) ,  Calo 65 

Cummings,    April    29,    1921. 

32.     Hilly    Country    (13x19)     115 

Grolleron,  Paul  Louis  Narcisse;  1848  1901,  French. 
Holmes,  Jan.  20,   1921. 

8.  The  Noonday  Meal    (12i/^x9H),  H.  Bull 200 

F.  A.   A.    R.,   May   7,    1921. 

862.     Zouave  Soldier  Resting  (12x9),  Arlington  Galleries 90 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  259 


Qpuppe,  Charles  P.;  1860-        ,  American, 
A.   G.,  April   5,    1921. 

56.     November  Afternoon    (2i.r:36),   Fenwick $130 

Grutzner,  E.;   1846-1878,  German. 
Plaza,  Jan.  6,   1921. 

Lunch  Time   (9x1 1 ) ,   Francis  Draz 60 

Guard!,  Francesco;   1712-1792,  Venetian. 
Cattadori,   April   15,    1921. 

532.     View  of  San  Giorgi   Maggiore,  Venice   (I5x20j^),   McCarthy 120 

French,    Jan.    21.    1921. 

111.  Venice  (llj^xl534),   M.   Knoedler  &  Co 1,050 

Orselli,    Feb.    16,    1921. 

244.     Ruins    (8x7) ,    Buffardi 50 

Guillaumin,   Armand;    Contemporary,   French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,  1921. 

36.     La    Lecture    (Madame    Cezanne    reading)    (24x20),    Kraushaar   Galleries        230 
Haquette,  Georges;  1854-1906,   French. 
F.  A.  A.   R.,  April  9,    1921. 

852,     French  Fisherman   (22x28),  H.  D.   G.   Rohlfs 80 

Hahn,   Wilhelm;    XIX   Century,    German. 
A.   G.,   Nov.  26,   1920. 

120.  The    Harvest    Feast    (45x69),    W.    Wesendonck 200 

Hamilton,  C.  W.;  1675-1751,  Flemish, 
F,  A.  A.   R,  Feb.   10,   1921. 

31.  Butterflies  and  Insects    (companion  to   31a)    (15^x12^) SO 

31a.  Butterfles  and  Insects   (companion  to   31)    (15^x12^/^) 50 

Hanneman,  Adreaan;   1601-1671,  Dutch. 
Charles,    Nov.    17,    1920. 

654.  Lady   Cholmely   of   Whitby    (24i,4x20),   H.    L.    Adams 100 

Hardime,    Pieter;    1678-1758,   Flemish. 
Charles,    Nov.    17,    1920. 

858.  A    Bowl    of    Flowers    (22i^xl8^),    Mrs.    Band 85 

F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.   26,    1920. 

92.  Flower    Piece    (35x43),    Satinover 110 

Harding,    Chester;    1792-1886,    American. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,  Feb.    9,    1921 

135.     Portrait  of  Judge  Jacon   Kent  of  Newberry,  Vermont.      Cooper  Hewitt  55 

Harlamoff,    Alexis;    1849-         ,    Russian. 
Peckham,    March   29,    1921 
22.     Innocence     (18^^x14^ ),     Mr.     Crooker 150 

Harpignies,   Henri  Joseph;  1819-1916,  French. 
Beck,   Feb.   3,   1921. 

56.      Summer    (25^x32)    Mr.    Burtman 1,800 

French,   Jan.   21,   1921. 

151.  Environs  de  Beaucaire   (25^^x32),   R.   C.  Vose 1,800 

Holmes,   Jan.    21,    1921. 

148.  Evening    (20x32),   P.    J.    Higgs 3,600 

Robbins,    Feb.    24,    1921. 

34.     A    Holiday   in    the   Woods    (26x20H),    William    F.    Laporte 120 

Roebling,   Jan.   21,   1921. 

159.  Landscape   (29x39^),  J.   M.   Heatherton 1,450 

Taft,   Feb.    3,    1921. 

31.     Children   in  the  Wood    (22xl8J4),   Robert  Anderson 275 

Wasserman,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

4.  Landscape     Mxll3/0    C.    S.   Baldwin 225 

Harrison,   Alexander;    1853-        ,   American. 

F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

260.  Marine     (19x30).    Ellis 125 

Harrison,  April    19,    1921. 

5.  Springtime  in  Brittany   (13x16),  M.  E.  'Sterne 70 

8.     Backwaters  (15-^x231^),  M.  E.  Sterne 55 

11.     Lever  de  Lune  (18x293/4),  H.  H.  Smith 60 

13.  Nymph  of  the  Birches  (25i^x25H),  Dr.   C.   H.  Williams 100 

14.  Faux  et   Sables    (1734x31 54 ),    E.   Coykendall 75 

15.  Vagues  Dorees    (12x40),   M.  W.   Clepham 80 

16.  Vagues   Bretonnes    (12x40),   M.   W,   Clepham 65 

17.  La  Bretagne  (12x40),   F.  J.  Deardon 60 

18.  Les   Vagues    (16x40),  Ellis 65 

19.  Swimming  Girl   (17^x2934),  F.  J.   Deardon 60 

20.  Innocence    (193/^x31 1^),  F.  J.   Deardon 60 

21.  Tidal  Inlet   (27i4x27i^),  Ellis 75 

22.  Les  Cypres  (23^x28^),  E,  Coykendall 125 


260  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Harrison — Ccntinwed. 

23.  Venice  by  Moonlight    (20x30),  R.   Hyman $70 

24.  Pleine  Mer   (20x30),  E.   E.   Rice 55 

25.  The  Lagoon  (20x31^),  M.  W.  Clepham 70 

27.  Midnight   (21^x31  M),  Ellis 60 

29.  Alpes  du  Midi  (22i^x31^),  M.  E.  Sterne 90" 

30.  Olive  Trees  (23x31 3^),  M.  W.  Clepham 75 

31.  Sand  Prairie   (213^x3534),   Ellis ' 80 

34.  Lune  Calme  (233^x32^^),  M.  W.  Clepham 75 

35.  Solitude  (24x31^),  T.  Richards 55 

37.  Alpes  Maritimes    (22^x32),   Ellis 50 

38.  Le  Soir   (24x35 H),  C.  M.    Levett 55 

39.  Venise   Doree    (30x36) ,  Arlington  Galleries 65 

40.  Seaweed   Boy    (313^^x31^),   F.   J.    Deardon 120 

41.  Nuages-Ecume   (21  Hx32) ,   T.   Richards    55 

42.  Pecheurs  de  Nuit   (21^x32),  M.  W.  Clepham 55 

43.  Lune  Venetienne    (20x33^),    E.   Travis 115 

44.  Soleil   Couchant    (20^x36),  H.  A.   Pomeroy 85 

45.  La  Bretagne   (24x35>^),  Ellis 80 

46.  Eaux  Venetiennes    (27i^x39i/$),   J.    Buck 75 

47.  Sun  Foam   (23^x47),   M.  W.  Clepham 120 

48.  Moon  Clouds  (23^x47),  J.  Buck 75 

49.  La   Mer  Rose    (24x47^^) 55 

50.  Moonlight  at  Sea  (27^x47)^^) 125 

51.  Lune-Vagues   (29^x47^4),  H.  A.  Pomeroy 55 

Robbins,  Feb.   24,   1921. 

61.     Un   Naufrage    (30x55),    S.   A.    Powell •  230 

Harrison,   Birge,   N.  A.;  1854-         ,  American. 
Harrison,   April   19,    1921.      ' 

9.     Golden  Haze  (18x24),  E.  Coykendall 55 

12.  Fifth  Avenue  in  Winter  (30x18),  C.  W.  Bull 95 

28.  On  Lake  Cayuga   (24x30) ,  R.  Hyman 75 

32.  The  Edge  of  the  Park  (30x25),  T.  Richards 90 

33.  Moonlight    (25x30)     65 

36.  Sunburst  at  'Sea  (28x30),  R.  Hyman , 60 

Hart,   James    IVI.,    N.A.;    1828-1901,   American. 
F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

283.  In    the    Grove    (21x16),   Arlington    Galleries 130 

F.  A.  A.  R.,  Dec.   11,   1920. 

779.  Landscape  and  Cattle  (16x12),  Holland  Art  Galleries 50 

F.  A.  A.  R.,  April  9,  1921. 

857.     Landscape  and   Cattle    (17x22),    S.   Guardini 60 

F.  A.  A.  R.,   May  7,   1921. 

874.     Landscape  (14x10),  W.  G.  Downie 90 

Plaza,  Jan.  6,  1921. 

Landscape  and  Cattle    (20x36),  J.  J.   Wilson 72 

Robbins,   Feb,   24,    1921. 

13.  Landscape    and    Cattle    (20x16),    E.    H.    Manning 105 

Hartley,   IVIarsden;  1877-        ,  American. 
Hartley,    May   17,    1921. 

22.  Desertion,    Maine,    1909.      Daniel    Gallery 120 

23.  Landscape,   Maine,    1909.      Wertheimer 65 

27.  Still-Life,    1911.      Paul   Rosenfeld 100 

28.  Still-Life,    1911.      Florence    Cane 90 

30.  Impression,   Maine,   1908.     Lindaberg 75 

31.  The  Ice-Hole,  Maine,  1908.     De  Wald 55 

35.     Autumn,   Maine,   1908.     A.    Mayer 55 

43.     Pre-War,  Pageant,   1913.     Daniel   Gallery 100 

48a.  Autumn,  Lake  and  Hills,   1908.     O.  D.   Sterner 200 

48b.  Storm  Clouds,  Maine,  1908.     O.  D.  Sterner 200 

56.      Movement,   Bermuda.      A.   C.   Barnes 100 

58.  Still-Life,    1916.     A.Gallatin 50 

59.  Landscape,  New   Mexico,   1918.     A.   Rothbarte 50 

65.     Hondo  Canyon,  Valdez,  New  Mexico,  1918   (pastel),  A.  Einstein 60 

71.     New   Mexico,    1919    (pastel),   A.    Leniger 60 

87.  Painting   on  glass,   1917.     A.    Rothbaite 150 

88.  Painting  on  glass.      C.  'Stetheimer 55 

89.  Painting  on  glass,   1917.     A.   Rothbarte 60 

90.  Volupte,   1919.     A.   C.  Pellon 55 

91.  Atlantic  Window  in  the  New  England  Character,  1919.     Paul  Rosenfeld  65 

9Z.     Still-Life,    1919.      M.    Wertheimer SO 

95.     New   Mexico,    1919.     Daniel   Gallery 50 

98.  Virgin  of  Guadaloupe,  1919.     A  Stieglitz 95 

99.  Mountain  and  Cemetery,  New  Mexico,   1919.     A.   Stieglitz 85 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  261 

Hartley — Continued. 

109.     Landscape,  New  Mexico,  1919    (pastel),  W.  C.  Williams $105 

113.  Landscape,  New  Mexico,   1919    (pastel),    A.    Praskauer 50 

114.  Landscape,  New  Mexico,   1919   (pastel),  A.   Stieglitz 160 

Harvey,  George;  1782-1852,  American. 

Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,    1920. 

36.  Daniel   Webster    (5i4x4)    135 

Hasbrouck,    Du    Bois    Fenelon;    1860-         ,   American. 
F.   A.  A.   G.,   Nov.   26,    1920. 

262.  Winter    (34x45),    M.    Ready 125 

Hassam,  Childe,   N.  A.;  1859-         ,  American. 
A.   A.   A.,   Jan.    20,    1921. 

60.  A  Spring   Morning   (27j4x20),   E.   A.   Milch 1,075 

Clarke,   Jan    12,    1921. 

147.  Wood  Nymphs   (42x31  H),  Mr.  Zoch 200 

Haven,  Frank  De,   N.  A.;   1856-        ,  American. 
Smithers,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

40.  Old  Road  Near  Plymouth   (14x20),  J.  Heatherton 70 

Haverman,    Marghertha;    1720-1795,   Dutch. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

652.  Flowers    (283/^x23^),    Stephen  A.    Powell 150 

871.  Flowers   and    Butterflies    (283^x22^),    Mrs.    Band 55 

Hawker,    Edward;    1641-1721,   British. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

873.  Lady  Mary  Norden   (30x25),  George  Utassy 70 

Hawthorne,  Charles  Webster,   N.  A.;   1872-         ,  American. 
Smithers,  Jan.   21,   1921. 

96.  The  Helper   (25x20),  J.  C.  Ferguson 190 

Peckham,   March   29,    1921. 

80.     The    White    Shawl    (40x30),    Mr.    Crooker 130 

Heem,   Jan    De;   1650-c;rca   1720,   Flemish. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

690.  Flowers    (52x32),    Mrs.    James 175 

Heere,    Lucas    De;    1534-1584,    Flemish. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

866.  The  Countess  of  Pembroke    (27x21^),  H.   L.   Adams,  Jr 240 

Heffner,   Professor   Karl;   1849-        ,  German. 
A.  A.  A.,   Feb.  24,   1921. 

65.     Landscape   (33^x47),  William  F.   Laporte 170 

Heist,    Bartholomeus   Van'   Der;  1613(?)-1670,  Dutch,   (Attributed  to). 
A.  G.,   Jan.    14,   1921. 

46.  Portrait   of   a   Lady    (50x40),   H.   Edwards 600 

Henner,  Jean  Jacques;   1829-1905,  French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  3,   1921. 

25.      Lady   in   Red    (21^x15^),    Scott   and   Fowles 625 

Aron,   Feb.   24,    1921. 

7.     Reclining    Nymph    (10x16)     560 

Henry,   E.   L.;  1841-1919,  American. 
F.   A.  A.   R.,  Dec.    11,  1920. 

783.  The    Old   Homestead    (11x22),   H.    Schultheis 175 

tensch,  Willem   De;  Contemporary. 
French,  Jan.  21,   1921. 

34.  Travellers  on  the  Road  (141/^x18^4),  C.  Thompson 180 

HIghmore,   Joseph;    1620-1780,  British. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

684.  The  Hon.    Selina   Wollaston    (50x40),    I.    Rosenfield 300 

Hill,   J.;   XVIII  to   XIX  Century,   British. 
Henkel,    March   28,    1921. 

207.     His  Excellency,  James  Sullivan,  Esq 105 

Hitchcock,  George,  A.   N.  A.;  1850-1913,  American. 
A.   A.  A.,   Feb.    14,   1921. 

68.     The   Flight   into   Egypt    (44x66),    Willicomber 350 

Hobbema,   Meindert;   1638-1709,  Dutch. 
French,  Jan.  21,   1921. 

112.  Landscape  with  Mill   (9x11),  G.  Watson 800 

Goossens,  Feb.   24,   1921. 

46.     Landscape   with    Watermill    (18x24),    Fred    Pearson 1,000 

Hoeber,   Arthur,    N.  A.;    1854-1915,   American. 
Fifty-seventh   St.  Gal.,  Feb.  24,   1921. 

187.     Autumn    (30x40),    Franklin    Haines 60 


262  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Hoet,   Gerard;   1648-1733,  Dutch. 
French,    Tan.    21,    1921. 

49.  A   Roman   Festival    (20x25),   F.    Pierson $130 

Mogarth,   William;   1697-1764,   British. 
Wasserman,    Feb.   3,    1921. 

78.     Portrait   of    Mrs.    Lucy   Weston    (30r25H)    C.    S.    Baldwin 175 

Holsteyn,  Cornelius;    ?-1658,  Dutch. 
A.   G.,   Jan.    14,    1921. 

41.  Bacchanalia   (64-)4x59^),  H.  Temmer 1,300 

Homer,   Winslow,    N.    A.;    1836-1910,  American. 
Plaza,    Feb.    19,    1921. 

147.     Coast  of  Maine   (20x24) ,  P.  D.  Kerrison 65 

Hondecoeter,  Meichior  de;  1636-1695,  Dutch. 
Fricke,    Feb.    14,    1921. 

64.     Fighting    Cocks    (29x47) 310 

Hoppner,    John;    1758-1810,    British. 
Peckham,    March   29,   1921. 

70.  Portrait   of  a   Lady    (36x28^),   W.   E.    Segsworth 260 

Howe,  William    H.,    N.   A.;  1846-         ,  American, 
A.   G.,  April   5,    1921. 

29.     The    Bull    (18x24),    Rohlf 55 

Huang   Ch'uan;   940-1000,   Chinese   (Attributed  to). 
Yamanaka,   Feb.  4,    1921. 

436.     Plum    Tree    and    Birds    (64^4x67^^) 325 

Hubert-Drouais,    Francois;    1727-1775,   French. 
Charles,   Nov,   18,   1920. 

674.   Madame   de   Monchablon    (22^^x18),    I.    Rosenfield 475 

Hubner,    Carl;    1814-1879,    German. 
F.   A.  A.   R.,  Feb.   20,    1921. 

112.      Evening    Prayer    (41x52),    A,    Janssen 110 

Hudson,  Thomas;   1701-1799,  British. 
A.   G.,   Tan.   14,   1921. 

54.  Portrait  of  a  Man   (30x25),   Geo.  Mercer 140 

Huguet,   Victor   Pierre;    1835-1902,  French. 
A.  A  A..   Feb  24,    1921. 

Z7.     Desert  Encampment    (25^4x34),   D.   J.   R.   Ushikubo 570 

38.     Arabian  Scene   (25^x32),   S.  A.   Powell 475 

Hunt,  William    Morris;   1824-1879,  American. 
Smithers,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

41.  The  Amazon   (24x16),   C.  Thompson 225 

Huntington,    Daniel,    P.N. A.;    1816-1906,   American. 
A.   G.,   Nov.   26,    1920. 

88.   Portrait   of    Guy   Richards    (29x25),   Jas.    Miller 80 

121.  Justice    and    Peace    (80x64),    Chas.    Oberwalder's    Sons 50 

Huysum,  Jan  Van;  1682-1749,  Dutch. 
Cummings,   April   29,   1921. 

71.  Still  Life,    Flowers    (15x13)    75 

Ihlefeld,   Henry,  Contemporary. 
Smithers,  Jan.   20,   1921. 

43.  Girl   with   Bowl    (26x18),    Mrs.    Coler 60 

Indian  School;  Second  Half  XVI  Century. 
A.   G.,   May   14,   1921. 

450.  An  Enthroned  Sultan    (miniature)    (16^4x11) 200 

451.  Sultan    and   Retainers    (miniature)     (7x5) 200 

Indian  School;  XVII-XVIII  Century. 
A.   G.,   May   14,   1921. 

467.     Two  Dancers  (7^x41^)    75 

Indian  School;  XVIII  Century. 
A.   G.,   May   14,   1921. 

464.  Night    Scene    (miniature)    (8>^x6) 55 

Indian  School;  Early  XIX  Century. 

A.   G.,   May   14,   1921. 

465.  Portrait  of  a   Nabob    (miniature)    (6>2x4J4) 85 

Inman,   Henry;   1801-1846,  American. 

Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,    1920. 

38.   Portrait  of  a  Young  Lady   (2x2^) 235 

97.  William  Inman   (8x9J^)    100 

98.  Caroline  Inman  (8>4xll)    .  .  — ; 50 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  263 

Inness,  George,   N.  A.;  1825-1894,  American. 
Cummings,   April   29,   1921. 

58.     Autumn  Scene    (8x10)    $80 

61.     Italian   Landscape    (12x17)     230 

64.     Italian   View    (12x18)    230 

68.     Monte  Lucia,  Perugia   (14x19^) 500 

F.   A.  A.    R.,   Dec.    11,    1920. 

802.   Springtime    (30x20),    H.    Schultheis 150 

F.  A.  A.    R.,    March   19,    1921. 

504.     A     Sunshiny    Autumn     Landscape.       Mrs.     Walls 72 

Ferlov,  April   5.    1921 

30.     Forest  Pool    (14x20),   Metropolitan   Galleries 70 

Kerr,   Nov.   26,   1920. 

54.   Landscape     (14x12),    A.    D.    Snow 1,225 

Plaza,   Feb.    19,    1921. 

156.      Italian    Landscape     (12x16),    J.     S.     Read 50 

Inness,    George;    1825-1894,    American    (Attributed    to). 
F.  A.  A.  R.,  Feb.    10,   1921. 

116.     Golden  Autumn  (52x35),  F.  M.  T.  Lane 70 

Marks,    Feb.    17,    1921. 

Landscape    (19x13)),    Dunlap    425 

Isabey,   Louis  Gabriel    Eugene;  1803-1886,  French. 
A.   A.   A.,   Jan.    21,    1921. 

109.  The  Embarkation  of  William   of   Orange    (16§^x23>4),   Seaman   Agent,.         475 
F.   A.  A.    G.,    Nov.    27,    1920. 

293.  On   the   French   Coast    (16x30),    M.    Ready 90 

French,   Jan   21,    1921. 

147.  The  Departure  for  the  Hunt   (29x23M),   S.  S.  Laird 2,000 

Goossens,   Feb.  3,  1921. 

9.     Marine    with    Shipping    (13%x9.>^)    J.    F.    Albee 250 

Plaza,   Feb.    19,    1921. 

231.     Scene   in   Spain    (9x13),  Wm.    M.    K.    Olcott 55 

Israels,  Josef;   1824-1911,  Dutch. 
A.   A.   A.,   Jan.   21,    1921. 

167.  The  Shoal  Fisher  (78x55),  E.  F.  Albee 4,600 

Holmes,   Tan.   21.   1921. 

102.  At  the  Window  (9^x16)    (water  color),  F.  M.  Grossman 950 

Plaza,   Ian.   6,   1921. 

Sewing    (22x25),   Kelly  Art  Galleries 70 

Plaza,   June  4,    1921. 

376.     Peasant  Woman   (12x16),  W.  F.  Laporte 70 

Wasserman,   Feb.   3,   1921. 

12.     Peasant    Woman    (10^x7^)     S.    C.    Lampert 110 

Italian  School. 

F.  A.  A.   G.,   Nov.  26,   1920. 

104.  Four   copies   of    Rembrandt    (llx8J^    each),    Langeman 72 

Italian  School;  About  the  1st  Century  A.  D. 
Khayat,    May  20,    1921. 

197.  Cupid  (6x5),  J.  Mills   50 

198.  Landscape   (9x6J/^)    (wall  decoration  at    Boscoreale) 165 

Italian   School;    XV  Century. 
Lawrence,  Jan,  28,   1921. 

2,2,7.     Madonna  and   Saints    (37^x20),  C.   Stephens 1,150 

Orselli,  Feb.   16,    1921. 

268.     Madonna    and    Child    (26x18),    S.    Schepps 200 

Weissberger,   April   27.   1921. 

455.     Virgin  and  Child  and  St,  Francis   (7^x6j4),  Heckser 200 

Italian  School;  XVI  Century, 

Orselli,  Feb,   16,   1921, 

245,     Madonna    and    Child    (6i^x8H),    Mae    Murray 230 

247.      Holy  Family   (12x10),   M.  J.   Rougeron 130 

Weissberger,   April   27,   1921. 

478.     Virgin   and   Child   (18x12),   T.   Schilling 50 

Italian   School;   Early   XVII  Century. 
Bartlett,   March   7,   1921. 

16.     Madonna  and   Child    (17x13),  J.   F.    McCarthy 95 

Italian  School;  XVII  Century. 
Cattadori,   April   15,   1921. 

544.  Still  Life:    Fish    (4  ft.   10  in.  x  6  ft,   6  in.),  O.  Ozzoni 60 

545,  Still  Life:    Fish    (4  ft.  10  in.  x  6  ft.   6   in.)    O.   Ozzoni 60 

Orselli,  Feb.   16,    1921. 

249.     Madonna    and    Child    (12x9^),    A.    Sommers 150 


264  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Italian  School — Continued. 

Weissberger,   April   27,   1921. 

488.     Pair  of  Flower  Paintings   (23^x16^),  Wm.   C.  Jafifee $170 

515.     Christ  and  Saints  (cassone  front)    (19x59),  Richardson 70 

A.   A.  A.,   March  7,   1921. 

65.  Venus    and     Cupid     (45x58^),     R.     Glendenning 50 

66.  A  Gardener  and  a  Little  Maid   (45x58^/^),  R.  Glendenning.. 50 

Italian   School;    Early   XVIII    Century. 

Charles,  Nov.   18,    1920. 

881.  Flowers    (2)    (33^x33)    ((22^x23),   N.   J,   Deming 70 

Italian   School;   XVIII  Century. 
Bartlett,   March   7,    1921. 

53.     Belisarius    (28Hx32i4),  J.    F.    McCarthy 70 

Italian   School;  Late  XVIII   Century. 
Bartlett,   March   7,    1921. 

59.     Rural     Festivities     (49x37),     J.     F.     McCarthy 50 

Italian    School;    Sienese. 
Smith,   Feb.   3,   1921. 

21.     Adoration  of  the  Magi   (9x51),  A.   Rudert,  Agent 350 

Jacque,  Charles   Emile;   1813-1894,  French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Jan.  21,  1921. 

132.   Shepherdess  and   Sheep    (18x15),   Park,  Agent 625 

A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   3,    1921. 

38.      Sheep     Drinking     (13^x10^) 1,500 

Beck,  Feb  3,   1921. 

41.     Feeding    Time     (6x9^^)     D.    J.    R.    Ushikubo 525 

49.     A    Hillside    Pasture    (20^x185^) 450 

French,   Jan.   20,   1921. 

17.   Shepherdess  and  Sheep   (4^x6),  J.   C.   Willever $210 

74.  Entering  the  Pastures   (27x39^),  E.   F.  Albee 7,500 

126.  Landscape  and  Sheep   (Sj^xll),   Mrs.  G.   Stromberg 450 

Plaza,   June  4,    1921. 

382.     Barn   Interior    (12x16),    E.   Schwerdt. 75 

Williams,   Feb.  24,   1921. 

5.     Chickens    (4i^x6),    Satinover    Galleries 270 

Jacque,    H. 

F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  27,  1920. 

868.     Sheep  (9x6),  Dr.  La  Porte 110 

Jansen,  W.  F.;  Dutch. 

Charles,   Nov.   18,   1920. 

253.  Landscape    and    Cattle     (17x23),    Schultheis 51 

Janssens,  Abraham;  1575-1632,  Flemish. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   24,    1921. 

653.  Portrait  of  a  Burgomaster  (29x25^4),  Mrs.  M.  Adler 70 

Janssens,  Cornells;  Circa  1593-1664,  Dutch. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,   1921. 

52.     Jane,   Daughter   of   Henry    Skipwith    (26x201-0,    B.    R.    Kittredge 240 

Charles,    Nov,    18,    1921. 

659.  Lady    Dering    (30x26),    C.    B.    Wilson 120 

661.  Lady    Ashburnham,    Baroness    Cramond    (28x21J/^),    Austin,    Agent....         975 

679.  Portrait  of  a   Prelate    (36x27),   Mrs.    M.    Stewart 350 

Japanese    School;    Kamakura   period. 
Yamanaka,  Feb.  4,  1921. 

511.     Amida    Buddha     (44^x24i/^),    F.     Keally 50 

Jiminez,   Luis;   1845-         ,  Spanish. 
Holmes,    Tan.    20,    1921. 

62.  Farmyard   Duties    (24J/$xl73^),  W.   T.   Heniot 285 

Johnson,  Eastman;  1824-1906,  American. 
Plaza,  Jan.   6,    1921. 

The  Boy  Lincoln  (22x28),  J.  J.  Wilson 102 

Jongkind,  Johan    Barthold;   1822-1891,  Dutch. 
French,   Jan.  21,   1921. 

105.  Scene  at  Delft,  Holland  (13)4x18^),  A.  A.  Healy 1,100 

Goossens,    March    7,    1921. 

19.     Landscape    (15x205^),    R.    Vitole 55 

Jordaens,  Jacob;  1593-1678,  Flemish. 
A.    G.,   Jan.    14,    1921.     , 

38.  Bacchus   with    Faun    (52^x40%),   J-   Temmer 1,300 

Clarke,  Jan.    12,   1921. 

141.   Philosopher,    Styled   Head   of   Thinker    (22x27),    Brittain 90 

Jungheim,   Carl;   1803-1886,  German. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,  Feb.   10,  1921. 

115.     Alpine    Scene     (46x68),    A.    Janssen 205 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  265 

Jurres,  Johannes  Henricus;  1875-        ,  Dutch. 
Peckham,    March  29,    1921. 

3.     Asking    Alms    (8^x7^),    Kraushaar    Galleries $60 

28.     Horseman    and     Attendants     (14x18),     Kraushaar     Galleries 120 

43.     Spanish    Beggars    (21xl7>^),    A.    A.    Boom 150 

59.     Breaking     Camp     (20x3 1J4),     Kraushaar     Galleries 390 

n.     The     Prodigal     Son     (30^x22M), Kraushaar     Galleries 300 

81.     The    Attack    (29j^x44),    W.    E.    Segsworth 450 

93.  Peter    and     the     Cripple     (47x35^) 210 

94.  The    Halt     (403^x58),     Kraushaar     Galleries 650 

95.  Don    Quixote    and    Sancho    Panza  After    the    Battle    (40x29),    Kraushaar 

Galleries      225 

Kaemmerer,  F.  H.;  Contemporary,  French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   14,   1921. 

16.     Knitting   (22xl6J^),  R.  Ito 65 

Clarke,  Jan.    12,   1921. 

Zl.  Sleigh   Ride    (31x22),    H.   D.    G.    Rohlphs 90 

F.  A.  A.    R.,   May   7,    1921. 

865.     The  Fisherwoman    (15x24),   J.  I.   Downey 85 

Kaltenmoser,  Max;   1842-1887,  German. 
Smith   &   Jafife,    May   21,    1921. 

1356.     The   Visitors    70 

Keith,  William;  1839-1911,  American. 
Beck,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

62.     Landscape:  The  Passing  Storm    (18x26)    C.   J.  Wrightsman 475 

Plaza,  June  4,   1921. 

321.  Wooded  Landscape   (19x15),  W.  V.  Goldie 55 

Kever,  Jacobus  Simon  Hendrik;  1854-         ,  Dutch. 

Peckham,   March   29,    1921. 

58.     Mother    and    Child    (30^x22^4),    Kraushaar    Galleries 375 

Kilburne,   G.   G.;   Contemporary,  British. 
A.  A.  A.,   Feb.   14,   1921. 

9.     Afternoon  Tea  (16x12),  C.  E.  Atwood 160 

Knaus,   Ludwig;   1829-1910,  German. 
A.  G.,  Jan.   14,   1921. 

4.  A   Poodle    Dog    (9xl2i^),    Seaman,    Agent 160 

53.  Roses  and  Thorns  (31x23),  Miss  M.  H.  Dodge 1,000 

Kneller,  Sir  Godfrey;  1646-1723,  British. 
A.   G.,  Jan.   14,   1921. 

S3.  Portrait  of  a  Young  Lady   (29x24^),  Miss  I.  Taylor 100 

58.  Portrait  of  a  Lady   (29x24H),  Miss  I.  Taylor 150 

Ramsay,    March   9,    1921. 

322.  Portrait    of    Lord    Peterborough    (30x25),    A.    McCrea 120 

Knight,   Daniel   Ridgway;  1845-        ,  American. 

Holmes,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

83.  French  Shepherdess   (41x32),  E.  F.  Albee 1,700 

Roebling,  Jan.  21,   1921. 

154.  Along  the  River    (32x26),   Arlington   Galleries 725 

Kobell,  Ferdinand;  1740-1822,  Austrian. 
A.   G.,   Jan.    14,    1921. 

10.   Companion  Landscapes   (14x17) 50 

Koopman,    Augustus;    Contemporary,    American. 
Peckham,   March   29,    1921. 

71.     Hoisting     (26^x32^),     F.    Concklin,    Jr 110 

Korean   School;  XII   Century. 
Yamanaka,   Feb.   4.    1921. 

423.  Buddha    (50x19),    Miss    M.    Lane 90 

Korean    School;   XIII    Century. 

Yamanaka,   Feb.  4,    1921. 

424.  Figure    of    Hattara    Sonja    (25^x17),    Mr.    Ormond 85 

Korean   School;   XV  Century. 

Yamanaka,   Feb.  4,    1921. 

461.     Figures     (28^x33^),     L.     A.     Oliver 55 

464.  Still  Life   (50^x18^),  Mrs.  J.  E.  Spingarn 50 

465.  Still    Life    (50^x18^) 50 

Korean   School;  Ri  Dynasty. 

Yamanaka,   Feb.  4,    1921. 

466.  Portrait   of   the    Monk   Enkaku-Kokushi    (45x34),   O.    F.    Roberts 55 

Kost,  F.  W.,   N.  A.;  1861-         ,  American. 

Cummings,   April   29,    1921. 

22.     Bleak  Morning  (13x26)    90 

35.     Evening  Landscape   (22x29)    120 


266  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Kronbepger;  German. 

F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  26,   1920. 

95.  Visiting    Grandmother     (35x26),     Schultheis $51 

Kruseman  Van  Elten,  Hendrik,  N.A.;  1829-1904,  American. 

Clarke,   Jan.    12,    1921. 

62.  Landscape    (2.6x3.2),   L.   S.   Hedrea 100 

La   Farge,  John;   1835-1910,  American. 
Freeman    Gal.,    Phila.,    Feb.    26,    1921. 

768.     Mother  and  Child   (14x12) 140 

Peckham,   March  29,    1921. 

10.     The  Pied   Piper  of  Hamelintown    (water  color)    (8>^x6^),  A.   Babcock  70 

79.     Le  Jet  d'Eau   (42x21  H),  A.   F.    Egner 200 

Lagrenee,   Francois;   1724-1805,  French. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

655.  Louis  XVI    (27x23^),   T.   L.   Wetherhill 140 

Landseer,    Sir   Edwin,    R.   A.;    1802-1873,   British. 
Smith,  Feb.  3,  1921. 

87.     Boy    and    Dogs    (50x59^)    Metropolitan   Galleries 275 

Lancret,    Nicholas;   1690-1743,  French. 
French,   Jan.    20,    1921. 

64.  Pastoral    (19x25j4),    Mrs.    Mason 1,075 

Largilliere,   Nicolas  De;  1656-1746,  French. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

672.  Madame  de  la   Suze    (34x26M),   H.   L.  Adams,  Jr 500 

673.  Mademoiselle  de  Scudery   (34x2634),  Louis  Ralston 525 

680.  Le  Due  de  Nivernas    (48J^x41^),   George  L.   Brandon 425 

F.  A.  A.  R.,   March    18,    1921. 

316.     Portrait  of  Duchess  de  Grammont.     Van   B.   Post 90 

Laugee,  George;   1843-        ,  French. 
F.  A.  A.  R..  April  9,  1921. 

847.     At    Rest    (18x15),    Weitemeyer    Bros 72 

853.     Potato    Gatherers    (26x32),    S.    Guardini 150 

Lawrence,   Sir  Thomas,   R.   A.;   1769-1830,  British. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   24,   1921. 

58.     Portrait    of    Captain    Thomas    Drake    (36x28),    Mrs.    A.    S.    Jarvis 350 

Smith,  Feb.  3,  1921. 

71.     Portrait  of   Master   Peters    (circular  diameter   18)    R.   A.   Reader 1,350 

90.     "Charity":    The    Misses    Newdigate    of    Surrey     (84x58^) 3.900 

Lawson,    Ernest,   N.  A.;   1873-         ,  American. 
A.  G.,  April  5,   1921. 

58.     The   Old   Fashioned   Circus    (25x30),  F.   K.    M.   Rehn 165 

Leader,  Sir  Benjamin  Williams,  R.  A.;  1831-        ,  British. 
Fricke,    Feb.    14,    1921. 

50.  Streatly-on-Thames   (23x37^),  A.  Tooth  &  Son 105 

Leigh,   W.    R.;    1866-         ,  American. 

Fifty-seventh    St.    Gal,    Feb.    24,    1921. 

263a.   Painting.      Babcock    Galleries    105 

Leiy,  Sir  Peter;   1610-1680,  British. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

657.   Mary   Harvey,    Lady    Dering    (30x25),    H.    L.    Adams,    Jr 90 

662.  Lady    Stroude   of    Chipstead    (30x25),    A.    J.    Kobler 525 

683.   Portrait  of  Anne   Dering   (50x41),   Warren    Smadbeck 525 

685.  Portrait  of    Mr.    Southwell    (49^^x40),   H.   L.   Adams,  Jr 500 

688.  Lady    Lecon     (493^x37^),    A.    J.     Kobler 100 

Clarke,   Jan.    12,    1921. 

40.  Nell   Gwynn    (48^x391^)    375 

Fifty-seventh    St.    Gal.,    Feb.    24,    1921. 

288.     Portrait   Col.    Henry   Heylyn    (30^x24),  A.   F.   De   Forest 55 

French,  Jan.   20,   1921. 

76.  Portrait  of   Lord  Butler    (30x25),   Seaman,  Agent 400 

Goossens,    Feb.   24,    1921. 

53.     Portrait    of    a    Lady    (28i^x23^),    M.    B.    Bernstein 110 

LeIy,   School  of. 

Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

887.  La  Belle  Stuart  (50x39 J^),  Lans  Co 75 

Le   Moyne,  Francois;  1688-1737,  French. 
French,   Jan.    20,    1921. 

51.  Pastoral  (22x29J/^),  E.  F.  Albee , 250 

Lenbach,  Franz;   1836-1904,  German. 

Peckham,   March  29,   1921. 

96.  Portrait  of   Frau   Yost    (4234x32),   Baumeister 465 

97.  Portrait    of    Lady    Bateman    (44^4x32),    Hans    Henricks 200 

98.  Portrait  of  Bjornsterne   Bjornson    (29^x25),   J.    C.   Heldring 550 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  267 

Lepine,    S.;    1836-1892,    French. 
Burgess,   Feb.  3,    1921. 

28.     Summer   Mocn    (l5x21->4)    M.    Knoedler  &   Co $325 

Le  Prince,  Jean   Baptiste;  1733-1781,  French. 
French,    Tan.    20,    1921. 

9.   Reading  the  Heavens  (8x5f^),  L.  Biddle 100 

123.  The  Young  Musician   i22x\8}i) ,  L.  A.  Biddle 500 

Le    Richer;    XVIII    Century,    French. 
Charles,  Nov.    18,   1920. 

888.   Still   Life:    "Flowers"    (32^x51^),    J.   Harris 110 

Lhermitte,    Leon    Augustin;    1844-        ,    French. 
Beck,   Feb.   3,   1921. 

57.     The    Gleaners    (20i^x383^) 9,400 

French,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

71.  Returning  from  the  Fields  (22xl7j4),  P.  T.  Higgs 2,150 

104.  The  Faggot  Gatherers    (HJ^xie),   Findlay   Galleries 475 

Lier,  Adolf;   1826-1882,  German. 
Smith  &  Jaffe,  May  20,   1921. 

1201.     Moonlight,   Coast    Scene    155 

1233.     Landscape    100 

Lievens,  Jan;  1607-1674,  Dutch. 
A.   G.,  Jan.    14,   1921. 

25.  Portrait  of  a  Burgher  of  Amsterdam  (Hj^xlOJ^),  F.  A.  Muschenheim.  .      1,400 
Lima,  Adelaide;   Contemporary. 
Peckham,  March  29,   1921. 

83.     Young    Woman    Reading    (31i^x37i^),    Mr.    Crocker 55 

Lingelbach,   Johannes;   1625-1687,  Dutch. 
Charles,  Nov.  20,   1920. 

691.  The  Fish   Market,   Antwerp    (44x72),   H.    L.    Adams,   Jr 400 

Lin    Liang;    active   circa   1460,    Chinese. 
Yamanaka,   Feb.   4,    1921. 

493.     Peacocks     and     Trees     (61^2x36) 310 

Loeb,    Louis,    N.   A.;   1866-1909,  American. 
Smithers,   Jan.   21,    1921. 

95.  Jessica    (26^xl9j4),  J.   C.   Ferguson 250 

166.  Joyous  Life    (32x62),  J.   C.   Leslie 1,150 

Lorenzetti,  Pietro;  12?-1348,  Sienese. 
Cattadori,   April   16,   1921. 

679.  Virgin  and  Child   (36x29),  J.   Satinover 1,000 

Loten,  Jan;    1618-1680,   Dutch. 
Osterreith,    Feb.    24,    1921. 

49.  Landscape   and    Figures    (34x2734),    Marie    Glynn 250 

Loutherbourg,   Philippe   Jacque   de;    1740-1812,  French. 

Lehne,   April    1,    1921. 

910.     Battle  of  Camperdown,  October  11,   1797    (35x48),  'S.   G.   Mortimer 225 

Louyot,    Edmond;    Contemporary,    French. 
A.  A.  A.,  March  7,   1921. 

47.     Retour  de   la   Plage    (23^x31^),    F.   A.   Lawlor 80 

50.  Marine     (24x31),     Rita    Louyot 60 

55.     Winter    Landscape    (23^x31^),    R-    Louyot 55 

Lu-Chi;   Ming,    Chinese    (Attributed   to). 
Yamanaka,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

481.     Ducks     (463/4x22^),    K.    Oshima 60 

Lu    Sungnien;   circa    1190-         ,    Chinese. 
Yamanaka,   Feb.  4,    1921. 

437.     Figures    in    Mountainous    Landscape    (82^x43j4),    J-    L.    Gilchrist 110 

IVIadrazo,  Ralmundo  de;   1841-1920,  Spanish. 
A.  A.  A.,   Feb.    14,    1921. 

17.  Preparing  Tea    (23^x17^),  Calo  Art  Galleries 55 

A.   G.,  April  5,   1921. 

18.  The  Galant   (19x26),  Calo 62 

Roebling.   Jan.    21,    1921. 

156.  The  Swing   (39^x28),   Mrs.  Coler 175 

Maella,   Mariano  Salvador;  1739-1819,  Spanish. 
Ruiz,  May  21,   1921. 

879.     Portrait.     J.   Delmar   55 

Malbone,   Edward  Green;   1777-1807,  American. 
Rosenthal,  Dec.   14,   1920. 

40.  Mrs.  Mary  D.   Harris  (354x2>4) 550 

41.  Mrs.   Grimke   (2^x2)    325 

102.  Portrait  of  Himself  (10x13)    200 


268  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

ManeschI,  Jacopo. 

F.  A.  A.   G.,   Nov.   26,    1920. 

91.  Piazza  St.   Marks,  Venice   (24x35),  Weidemeyer $60 

Map,   C;   1657-1724,  German. 
A.  G.,  Jan.   14,   1921. 

13.  Bambino  on  the  Cross   (20^^x2554) 80 

Marchette,   L. 

Freeman   Gal.,   Phila.,    Feb.   26,    1921. 

787.     Spanish     Soldier    at    Arms     (14x11) 50 

Marcke,   Emile   Van;    1827-1890,  French. 
F.  A.  A.   G.,  Nov.  2,   1920. 

299.  French   Farm   (13x16),   E.   Gruppe 85 

Taft,   Feb  3,    1921. 

67.     After  the  Shower   (38^x583^)    Holland   Galleries 1,700 

Marias,  A.;  Dutch. 

Clarke,  Jan.   12,   1921. 

46.  Landscape  with  Cattle  at  Pool  (31x26),  S.  A.  Powel 180 

Mariees,  Georges    Des;  1697-1776,  French. 
Cattadori,  April   15,   1921. 

537.     Portrait  of  a  Young  Prince   (32^x25^),  McCarthy 85 

Marieschl,    Jacopo;    1711-1794,    Venetian. 
Bartlett,   March   7,   1921. 

36.     The   Doge's   Palace    (18x285^),   J.   F.    McCarthy 80 

Charles,   Nov.    18,    1920. 

668.  St.   Marks  Place,  Venice   (46^x58),   Rosenfield 500 

669.  The  Bridge  of   Sighs,  Venice   (46j^x58),   I.   Rosenfield 475 

Martin,  Henri  Jean  Guillaume;  Contemporary,  French. 

Smithers,  Jan.   20,    1921. 

65.  Noonday  Rest   (22x37^),  C.  W.  Kraushaar 140 

Martin,  Homer  D.,  N.  A.;  1836-1897,  American. 
Ferlov,   April   5,    1921. 

26.     Autumn  in  the  Catskills   (6x10),  F.  F.  Sherman 105 

Martinez,  Del   Mazo;  1610-1687  Spanish. 
Weissberger,  April   27,    1921. 

Don  Carlos  Balthasar   (22x18) ,  Richardson 80 

Mauve,  Anton,  1838-1888,  Dutch. 
A.  A.  A.,  Jan.  21,   1921. 

142,  Cows  Returning  to  the  Farm   (22j^xl7j4),  A.  A.  Healy 3,500 

A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,   1921. 

11.     Feeding    Time     (13x18),     Mrs.     Johnson 240 

F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

301.  Sheep   in   Pasture    (14x22),   Lounes 125 

Max  Gabriel  Cornelius;  1840-        ,  German. 
Beck,   Feb.    3,    1921. 

24.     "Forgive"    (13J^xll)    P.  Van  Veen 175 

McEntee,  Jervis;   1828-1891,  American. 
Plaza,  Nov.  5,  1920. 

Landscape.     Dr.  J.   Dorr 65 

McCord,  George  H.,  A.  N.  A.;   1840-1909,  American. 
A.   G.,   April   5,    1921. 

24.     Coast    Scene    (22x27),    Calo 57 

F.  A.  A.   G.,   Nov.   27,    1920. 

188.  Autumn    Landscape     (18x28),    Ellsworth 125 

F.  A.  A.  R.,  April  9,   1921. 

841.     Sunset,  Lake  George  (19x31),  H.  D.  G.   Rohlfs 52 

Fifty-seventh    St.    Gal.,    May    5,    1921. 

35.     Dortrecht  Harbor.     Babcock  Galleries 100 

Plaza,  Jan.   6,    1921. 

Fishing  Village   (12x12),  J.  J.  Wilson 57 

Landscape  (14x22),  J.  R.  Bremner 62 

Meissonier,  Jean   Louis  Ernest;   1815-1891,  French. 
A.   A.  A.,  Jan.   20,    1921. 

18.  Sketch    (43/^x9^),    Seaman,  Agent 85 

A.   G.,   Nov.  26,   1920. 

4.  An    Officer    (42x32),    F.    C.    Mortimer SO 

Mesdag,   Hendrik  Willem;   1831-1915,  Dutch. 
F.  A.  A.   R.,   March   19,   1921. 

494,     Starting  Out.     Weitemeyer   Bros 60 

Mesgrigny,   F.;  Contemporary,  French. 
A.  A.   A.,    Feb.   17,    1921. 

87,     Houseboats  on  the  River  (14^x22),  A.  Zeeber 50 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  269 

Mettling,    Louis;    1847-1904,    German. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,   1921. 

8.     Relics  of  the   Past    (13x9),   J.    C.   Willever $65 

Smithers,    March    19,    1921. 

98.  Polishing  the  Metals  (21xl5j4),  G.  Utassi 175 

Metsu,  Gabriel;  1630-1667,  Dutch. 
French,    Ian.    21,    1921. 

113.  The  Musician  (7i^x6M),  Parke  Agent 350 

Meyer,  Otto;   1825-         ,  German. 

Smith  &  Jaffe,   May  21,   1921. 

1354.     Italian  Girl  with  Fruit 90 

Meyeriieim,  WilPielm  Alexander;  1814-1882,  German. 
Roebling,  Jan.   20,    1921. 

11.  At  the  Watering  Trough   (26J^x38>4),  Mrs.   Coler 135 

78.  The  Return  of  the  Fisherman  (26^x38^),   Seaman,  Agent 150 

Meyerheim,    Paul;    Contemporary,    German. 
Peckham,    March    28,    1921. 

84.     At    the    Seaside     (30x39),    A.     Mayer 70 

Meyer  Von   Bremen,  Johann   Georg;   1813-1886,  German. 
Kerr.    Nov.    26,    1920. 

26.  Mother  and   Child    (8x6J^),    Hans    Mueller 175 

Michel,   Georges;   1763-1843,  French. 
Clarke,    Jan.    12,    1921. 

149.  Italian   Landscape,    Coming   Storm    (33^^x39^/2) 55 

MIgnard,  Nicholas;  French. 

Clarke,    lau.    12,    1921. 

35.   Maria  Theresa,  Wife  of  Louis  XIV   (35^x26) 500 

Mignard,   Pierre;   1612-1695,   French. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

656.  Queen   Maria  Theresa   of   France    (27x23^),    H.    L.   Adams,   Jr 120 

Clarke,   Jan.    12,    1921. 

38.  Anne  of  Austria,  Wife  of   Louis  XIII    (39x31),   Mrs.  J.  Welch 375 

Fifty-seventh   St.   Gal.,   Feb.   24,   1921. 

284.     Portrait  of  a  Court  Beauty   (32x24),   Metropolitan   Galleries 60 

Plaza,    Oct.    23,    1920. 

The  Duchess  de   Montpensier,  Mrs.   D.  H.   Carstairs 190 

Miller,  Alfred   J.;   1810-1874,  American. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,  Feb.    10,  1921 

108.     Buffalo   Hunting    (30x41),   J.   R.   Collins 52 

Miller,    A.    T.;    1860-1913,    American. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,  Feb.    10,  1921 

124a.  Algerian    Fountain     (35x41),    Voorhees 100 

Minor,   Robert  C,    N.   A.;   1840-1904,  American. 
Plaza,   Feb.   19,    1921. 

158.     In  Early  June    (14x20),    S.    Sprague 65 

Molenaer,  Jan   Miense;  1610(?)-1668,  Dutch. 
French,    Jan.    21,    1921. 

114.  Cajolery  (14j4xl2M),  F.  Donahue 175 

Goossens,   Feb.   3,   1921. 

14.      Motherly    Love    (14x11),    Mr.    Klein 100 

Monchablon,   Ferdinand  Jan;  1855-1903,  French. 
Roebling,   Jan.    20,    1921. 

70.  Le   Vallon  de   I'Apance  a  Chatillon    (Vosges)    (21x29),    H.    Schultheis..         380 
Monaco,    Lorenzo;    active    1370-1425,    Florentine    (Attributed    to). 
A.   G.,   Feb.    18,    1921. 

103.      Madonna    and    Child    with    Angels    and    Saints    (26  2/5x16),    Dr.    C.    G. 

Fenwick    325 

Monnoyer,    Jean    Baptiste;    1634-1699,    French. 
Bartlett,    March    7,    1921. 

40.     Italian   Garden  with   Flowers    (28^x38^),   J.   F.    McCarthy 55 

Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

665.   Flowers     (3834x47^),    E.    F.    Abbee 350 

Cummings,  April  28,   1921. 

11.     Fruits,    Flowers,   Rabbits    (56x60) 120 

Pares,    Feb.    5.    1921. 

157.     Over  Hantle  Panneau   (6  ft.  x  3   ft.  6  in.),  Geo.  Mercer,  Jr 300 

150.  Large    Side    Panneau:    Flower    Urn    with   Architectural    Ground    (9    ft. 

X   5    ft.),    Clapp   &    Graham.. 1,050 

151.  Large    Side    Panneau:    Flower    Urn    with    Architectural    Ground    (9    ft. 

X  5  ft.    1  in.),  Clapp  &  Graham 1,050 

152.  Large    Centre    Panneau:    Flower   Urn   on   Balustrade    (9    ft.    x    5j'^    ft), 

Mme.    Mercey 1 ,000 


270  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Monnoyer^ — Cc-nfinncd. 

153.  Window  Panneau   (6  ft.  x  3  x  2  ft.  8  in.),  G.  Mercer,  Jr $350 

154.  Window   Panneau    (companion    to    153),    G.    Mercer,    Jr 350 

155.  Over  Door  Panneau   (3  ft.  x  5   ft.),   G.  E.   Smith 300 

156.  Over  Door  Panneau.     G.  E.   Smith 300 

157.  Over  Mantel  Panneau   (5   ft.  x  3  ft.   6),  George  Mercer 300 

Monticelli,  Adoipe;    1824-1886,    French. 

A.   A.  A.,   Feb.    24,    1921. 

24.     The    Farmyard    (15i^x24),    C.    W.    Kraushaar 425 

Mora,  F.  Luis;   N.  A.;   1874-         ,  American. 
Cummings,   April   29,   1921. 

19.  The  Mantillas  (18x12)    65 

Moran,    Edward;    1829-1901,   American. 
A.   G.,    Nov.  26,    1920. 

98.  Crabbing    (21x36),    Metropolitan    Galleries 65 

Moran,  Thomas,    N.A.;   1837-         ,  American. 
Clarke,    Jan.    12,    1921. 

133.  Inchhead    (21^xl7j^)    62 

Moreau,  Adrien;  1843-1906,  French. 
Hutchinson,   Feb.   14,   1921. 

2>6.     Toilet   of  the   Bride    (20x253^) 110 

43.     Coming  from  the  Christening  (24x32) 105 

Moreau,  Charles;  1830-         ,  French. 
Holmes,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

69.  The  Noonday  Meal  (23 J^x28M),  J-  H.  Brunell 500 

Peckham,   March  29,    1921. 

41.     The  Puzzled    Grandson    (19^x15^),   J.    C.   Willever 80 

Moreelse,    Paulus;    1571-1638,   Dutch. 
Peckham,   March  29,   1921. 

56.     A   Prince  of   Nassau    (25^4x1854),   B.   R.    Kittredge 180 

Morse,   Samuel    F.   B.;   1791-1872,  American. 
F.   A.  A.    R.,   Feb.    10,    1921. 

137.     Portrait   of    the   Artist    and    Daughter.     A.    F.    De    Forest 85 

Rosenthal,    Dec.    14,    1920. 

104.  Portrait  of  Himself  (9j^xllJ^)    380 

Mosler,    Henry;    1841-1919,   American. 
F.   A.   A.    G.,   Nov.   27,    1920. 

190.  Girl    Reading    (17x12),    Mo<=ler 55 

232.  Coming   from   the   Well    (11x14),    McDonough 70 

Moucheron,   Isaac;   1670-1744,  Dutch. 
Parker,   Nov.  9,   1920. 

77.  Architectural    Landscape    (11^x14^)     (water    color) 160 

Munsch,   Josef;   1832-1896,   German, 
Smith  &   Taffee,   May  20,   1921. 

1232.     the  Presentation   60 

Munger,  Gilbert;  1837-1903,  American. 
A.  A.  A.,   Feb.   14,   1921. 

55.     Marine   (24x42),  H.  Edge 55 

Munkacsy,    Mihaly   De;    1844-1900,   Hungarian,  and   De   Paal. 
A.  A.  A.,   Feb.   14,   1921. 

757.     After     the     Rain      (46x32) 330 

Murillo,   Bartolome   Esteban;   1618-1682,   Spanish. 
Smith,   Feb.   3,   1921. 

20.  The    Little    Shepherd     (223/^x27) 300 

Murphy,  J.   F.;  1853-1921,  American. 

F.  A.   A.   R.,    Dec.    11,    1920. 

780.  Landscape   (12x18),   H.   Schultheis 430 

Nuzzi,   Mario;  1603-1673,  Italian. 

Charles,  Nov.   18,   1920. 

663.  Flowers    (53x39),   Lenyman    and    Morant 850 

664.  Flowers    (53x39) ,    Lenyman    and    Morant 850 

Mytens,  Daniel;  1590-1656,  Dutch. 

Smith,  Feb.   3,   1921. 

91.     Sir  William  Ruggeley   (79x48),  R.  A.  Reader 275 

Nattier,  Jean    Marc;   1685-1766,  French. 
Clarke,    Jan.    12,    1921. 

32.  Marie  Lesczynski,  Wife  of  Louis  XV '       500 

Nattier,   Jean    Marc;    1685-1766,   French   School   of. 
F.    A.   A.    G.,    Nov.   27,    1920. 

277.  Portrait    of   a    Lady    (31x26),    Henderson 110 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  271 

Neagle,  John;  1799-1865,  American. 
Henkel,   April    12,    1921. 

149a.   Portrait  of  W.  B.  Wetherill.     Red $425 

149b.  Portrait  of  Mrs.  W.    B.   Wetherill.      Red 350 

149c.   Portrait  of   Mrs.   W.    B.   Wetherill.      Red 350 

Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,    1920. 

105.  George  Catlin   (5x6)    52 

Neapolitan    School;    XVII    Century. 
Bartlett,   March   7,   1921. 

54.     Seaport    (29^^x44) ,    J.    F.    McCarthy 60 

Neapolitan  School;  XVIII  Century. 
Weissberger,  April  27,   1921. 

505.     Four   Seasons    (4  panels)    (39x43),  Heckser 400 

Peale,   Charles   Wilson;    1741-1827,  American. 
Bartlett,   March   7,   1921. 

51.  General    Joseph    Reed    (30^4x25^),    Mrs.     Sears    Ruce 725 

Neer,  Aert  Van  der;  1603  or  4-1677,  Dutch. 

Osterreith,   Feb.   24,   1921. 

47.     The    Frozen    Canal    (19^x32^) 350 

Neer,   Eglon    Hendrik  Van   Der;  1643-1703,  Dutch. 
FrencTi,   Jan.    28,    1921. 

21.  The  Concert   (16x1254),  R.  H.  Wallach 100 

Nefs,  Peter  Senior;  circa  1577-1660,  Flemish. 
French,    Tan.    20,    1921. 

115.  Cathedral   Interior    (13^x17),   Bernet,   Agent 115 

Netscher,    Constantine;    1670-1722,   Dutch. 
Boossens,   Feb.   24,    1921. 

20.     Soap    Bubbles    (19x15^^),    R.    M.    Wallach 100 

Neuhuys,  Albert;   1844-1914,  Dutch. 
Holmes.    Jan.    21,    1921. 

110.  Mother   and   Children,   Holland    (I7^x21i/^),    R.    Anderson 1,050 

Neuville,  Alphonse  Marie  De;  1836-1885,  French. 
Holmes,    Tan.    21,    1921. 

88.  A  French  Cavalryman   (18x15^),  Bernet,  Agent 350 

NIcol,    Erskine,    R.S.A.,   A.R.A.;   1825-1904,  British. 
Bostwick,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

33.  "Kept  in"   (26^x20i^),  Seaman,   Agent 510 

45.  On  the  Lookout    (20x15),   Mrs.   Coler 150 

85.  A    Deputation    (41x56),    C.    W.    Kraushaar 500 

Noel,  Achille  Jules;   1815-1881,  French. 
F.  A.  A.  R..  May  7,  1921. 

880.     Coaching  Party    (18x28) ,   Weitemeyer 75 

Norton,  William   E.;   1843-         ,  American. 
Cummings,    April    29,    1921. 

15.     Outward  Bound    (12x16)    51 

50.     Marine   (18x22)    82 

Ochtman,   Leonard,   N.  A.;  1854-         ,  American. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.    14,   1921. 

13.     Moonlight    Landscape    (16x22),    Hyman 55 

Cummings,   April    29,    1921. 

52.  Autumn    Sunset    (13x16)    90 

Offermans,  Tony;  1845-1911,  Dutch. 

Rcebling,    Jan.    20,    1921. 

56.  The  Carpenter   (24^^x16),   Findlay  Galleries 110 

Opie,    John,    R.    A.;    1761-1807,   English. 
A.   A.   A.,   Feb.   24,    1921. 

18.  Portrait    of    Himself     (lSxl434),    B.    Malone 60 

19.  The    Fortune    Teller    (18x143/0,    J.    Aron 80 

Peckham,    March   29,    1921. 

62.     Portrait   of    Miss    Montague    (30x25),    Mr.    Brooks 275 

88.      Lady   Caroline   Prince    (40x29i^),    Mr.   Firth 610 

Ostade,  Adriaen  Van;  1610-1685,  Dutch. 
French,    Jan.    20,    1921. 

19.  A  Game  of  Cards   (14x12]^)    Rudert,  Agent • 450 

Wasserman,    Feb.   3,    1921. 

15.     An    Old    Toper    (9^x7i.O,    Scott    &    Fowles 400 

Outin,    Pierre;    1840-1899,   French. 
F.   A.   A.   G.,    Nov.   29,    1920. 

286.  A    Modern   Cinderella    (32x23),    McDonough 92 

Palmezzano,   Niccolo   Da;  early  XVI  Centurv,  Italian. 
A.    G.,    Tan.    28,    1921. 

674.  the   Virgin  with  Saints    (46j4x32),  Baer 3,000 


272  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Pannlnl,  Giovanni  Paolo;  1695-1768,  Italian. 
Clarke,  Jan.   12,    1921. 

137.  Roman  Fantasy  (3.5x2.6),  Brittain   $110 

Orselli,  Feb.   16,   1921. 

270.     Ruins    (38x54),   M.  J.  Rougeron 250 

Weissberger,   April   27,    1921. 

511.     Architectural  Ruins   (37x52J^),  J.  Z.  Noorian 250 

Pannini,   Sciiool   of;  ZVIII    Century,   Italian. 
A.   G.,  Jan.   14,   1921. 

39.  Architectural  Ruins    (27^x50),   Chas.    Morgan 750 

Cattadori,   April   15,   1921. 

540.  Architectural   Ruins  at  'Seaports   (2  panels,  55x51),  Pope 1,000 

541.  Architectural  Ruins  (2  panels,  65x51  each),  Mrs.  F.  Raineri 520 

Charles,   Nov.    18,    1920. 

876.  Architectural    Ruins    (2)     (25x44^^) 100 

Parmentier,    James;    1658-1730,    British. 
Charles,   Nov.    18,    1920. 

686.  Queen  Mary,  Consort  of  William  of  Orange   (50x39^),  A.  J.   Kobler.  .         140 
Parton,   Arthur,    N.A.;    1842-1914,   American. 
F.   A.  A.    G.,   Nov.   27,    1920. 

281.  A    Spring   Morning    (25x32),    M,    Ryan 60 

Pascuttie,  A.;  Contemporary,  Italian. 
F.   A.  A.    G.,    Nov.   27,    1920. 

294.  A  Reception  in  the  Time  of  Charles  II   (21x28),  P.  Tartoue 144 

Pasini,  Alberto;   1826-1899    Italian. 
A.  A.  A.,  Jan.  21,   1921. 

106.  Caravans  in  the  Desert  (10^x18),  Olivotti 475 

A  A.  A.,  Feb.   3,   1921. 

5.     At  the  Watering  Trough  (8|4x6:^) 400 

Robbins,    Feb.    24,    1921. 

26.     The    Court   on   a   Journey    (25^/^x19^),    Harrison 160 

32.     Hunting  in  North  Africa    (26x21  J/^) 160 

Passe,   Simon  Van   Der;  circa  1590-1644,  Flemish. 
Charles,   Nov.    18,    1920. 

671.  Sir   Thomas    Sutton    (39^x295^),    M.    L.    Wetherhill 175 

Paton,  Richard;  1717-1791,  British. 
Lehne,   April    1,    1921. 

909.     Engagement    of    the    Monmouth    and    Faudroyant    by    Moonlight,    1758 

(34x48),    S.   G.   Mortimer 275 

Pauii,   Richard;   1855-1892,  American. 
Cummings,  April   19,   1921. 

31.     Near  Haverstraw  (14x24)    50 

Peale,  Anna  Ciaypoole;  XIX  Century,  American. 
Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,    1920. 

43.  Sophonisba    Peale    (3x2^^)     90 

Peaie,  Charies  Willson;   1741-1827,  American. 
Henkel,   April    12,    1921. 

154.  Dr.  William  A.   Patterson   (30x24) 150 

155.  Elizabeth   de   Puyster  Peale    (30x24) 300 

Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,    1920. 

44.  Mrs.  Knapp  (2^/^x1^)    425 

44a.   Mrs.  Peale  (2x1^)    90 

108.  John  Bartram  (13x10)    190 

131.  George   Washington    (11-16x16-16) 9,600 

Peale,  James;  1749-1831,  American. 
Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,    1920. 

45.  Mollie   Callahan    (2^x2)    130 

45a.  Anna  Ciaypoole  Peale  (3x2 J4) 250 

45b.  Johnathan   L.   Worth    (3x2J^) 525 

Peale,   Rembrandt,    N.   A.;   1768-1860,  American. 
A.   A.  A.,  Feb.   17,    1921. 

105.      Erinna    (24x18)    410 

Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,    1920. 

46.  Portrait  of  a  Gentleman   (2^x2) 80 

47.  Miss  Catherine  Melish 145 

Peeters,   Bonaventura;   1614-1652,   Flemish. 
Orselli,    Feb.    16,    1921. 

266.     View   of   Harbor    (35x52),   Leone   Ricci 150 

Pelxotto,   Ernest  Clifford,  A.N. A.;  1869-         ,  American. 
Smithers,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

24.  Suzanne   (20x15),  M.  E.  Kein 100 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  273 

Pergamini,    P. 

F.   A.  A..R.,   May  7,    1921. 

861.     Interior   of  Village  School    (31x19),  J.  I.  Downey $70 

Peters,  Charles  Rollo;  1862-         ,  American. 
A.  A.   A.„  Feb.    14,    1921. 

58.     San  Juan  Mission   (36x30),  M.  B.  Bernstein 140 

Pettenkofen,    Augusta    Von;    1832-1889,   Austrian. 
A   A.   A.,    March    7,    1921. 

5.     Hungarian    Peasant    Wagon    (lOJ^xlS^),    R.    Glendenning 200 

Persian  School;  XVI  Century. 

A.  G.,  Feb.    14,   1921. 

466.     A  Dragon   (miniature)    (3^x5^) 70 

Persian  School;  Middle  XVI  Century. 

A.  G.,  Feb.    14,   1921. 

460.  Scene  of  the  Shanameh  (miniature)    (9j4x6 J4) 65 

Persian  School;  Second  Half  XVI  Century. 

A.  G.,  Feb.    14,  1921. 

452.  Preparations  for  a   Royal  Feast   (miniature)    (14x7^) 160 

453.  The    Meeting    of    Two     Enemy    Armies,     Scene    from    the     Shanameh 

(miniature)     (10x10)     160 

454.  Scene  from  Shenameh    (miniature)    (9x7^) 110 

456.     Fight  between  a  Dragon,  a  Gazelle,  and  a  Lion   (6x9^) 120 

459.     Body  of  a  Dead  Hero  and  His  Wife  Perishing  in  the  Flames  (miniature) 

(13i^x8M)    110 

461.  Divan  of  a  King  (miniature)    (13^^x7^) 120 

462.  Illustration  of  the  Shanameh  (miniature)    (10x7^^) 170 

Persian    School;   Late  XVI  Century. 

A.   G.,    May.    14,    1921. 

455.  Young  Man  with  Four  Young  Women  Feasting    (miniature)    (8j4x65^)         300 

463.  A  Page  with   Elaborate  Turban    (miniature)    (12^x8^) 160 

Potter,   Paul;   1625-1654,  Dutch. 
A.  A.  A.,  Jan.  21,    1921. 

119.  Noah   Disembarking  on  Mount  Ararat   (38x51^),    Seaman,  Agent 2,300 

Philippoteaux,   H.   F.   E.;   1815-1884,  French. 
Clarke,    Jan.    12,    1921. 

55.  Outside  the  Harem,  Horses  Drinking  (2x3.3),   S.  A.  Powel 125 

Plehle,  N.   (probably  a  French  copy  of  Peale). 
Rosenthal,  Dec.   14,   1920. 

109.  George  Washington   (10x13)    85 

Pletro,  Sano  di;  1406-1481,  Italian. 
A.   G.,   Feb.    18,   1921. 

107.     The    Madonna   and   Child   with    Saints   and   Angels    (26x19),    F.    Klein- 

berger    Galleries    5,600 

Plllement,   Jean;    1727-1808,   French. 
Parker,    Nov.    9,    1920. 

78.  La    Promenade    (pencil    drawing)     (8^x14^^),    R.    Ederheimer 210 

79.  Les    Blanchiseuse    (8/^x14^^)     (pencil),    R.    Ederheimer 190 

Pocock,   Nicholas;    1741-1820,  British. 

Lehne,  April    1,    1921. 

912.     Battle  of  the  Nile,  August  1,   1798  (20x27),  C.  F.  R.   Drake ..         200 

915.     Battle  of  the  Nile,  Midnight   (43x54),   H.   I.   Pratt 900 

Pond,  Arthur;   1705-1758,   British. 

Charles,   Nov.    18,    1920. 

687.  Lavinia  Fenton    (50x39^),   J.   Kelekian 150 

Post,   William    IVIerritt;    1856-         ,  American. 
Kerr,    Nov.    26,    1920. 

49.  Autumn   Landscape    (14x16),    E.    J.    Ellsworth 75 

Pourbus,   Frans;   1570-1622,  Flemish. 
Peckham,    March   29,    1921. 

90.     Eleonora   di   Medici    (46x37^),   B.    R.    Kittredge 210 

Smith,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

85.     Marchesa    de    Montecuolli    (49>^x35),    Mr.    M.    H.    Dodge 850 

Poussin,    Nicholas;   1594-1665,  French. 
Charles,   Nov.   18,    1920. 

872.  Landscape  and  Ruins  (31x43i^),  Mrs.  A.  Starr 100 

Orselli,    Feb.    16.    1921. 

253.     Adonis    (18i^xl3i^),    F.    Colby 90 

Primitive. 

Plaza,   Jan.   6,    1921. 

Madonna  and   Child,   M.   Toch 65 


274  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Pynacker,  Adrien;  Circa  1618-1663,  Dutch. 
Osterreith,   Feb.   24,    1921. 

40.     Landscape  with   Figures,    Cattle,    Sheep   and    Goats    (44^x36^),    Marie 

Glynn    $135 

Quartley,  Arthur;  1839-1886,  American. 
F.  A.  A.   R.,    Dec.    11,    1920. 

782.  Calm   Morning,   "Boer's  Head,   New  Hampshire"    (14x24),   J.   Laubier..  65 

Raeburn,  Sir  Henry;   1756-1823,  Scotch-British. 
A.   G.,  Jan.   14,   1921. 

42.  John  Macintosh,  Esq.,  Provost  of  Inverness,  Aberarder,  Inverness  Shire 

(30x25),    C.     Morgan 900 

Smith,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

74.  James    Haig,    Esq.     (29x24^^),    W.     H.    Philipps 5,100 

Raffaelli,  Jean    Francois;    1850-        ,  French. 

A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,    1921. 

22.     On    His    Way     (IS^^xlS^^),    P.    Thompson 240 

Ramage,   John. 

Smith,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

37.     Portrait  of  Washington    (14J^xl5H),    R-    Fridenberg 26 

Ramsay,    Allan;    1713-1784,    British. 
Peckham,   March  29,    1921. 

65.     Lady  Ashburton  (26^x21^4),  F.   S.  Armstrong 200 

Raphael,  School  of. 

Clarke,   Jan.    12,    1921. 

126.  Holy  Family  and  Cupids  (21x27) 50 

132.  Religious    Subject    (2.10^^x5^)    115 

Ravesteyn,    Jan    Van;    1572-1657,    Dutch. 
Gocssens,   Feb.  24,   1921. 

17.     Portrait    of    a    Woman     (18^xl4-K),    Robert    Glendenning 125 

Reid,    Robert,    N.A.;    1862-        .  American. 
F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

244.  Diana    (29^x27),    Gerard 50 

Harris,  Feb.   24,   1921. 

31.     The    Brook     (26x28>0,     M.    B.     Bernstein 170 

Reni,   Guido;   1575-1642,  Venetian. 
A.   G.,    Tan.   14,    1921. 

30.  The  Holy  Family  (48^x38"^),  F.  Klein 750 

Renoir,   Pierre  Auguste;   1841-1919,  French. 
Plaza,   Feb.    19,    1921. 

242.     Place  de  la  Public   (16x21),  L.  A.  Biddle 55 

Reynolds,  Sir  Joshua;  1723-1792,  British. 
Clarke,    Jan.    12,    1921. 

142.  Portrait    of     Mr.     Denning,     afterward     Lord     Ashburton     (31 3^x26 J^), 

Brittain    ' 275 

Smith,   Feb.   3.    1921. 

75.  The    Duchess    of    Gloucester    (30x25),    Mrs.    Eastman 700 

Wasserman,   Feb.    3,    1921. 

77.     Robinetta     (29x24),     Mr.     Guest 150 

Ribot,  Augustin  Theophile;  1823-1891,  French. 
A.    G.,   April   5,    1921. 

62.     The  Artist's  Family    (41x36),   Mrs.  Hinds 95 

Richards,   William    T.;    1833-1905,  American. 
F.  A.  A.   G.,   Nov.  27,    1920. 

307.  The  Valley  of   the  Brandy  wine    (40x72),    McDonough 55 

Richards,  William  T.;   1833-1905,  American. 
Moore,   April    18-25,    1921. 

1567.     End  of  a  Stormy  Day.     Hamilton 805 

Plaza,   June   6,    1921. 

374.     The  Breakers    (13x18),   H.    Kennedy 52 

Roebling,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

55.  Landscape  with  Cattle  (24]^x20),  F.  K.  Siegerman 240 

RIchet,   Leon;   1847-1907,  French. 
Plaza,    Nov.    5,    1920. 

On  the  River  Oise.     J.  Hayes 55 

Plaza,    Jan.    6,    1921. 

Solitude    (28x34) ,  Jefferson   Seligman 105 

Smith    &   Jaffe,    May    21,    1921. 

1352.     Landscape    72 

'  Rico,    Martin;    1850-1908,    Spanish. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  3,   1921. 

27.     Venetian  Scene  (28>4xl8),   M.   B.  Philipp 750 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  275 

Rico — Continued. 

Bostwick,   Jan.    21,    1921. 

90.   San  Vio  Venzie  (11x14^),  Bernet,  Agent $500 

Hutchinson,   Feb.    12,    1921. 

6.     Venetian    Scene    (14x8^) 525 

Roebling,    Tan.   20,    1921. 

73.  In    Venice    (28x19),    Holland    Galleries 575 

Smithers,   Jan.  21,    1921. 

93.  Rienzi's  House  at  Rome    (6j4xll),  J.  Woodward 200 

Riedel,    A.;   XIX   Century,    German, 
A.   G.,    Nov.   26,    1920. 

118.  Cupid    and    Psyche    (53x55),    W.    Wesendonck 70 

Rigaud,    Hyacinthe;    1659-1743,   French. 
Charles,    Nav.    18,    1920. 

867.  Sieur  de  Beaupre    (29x24),   H.    L.   Adams,   Jr 75 

874.  Due    D'Antin    (33x27),    Dudley    D.    Sicher 160 

F.   A.  A.   G.,    Nov.   27,    1920. 

267.  Portrait   of    a    Lady    (20x24),    Satinover   Galleries 50 

Medina,   April    5,    1921. 

85.  Portrait  of  Louis  XV   (31x24),  F.   Baumeister 70 

Ritschel,   William,   N.   A.;    1864-         ,  American. 
A.   G.,  April  5,   1921. 

48.     Old  Mill  at    Rotterdam  (30x25),   Calo 120 

Riviera  School;  XVII  Century. 
Ruiz,    April    9,    1921. 

1152.     St.  Jeronime.     J.  J.  Murray 80 

Rix,    Julian;    1851-1903,    American. 
Harris,  Feb.   24,   1921. 

63.     A  Black  Storm  (32x42)),  S.  A.  Powell 80 

Plaza,  Nov.  5,  1920. 

California    Landscape.      F.    Draz 80 

Smithers,   Tan.   20,   1921. 

67.  Solitary  One    (28J^x21i^),    Mr.   Tod 375 

RIzi,   Francisco;   1608-1685,  Spanish. 
Weissberger,   April   27,    1921. 

512.     Portrait  of  the  Infanta  Maria  Louisa   (56x44),  J.  F.  Carlisle 150 

Robie,    Jean;    1821-         ,    Belgian. 
Goossens,   March  7,    1921. 

27.     Flowers    (18^x27^:^),    R.    Stillivagon 50 

Roebling,    Jan.    21,    1921. 

146.  Still  Life:   Fruits  and  Flowers    (27^^x20) ,  W.  B.  Campe 425 

Robinson,    Hal;  Contemporary,  American. 
Plaza,  Jan.  6,   1921. 

Winter   Landscape    (25x30) ,   John   Slattery 110 

Robinson,  Thomas;   1835-1888,  American. 
A.  A.   A.,   Feb.    14,    1921. 

62.     The  Watering  Place   (30x49i^),  Thos.  Footer 50 

Rochettle-Torres,  Antonio;  1851-         ,  French. 
F.  A.  A.   G.,   Nov.   26,    1920. 

264.  Ideal   Head    (24x18),   Landeman 50 

Rodeltz,   A. 

Plaza,   Feb.    18,    1921. 

10.     Venetian    (23x36),  S.   Sprague 57 

Roegge,  Ernst  Friederich  Wilhelm;  1829-         ,  German. 
Smith  &  Jaffe,    May    19,    1921. 

1204.     Chess  Players   65 

1228.     Interior    with    Figures 65 

Roelofs,  Willem;   1822-1897,  Dutch  and  Eugene  Joseph  Verboeckhoven. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,   1921. 

29.     Landscape,  Sheep  and  Shepherd  (18^x20),  D.  J.  R.  Ushikubo 525 

Roland,    M.;   XIX    Century. 
A.  G.,  Nov.  26,    1920. 

108.  Bringing    in   the   Catch    (22x36),    S.    C.    Wolmath 52 

Romani,  Juana;   1869-        ,  Italian. 
Baldwin,    Feb.    14,    1921. 

47.     Judith    (391^x28),   M.  B.   Bernstein - 330 

Romano,  Giuiio;  1492-1546,  Italian. 
Cattadori,   April    15,    1921. 

538.  The     Emperor     Constantine's     Victory     over     Maxentius     (26J/2x64J^), 

McCarthy     120 

539.  The    Triumph   of    Constantine    (26J^x64j4),    O,   Azzoni 150 


276  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 


Romney,   George;    1734-1802,   British. 
A.    A.    A.,    Feb.    24,    1921. 

56.     Portrait   of    Lord    Devon    (30x25),    William    J.    Kain $1000 

Fifty-seventh  St.  Gal.,  Feb.   24,   1921. 

292.     Elizabeth  Carter,  aunt  of  Henry  Heylyn    (24x20),   F.  C.   Morton 65 

Smith,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

11.     Thomas  Thornhill,   Esq.    (29x24^),   A.   J.   Kobler 475 

Roos,  Johann   Melchior;  1659-1731,  German. 
French,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

20.  Hunting  the  Stag  (12^4x14),  Mr.  Fox. 90 

Rottenhammer,  Johanna;  1564-1623,  German. 
Clarke,    Jan.    12,    1921. 

146.  Holy   Family,   Brittain    160 

Rousseau,  Theodore  Pierre  Etienne;  1812-1867,  French. 
French,   Tan.  21,   1921. 

124.  The  Outskirts  of  a  Farm   (5^x6^),  M.  Metcalfe,  Jr 350 

Plaza,    Jan.    6,    1921. 

Pool  in  the  Woods   (18x27),  J.  J.  Wilson 210 

Roybet,  Ferdinand;  1840-1919,  French. 
A.    G.,   April    5,    1921. 

52.     Return  from  the  Chase  (29x39),  Dr.   Riefstahl 55 

Bostwick.  Jan.   20,   1921. 

26.  The  Smoker   (23x14),   R.   H.  Wallach 550 

French.    Tan.   20,    1921. 

46.  The  Rehearsal  (24x17^),  Dr.  E.  Cadgene 625 

Peckham,   March   29,   1921. 

35.     Gentilhomme    Rouge    (16x1234),    T.    Hussa 150 

Smith,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

35.     A    Cavalier    (32x25^).    R.    Hyman 80 

Rubens,   Peter  Paul;   1577-1640,  Flemish. 
A.   G.,  Tan.   14,   1921. 

35.  Death  of  Adonis    (29x41)    (landscape  by  Jan  Wildens),   F.   I'Clein 1,250 

Fifty-seventh  St.  Gal.,  Feb.   24.   1921. 

286.     Portrait  of  Cadinal  Aldobrandt    (43x37),  Jerome   Buck 60 

Osterreith,    Feb.    24,     1921. 

54.     Portrait  of  a  Young  Page  (one  of  the  sons  of  the  artist)    (4954x26^).      5,000 

Russian    School. 

Osterreith,   Feb.   24,    1921. 

21.  Le  Christ  en  Croix   (18^x14^4) 130 

Rustige,    H.;    1810-         ,    German. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,  Feb.   10,  1921. 

113.     Emperor  Rudolph  Subduing  the  Robber  Barons   (32x46),  J.  Beck 65 

Ruysch,   Rachel;  1664-1750,  Dutch. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   17,   1921. 

79.     Still  Life:    Flowers  and  Fruit  (19J^xl4),  A.  Mayer 90 

A  G.,   Tan.    14,   1921. 

26.  Flowers  in  a  Vase   (14J^xll^) 55 

Orselli,   Feb.    16,    1921. 

254.     Still  Life  (17x20^),  S.  Schepps 70 

Ruysdael,  Jakob  Van;  1628-1682,  Dutch. 
F.  A.  A.  R.  March  19,  1921. 

518.     Woodland    Scene   in   Holland.      Wm.    Baltimore 85 

Ruysdael,   Jacob   Van;   1628-1682,   Dutch    (Attributed  to). 
F.  A.  A.   R.,   Feb.   10,    1921. 

96.     Marine.      Harrington    70 

Sanchez-Perrier,    Emilio;    1853-1907,   Spanish. 
Kerr,  Nov.  26,   1920. 

92.  By   the    Riverside    (22x33),    McDonough    Galleries 470 

Sandor,  Mathias;   1857-        ,  American. 
A.   G.,  April   5,   1921. 

54.     In  New  Mexico   (29x36),  F.  Bianchi 60 

Sandart,   Joachim   Van;    1606-1688,   Dutch. 
Smith,  Feb.  3,   1921. 

83.     Portrait   of    a   Lady    of    Holland    (36x27^),    A.    Olivetti    &    Co 200 

Santerre,   J.    B,;   16581717,  French. 
F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  26,  1920. 

70.  Lady   Playing   Guitar    (28x35),    ICipps 110 

Sartain,  William,  A.   N.   A.;   1843-         ,  American. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,  1921. 

12.     Landscape    (14x17),    E.    D.    Levinson 90 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  277 

Sarto,   Andrea,   del;   1486-1531,  Italian. 
F  A.  A.  R.,   March   19,   1921. 

511.     Early    Copy    of    Madonna    de    San    Francesco.      Wm.    Lord $75 

Sauvage;    Early   XVIII    Century,    French. 
Pares,    Feb.    5,    1921. 

149.     Amorini,   Panneau  in  Grisaille    (4   ft.   x  3  ft.),  W.   R.   Hearst 325 

Schaffner,    Martin;  active  1508,  German. 
Ferlov,   April    5,    1921. 

45.  The  Annunciation   (32x14),   A.    Pope 75 

46.  The  Archangel  Gabriel    (32x14),  A.  Pope 75 

Schalcken,  Godfried;  1643-1706,  Dutch. 

F'erlov,   April   5,    1921. 

32.  Woman  Holding  a  Candle  (12^^x9),  Detroit  Art  and  Auction    Rooms..  75 

33.  Her  New  Chemise  (13x10),  Detroit  Art  and  Auction  Rooms 75 

Scharenberg,    F. 

Smith   &  Jaffe,  May  20,    1921. 

1194.     Interior  with  Figures    67 

Schenck,    August    F.    A.;    1828-1901,    French. 
F.  A.  A.  G.,   Nov.  27,    1920. 

273.  Sheep    in    Snow    (23^x19),    Weidemeyer 65 

Hutchinson,  Feb.  14,   1921. 

67.     Sheep  in  a  Storm  (36x57^),  E.  D.  Levinson 410 

Schetky,  John  Christian;  1778-1874,  British. 
Lehne,  April   1,    1921. 

922.     Dutch   Fleet  Raising  Anchor  oflf  Flushing   (44x72),   Max  Williams 675 

Schlegei,   Carl;    Contemporary,  German. 
Warwick,    March   21,    1921. 

Z7.     Reclining   Female    (46x50),    L.    Schlesinger 60 

Schmltgen,  Georg;  1856-         ,  German. 
F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

285.  Winter   Morning  in  the   Woods    (39x33),    Shields 60 

Schoevaerdts,  Mathys;  circa  1665,  Belgian. 
French,    Tan.   20,    1921. 

11.  Riding  Out  From  Town  (7x9),  E.  L.  White 70 

Schreyer,   Adolf;    1828-1899,   German. 
Beck,  Feb.  3,   1921. 

59.     The   Reconnoitre    (27i^x39j^),   R.   J.    Caldwell 4,900 

Bostwick,   Jan.   21,    1921. 

89.  Arab   Sheik   (7x9^)    Bernet,  Agent 625 

Roebling,  Jan.   21,   1921. 

157.  Arabian   Horseman    (32x26),   E.   F.    Albee 3,500 

Taft,    Feb.   3,    1921. 

10.     A    Russian    Carter    (6^x8j4) 250 

Schreyer,    Adolph;    1828-1899,   German    (Attributed   to). 
F.  A.  A.  R.,   Feb.   10,   1921. 

117.     Arabian   Sheik  and   His  Escort    (32x50),   F.   M.   T.   Lane 300 

Scorel,  Jan  Van;   1495-1562,  Dutch. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

108.     Madonna  and   Child    (19i/$xl3J^),    Lee   Elwyn 1,500 

Seghers,  Daniel;  1590-1661    Flemish. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

689.  Still    Life    (47^^x61^),    Mr.    James 175 

Selgnac,    Paul;    1826-1904,    French. 
F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

289.  The    Card    House    (21x18),    P.    Tartoue 60 

Seitz,  Alexander  Maximilian;  1811-1888,  German. 
Smith   &  Jafifej  May  20,    1921. 

1235.     Interior  with  Figures    70 

Sene. 

Henkels,  April  11,  1921. 

83.     Miniature   of   Mrs.  James  Monroe    (circular),   Bert 950 

Serres,  J.  T.;  1759-1825,  British. 
Lehne,   April   1,    1921. 

920.  Bombardment  of  Algiers  (33x52),  H.  O.  Pratt 405 

Severdonck,   F.  Van;   Contemporary,   Belgian. 
F.  A.  A.  R..  May  7,   1921. 

878.     Landscape   and  'Sheep,      P.  Thompson 200 

Sharpless,  James;   1751-1811,  American. 
Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,   1920. 

113.  James   McClurg   (pastel)    70 

114.  Portrait  from  life   (probably  John  Mason   (8x10) 60 


278  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 


Sheppard,  Warren;   1858-        ,  American. 
F.   A.   A.    G.,   Nov.   26,    1920. 

129.  Dario    Palace,    Venice    (19^xlli^),    Barnard $55 

Fifty-seventh    St.    Gal.,   Feb.   23,    1921. 

75.     Sunlight  on   the   Sea    (35x58),  Thos.   F.   Smith 55 

Shietz,    R. 

F.  A.  A.   R.,   May   7,    1921. 

869.     Alps,  Lake  Scene   (48x29) ,  J.   Chittick SO 

Shurtleff,  R.  M.,  N.A.;  1841-1915,  American. 
Plaza,   Jan.    6,    1921. 

Landscape    (11x16),   Mr.   Wisenberg    55 

Sienese  School;  early  XV  Century. 
A.   G.,  Jan.  28,   1921. 

en.  Saint  Barbara   (13^x10^).   Collectors  Gallery 120 

Sienese  School;  XVI  Century. 
Cattadori,   April    15,    1921. 

533.     The  Holy  Family    (28x20^),   McCarthy 95 

Signorlni,  G.  Giuseppe;  1857-        ,  Italian. 
Holmes,    Tan.    20,    1921. 

15.     The  Lute  Player   (13^x954),  E.  F.  Albee 105 

Simons,   Marcius;  Contemporary,  American. 
A.  A.  A.,    Feb.   24,    1921. 

60.     "Time    is    Mine,"    saith    the    Lord,    "I    will    repay"     (42x26),    M.    B. 

Bernstein    80 

Simons,  P.  Marcius;  1867-1909,  American. 
A.   G.,    Nov.   26,    1920. 

67.  The    Scribe     (28x20),    H.     Schultheis 55 

Simpson,    A.    B.;    Contemporary,    British. 
Ramsay,    March  9,   1921. 

324.     Song  and  Dance    (30x30),   H.    C.    Mathews 70 

Sisley,    Alfred;    1840-1899,    French. 
Piaza,   Feb.   19,   1921. 

188.     River    Oise    (23x28),    L.   A.    Biddle '. 50 

SmIIlie,  George   H.,   N.A.;   1840-         ,  American. 
Smithers,  Jan.   20,    1921. 

58.  Landscape   with   Fisherman    (16x31^),   M.  E.   Kein 390 

Smith,  James  P.;  1803-1888,  American. 
Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,   1920. 

80.  George  Washington   (2^4x2) 260 

Smith,   Henry  Pember;  1854-1907,  American. 
A.  A.  A.,  F^b.   14,   1921. 

8.     Study  at  East  Lyme,  Connecticut   (12x16) 450 

F.   A.   A.    G.,   Nov.   26,    1920. 

118.   Landscape    (18x28),    W.    Terry 107 

141.   New   England   Farm    (20x28),    Schultheis 135 

245a. Shores   of   Lake  Como    (30x40),   Arlington   Galleries 320 

296.   By  the   Lily  Pond    (25x35),  Arlington  Galleries 220 

F.  A.  A.  R.,  April  9,  1921. 

840.     Road  to  Old  Homestead   (20x28),  D.  H.  Dixon 140 

843.     The   Old  Homestead,    East  Lyme,   Conn.    (20x24),   Arlington   Galleries..         150 

845.      Guidena   Canal,    Venice    (14x22),    Arlington   Galleries 80 

868.     New  England  Landscape  (14x18),  H.  D.  G.  Rohlfs 61 

Fifty-seventh   St.   Gal.   Feb.   24,    1921. 

199.     New   England   Homestead    (12x16),    Jerome    Buck 65 

Kerr,    Nov.    26,    1920. 

66.  River    Scene    (20x28) ,    A.    J.    Houston 200 

Plaza,  Jan.    6,    1921. 

Painting    (14x20),    Mr.    Rolphs 70 

Somer,  Paul  Van;  1576-1621,  Flemish. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

670.  Lady    Harrington    (45i^x36),    George    E.    Utassy 60 

Sonntag,   Wm.;   1822-1900,  American. 
Plaza,    Nov.    5,    1920 

Landscape.      Mrs.   Edgar   Ames    SO 

Sopodukobekini,    E.;    Late    XVIII    Century,    Russian. 
Bartlftt,    March   7,    1921. 

45.     Portrait    of    a    Diplomat    (27x22),    E.    G.    O'Reilly 67 

Sorgh,  Hendrik  Maertenz;  1611P-1670,  Dutch. 
Gcossens,   Feb.    17,   1921. 

102.     Dutch  Interior   (20^x26^),  A.  Mayer 90 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  279 

Spanish  School;  Early  XV  Century. 
Ruiz,  April    14,    1921. 

1034.     St.  John   (3  ft.  5   in.  x   1   ft.   11   in.),  Mrs.  C.  Moran $100 

1200.     St.   Martin   Sharing  His  Coat   with  a  Poor   Man   (4  ft.  3   in.  x  3   ft.), 

W.    R.   Hearst    500 

1990.     The  Annunciation.     Spanish  Antique   Shop 170 

Spanish  School;  XV  Century. 
Ruiz,   May   20,    1921. 

752.  The  Birth  o<^  Saint  Jchn.     W.R.Hearst ^ 300 

753.  Six  Apostles.      C.    Snadeback '. .         ISO 

798.  Our  Saviour,  'Saint  Barbara,  Saint  Anne,   Saint  Catherine,  Saint  Marta 

(5   parts) ,  J.   Thomson 1 ,300 

799.  The  Annunciation,  Visitation  of  Adoration,  and  The  Flight  into  Egypt, 

Jesus  Among  the   Wise  Men   (5  parts) . ., 1,250 

Spanish  School;  Late  XV  Century. 
Ruiz,   May    17,    1921. 

1171.     Religious  Subjects  (5  panels)    (2  ft.  4  in.  x  6  ft.  4  in.),  H.  H.  Plate..         250 
Spanish  School;  XVI  Century. 
Ruiz,  April    9,    1921. 

1127.     Virgin  and  Christ  (2  ft.  x  1  ft.  8  in.),  C.  Munson 200 

1101.     Two  Religious  Subjects   (5  ft.  x  2  ft.),  Tompkins 425 

Ruiz,  May    17,    1921. 

■      133.     Virgin  and   Child.     J.  Thomson 60 

134.     Worshipping   Jesus.      G.    Kendall 100 

838.      St.  Jerome  and  Figures    in  Landscape.      J.  Thomson 140 

884.     The  Holy  Family.     C.   Moran 50 

Weissberger,   April   17,   1921. 

477.     Virgin    and  Child    (10^4x7^4),  G.   H    Miller 52 

Spanish   School;   XVII   Century. 
Medina,  April   5,   1921. 

79.     Venus  and  Adonis  (2  panels)    (22x28i^),  F.  S.  Goodman 210 

87.     An  Ornate  Vase  of  Flowers   (43x23  3^),  R.  B.  Bowler 50 

•  88.     An  Ornate  Vase  of  Flowers   (43x23^),  R-  B.   Bowler 50 

91.     Water  Fete,  Seville   (38k57H),  R-  Glendenning 50 

Spanish   School;  Early  XVII  Century. 
Ruiz,  April    9,    1921. 

1046.     Two  Paintings  of  Flowers   (3  ft.  x  2  ft.  3  in.),   Mrs.  Ittleson • 130 

1105.     Four  Paintings  of  Flowers   (3  ft.  x  2  ft.),  J.  Thomas 240 

Spanish  School;  Late  XVII  Century. 
Ruiz,  April    9,    1921. 

1051.     Two  Paintings  of  Flowers.     Mrs.  C.  Morrin 190 

Spanish  School;  XVIII  Century. 
Weissberger,   April   27,    1921. 

499.     Three  Panels  Hinged    (3   ft.  x  19  ft.  8  in.),   S.  'S.  Auchincloss.  ; 70 

Spanish    School. 

Weissberger,    April   28,    1921. 

547.     St.   Veronica  and   Mary   Magdalen   (20x12),   N.   Wood 50 

Spanish   Primitive. 

Plaza,    Feb.    19,    1921. 

233.     Virgin    "Immaculate    Conception"     (32x60)      (on    panel),     Herman     L. 

Meader     155 

Spanish  Primitive;  XV  Century. 
Plaza,  Feb.    19,   1921. 

244.      Saint  Helen  with  the  Cross   (235^x52),   L.   D.   Armstrong 135 

Spanish  School  with   Flemish  Influence;  XVI  Century. 
Ruiz,   April   9,    1921. 

1109.     The  Immaculate  Conception  (5  ft.  x  2  ft.  1  in.),  J.   Sterner SO 

Spanish  with  German  Influence;  XV  Century. 
Ruiz,  April   9,    1921. 

1200b.  Christ  Carrying  His  Cross,  with  Roman  Soldiers  Scourging  Him  (4  ft. 

10  in.  X  2  ft.  5  in.),  C.  Fair 450 

Spanish  Valencia  School;  Late  XV  Century. 
Ruiz,  April   9,    1921. 

1115.     Two   Paintings,   Religious  Subjects    (5   ft.   8   in.   x   2   ft.    10    in.    each), 

Mme.    E.    Farrara    800 

Spark*",  A.  W.;  Contemporary,  American. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.    14,    1921. 

61.     Pittsburgh   (36x40),  F.  Kelly 75 

Stagno,   Bernardino  di  Mariotti  della;  XVI  Century,  Florentine. 
Orselli,   Feb.    16,    1921. 
250.     Madonna    and    Child    (19xl5j^),    S.    Schepps 37S 


280  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

St.   Antolin;  XV  to   XVI  Century. 
Plaza,   Feb.    19,    1921. 

247.     Saint    in    Costume    (2314x52),    L.    D.    Armstrong $160 

Stevens,    L.    Alfred;    1828-1906,    Belgian. 
Osterreith,    Feb.    24,    1921. 

9.     La  Dame  au  Pigeon  (18x15),  Harrison 300 

French,  Jan.   21,    1921. 

100.  Lady  in  White    (183/^x15),   C.  W.   Kraushaar 950 

Steen,  Jan;  1626(?)-1679,  Dutch. 
French,  Jan.   21,    1921. 

118.  The  Surprised  Husband  (21i^x27H),  R.  Vitolo 400 

St.  Memin,  Charles  B.  J.  F.  de;  1770-1852,  American, 
Rosenthal,   Dec.   14,   1920. 

111.  Portraits — Mr.  and  Mrs.  Macdonald  of  Maryland   (8^4x11  J4) 80 

Stragllati;  XIX  Century,  Italian. 
A.  G.,  April  5,   1921. 

64.     The  Leaf  Gatherer    (77x34),  Calo 50 

Strozzi,  Zanobi  di  Benedetto;  1412-1468,  Florentine. 
A.  G.,  Feb.    18,    1921. 

105.     The   Descent   from   the   Cross    (245^x17),    A.    W.    Graetz 950 

Stry,  Jacob  Van;  1746-1815,  Dutch. 
A.  G.,  April   5,    1921. 

50.     Bringing  in  the  Harvest   (30x40),  L.   Elwyn 60 

Tenters,  David;   1638-1685,  Flemish. 
Ferlov,   April    5,    1921. 

42.     Adoration  of  the  Magi   (24x18 J4 ) ,  A.    Pope 250 

Stuart,   Gilbert;   1755-1828,  American   (Early  Copy). 
Housman,    Oct.    30,    1920. 

371.  George     Washington 66 

Rosenthal,   Dec.   14,    1920. 

115.  Portrait  of  Hall  Harrison   (11x13) 1,400 

116.  George  Washington  (15x13)    70 

Sully,   Laurence;   1769-1803,  American. 

Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,    1920. 

55.  Thomas  West  (2J^x2^)    $85 

Sully,  Thomas;  1783-1872,  American. 

Moore,  April   18,  1921. 

1555.  Henry  Robinson   of   Boston.     J.  T.  Kinsley 240 

1556.  Mrs.  Henry  Robinson  of   Boston.     J.  T.  Kinsley 290 

Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,    1920. 

56.  Edward   Drake  Jackson    (2^x1  ^)    65 

123.  Portrait  of  Himself    (6^x9) 50 

Tamburini,  A.;  1843-         ,  Italian. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,  May  7,   1921. 

872.     Monk  Eating    (10x14),  H.   Mays ■         50 

Tapiro,    T. ;    Contemporary,   Italian. 
Peckham,    March   29,    1921. 

76.     The  Pasha   (water   color)    (27j/$xl9^),   A.    Babcock 130 

Taravai,  Jean  Hugues;  1728-1785,  French. 
Orselli,    Feb.    16,    1921. 

265.     Bacchus  and  a  Nymph  (21x16^),  S.  Schepps 50 

T.    B.;    American. 

F.  A.  A.   G.,  Nov.   26,   1920. 

117.  Portrait  of  a  Lady    (25x30),   Satinover  Galleries 50 

Teniers,  David,  The  Younger;  1610-1694,  Dutch. 
A.  G.,  Jan.   14,   1921. 

18.  A  Pleasant  Evening    (11x15) 80 

Cummings,  April  29,   1921. 

70.     Interior  with  Figures   (20x26) 105 

French,   Jan.   21,    1921. 

117.  Dutch  Interior  with  Figures   (12i4x21^),  Bernet,  Agent 575 

Wasserman,  Feb.   3,    1921. 

18.     A    Tavern    Scene    (17x21),    C.    S.    Baldwin 550 

Terburg,  Gerard;  1617-1681,  Dutch. 
A.  A.  A.,   Feb.   14,   1921. 

39.     The  Message    (27x23),  A.  Olivotti   &  Co 100 

Termuhlen,    K.;  Contemporary,  American. 
Plaza,   Jan.    6,    1921. 

Moonlight   (25x30),  J.  J.  Wilson 110 

Plaza,    Feb.    18,    1921. 

111.     Off  the  Maine  Coast   (24x38),  J.  J.  Wilson 65 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  281 

Thaulow,   Frits;    1847-1906,   Norwegian. 
Beck,  Feb.   3,   1921. 

34.     Winter    Scene     (25j^x31M),     Louis     Ralston $550 

Burgess,  Feb.   3,    1921. 

30.     The   Mill    (25^x32),   P.   Jackson   Higgs 925 

Holmes,  Jan.  21,   1921. 

153.  A  French  Village  by  Moonlight   (25j^x31^),  Findlay  Galleries 1,650 

Plaza,    Jan.    6,    1921. 

The  Windmill   (28x32),  Kelly  Art  Galleries 190 

Thorns,   H.  C;  British. 

Cummings,   April  29,    1921. 

96.     The  Wood  Gatherers   (42x72) 65 

Thoren,  Otto  de;   1828-1889,  Austrian. 
Hutchinson,    Feb.    14,    1921. 

18.     Horses  Turned  out  to  Pasture  (21^x17^) 510 

59.     Coming  from  the   Harvest    (29x43) 250 

Flaza,  Oct.  23,   1920. 

The  Storm   (pastel) 180 

Thibetan  School;  XV  Century. 
Yamanaka,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

460.     Kuan-yin     (30k203^),     Ormond 100 

Thibetan;  XVIII  Century. 
A.    G.,    May    13,  .1921. 

298.     Four-Armed    Divinity   in   the  Attitude    of    Prayer   on    a  Lotus    Throne 

(bronze)    (10^)     SO 

Thornhill,  Sir  James;   1676-1734,  British. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

890.  An  Allegory  of  Painting   (3434x43),  A.  J.  Kobler 250 

Tintoretto,  Jacopo;   1518-1594,  Venetian. 
A.   G.,  Jan.    14,    1921. 

33.  The  Last  Supper   (104x56),  J.  Temmer 2,400 

A.   G.,   Feb.   18,   1921. 

62.     Holy    Conversation;    Group    of    Saints    Seated    Upon    Clouds    (8  3/1 6x 

151^),    A.   W.    Graetz 80 

Titian,    School    of;   XVI    Century. 
Orselli,  Feb.  16,   1921. 

274.     Venus    and    Adonis    (79x64),    S.    Schepps 150 

Ruiz,    May   21,    1921. 

870.     The  Goddess  Ceres  Gathering  Fruit,  and  Vulcan  at  the  Forge.    J.  Bartlett        350 

Tourmois,   Theodore;    1814-1871   and  Eugene   Verboeckho'ven. 
Goossens,  Feb.   17,   1921. 

99.     Landscape,   Cattle  and   Sheep    (19^x29^),  J.    C.   Leslie 260 

103.     Landscape  with  Watermill  and  Cattle   (21^x28^),  Thos.  Footer 200 

Tournieres,    Robert;    1668-1752,    French. 
Orselli,  Feb.  16,   1921. 

272.     Portrait    of    a    Lady    (38x30),    Mrs.    L.    D.    Armstrong 90 

Trott,   Benjamin;   1720-?,  American. 
Rosenthal,  Dec.  14,  1920. 

58.  Mrs.  Walter  Livingstone   (3x2j4) 380 

Troyon,  Constant;  1810-1865,  French. 
A.   A.   A.,  Jan.   21,    1921. 

152.  The  Time  of  Milking  (36J4x38J^),  Howard  Young 2,000 

A.    G.,    Jan.    14,    1921. 

19    Breton  Landscape   (10J4xl3K),  Chas.  Morgan 200 

Beck,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

32.       A  White  and   Red   Ox   (18J4x21J4),   J.   C.  H.   Heldring 1,000 

Bostwick,   Jan.   21,    1921. 

138.  Cattle   and   Landscape    (29x37^),   W.   N.    Laird 1,300 

Clarke,   Jan.   12,    1921. 

138.  Landscape  and  Cattle,  Hedrea  105 

F.  A.  A.   R.,   March  19,   1921. 

512.     Cows  and  Sheep  in  Landscape.     J.  A.  Clark 60 

French,   Jan.   21,    1921. 

131.  Brittany  Farm  Landscape   (14^x21  J^),  P.  E.  Higgs 4,200 

Goossens,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

68.     The    Gamekeeper  and   His    Dogs    (63x44>4),   John   Levy 4,100 

Plaza,    Jan.     6,    1921. 

Cutting  Wood   (13x16),  J.  J.  Wilson ; 120 

Trumbull,    John;    1756-1843,   American. 
F.   A.    A.    R.,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

131.     Portrait    of    General    Bacon    Brown 52 


282  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 


Trumbull,  John;    1756-1843,  American    (in  the  Manner  of). 
Housman,   Oct.  30,    1920. 

347.   George   Washington    (miniature) $305 

Turner,  J.   M.  W.;   1775-1851,  British. 
Fifty-seventh    St.    Gal.,    Feb.    23,    1921. 

135.     Italian   Scenery    (8x9),   S.   G.   Rains 120 

Twachtman,    John    Henry;    1853-1902,    American. 
A  A.  A.,   Feb.  3,    1921. 

6.     Landscape     (17x12),    Ferd.    Howard 275 

Plaza,   Feb.    19,    1921. 

176.     Frozen  Brook   (20x24),  Wm.   M.   K.   Olcott 100 

Tyler,  James  G.;  1855-        ,  American. 
F.  A.  A.   R.,   April  9,    1921. 

854.     Dangerous  Coast    (21x30),  Arlington  Galleries 90 

Unknown. 

A.   A.  A.,   Feb.    14,    1921. 

31.     Italian   Landscape    (22x251^^),    C.    Schorn 210 

49.     Dutch  Landscape  with  Figures   (25i^x35),  A.   Olivotti  &  Co 65 

F.  A.  A.   R.,   Dec.    11,    1920. 

800.  Rip  Van  Winkle's  Return    (40x50),  Chas.   Oberwalder's   Sons 120 

F.  A.  A.  R.,  Dec.   10,   1921 

146.     Portrait    of    a    Gentleman.      J.    S.    Berliner 75 

Fifty-seventh  'St.  Gal.,  Feb.  24,   1921. 

289.     Portrait   of  a   Lady    (30^x24^),   A.    F.    De   Forest 50 

Fifty-seventh   St.   Gal.,   May   6,    1921. 

170.     The   Holy   Family.      G.    Grant 52 

173.     Virgin  and  Child 87 

Lawrence,   Jan.   28,    1921. 

337a.   Painting.      R.   Pitcairn    800 

337b.  Painting    575 

Plaza,   Nov.   20,    1920. 

Landscape.      M.    Frenkel    SO 

Still  Life,   fruit.     J.    B.   Donchian 71 

Plaza,  Dec.  9,   1920. 

Dutch    Exterior,   J.    B.   Donchian 51 

Plaza,    Jan.    6,    1921. 

Portrait  of  a  French  Nobleman,  Mrs.  Bates 50 

Ruiz,  April  9,   1921. 

1099.     Two    Paintings    Representing    Flowers    (2    ft.    10    in.    x    1    ft.    8    in.), 

Mrs.  Skinner    ISO 

Smith   &   Jaffe,    May   20,    1921. 

1195.     Roman  Girl  and  Pets   60 

1357.     Portrait  of  Johann  Fust  Lodtmann   60 

1360.     Portrait     of     Joh.  Georg.  Friderici,  born  1720 40 

Unknown;    Late   XV   Century. 
Ruiz,  April  9,   1921. 

1178.     Religious  'Subjects    (5    panels)     (2    ft.    4    in.    x    7    ft.    4    in.),    Spanish 

Antique  Shop   350 

1200a.  Virgin  Mary  in  Contemplation  (5  ft.  x  3  ft.  6  in.),  W.  R.  Hearst 300 

Unknown;  XVI   Century,  Spanish. 
A.  G.,   Tan.    14,    1921. 

51.  the   Infant   Saint    (31x22) 70 

Unknown;  XVII  Century. 
Ruiz,  May  21,  1921. 
871.  Still  Life.     B.  Gallois 200 

Valentin,    Moise;    1591-1634,    French. 
Goossens,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

89.     The   Backgammon   Player    (45x66),   A.    Olivotti  &   Co 200 

Van  Boskerck,  N.  A.;  1855-         ,  American. 
A.  A.   A.,   Feb.    14,   1921. 

41.  River  Landscape   (24x36),  Calo  Art  Galleries 135 

Holmes,  Jan.   20,    1921. 

42.  The   Riverside    (20x24),  J.  Woodward. , 225 

Plaza,    Oct,    23,    1920. 

The   River    of   Wakefield,    Rhode    Island.      Dr.    V.    Pescale 320 

Van   Croos,  Antoine;    1650-?,  Dutch. 
Goossens,  Feb.   17,  1921. 

100.     The  Ferry  Boat    (15x27^),   A.    Mayer 55 

Vanderbank,  John;    1694-1739,   British. 
Charles,    Nov.    18,    1920. 

677.  Lady  Burlington    (49x40),  Ginsberg  and  Levy 105 

678.  Lord    Burlington    (50x40),   Lenyman   and    Morant 250 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  283 

Vanderlyn,    John;    1775-1852,   American. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,   Feb.   10,   1921 

152.     Portrait  of  Charles  Ewing,  Chief  Justice  of  New  Jersey.    Cooper  Hewitt        $52 
Rosenthal,   Dec.    14,    192U. 

129.  Junius   Brutus   Booth    (10x12) ' 65 

Van  De  Velde,  Adriaen;  1635-1672,  Dutch. 
French,  Jan.   20,    1921. 

n.  Horse,  Cattle,  Sheep  and  Landscape  (193/^x22^),  F.  Pearson 350 

Velde,  Willem  Van  De;  1653-1707,  Dutch. 
Wasserman,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

19.     Shipping    (25x31),  C.   S.   Baldwin 675 

Van    Dyck,    Anthony;    1599-1641,    Flemish. 
A.   G.,   Feb.    18,    1921. 

65.  Joseph  Revealing   His  Identity  to  His   Brethren  in   Egypt    (10J^xl4j4) 

Dr.     Muller     100 

Osterreith,  Feb.  24,  1921. 

55.     Portrait   of   a    Gentleman    (42^/^x32^),    O.    Bernet,    Agent 4,000 

Van  Dyck,  Sir  Anthony,  School  of. 
Goossens,   Feb.   24,   1921. 

14.     Portraits  of   Saints    (12   panels   in    1    frame,    each   5x4>4) 250 

Van    Eiven,   T.;   Contemporary,   Belgian. 
Robbins,   Feb.   24,    1921. 

66.  The  Market  Place  (59i^x4lH),  S.  A.  Powell ISO 

Van   Loo,  Carle  Andre;  1705-1765,  French. 

Plaza,    Tan.   6,    1921. 

The   Miniature    (28x40),   H.    Rosenberg 92 

Van    Loo,  Jean;    1684-1745,   French. 
Charles,   Nov.    18,    1920. 

666.  Le     Sieur     de     Brissac      (49^^x39^),     A.      L.     Lcewenstein 325 

Van    Marcke,   Emiie;  1827-1890,  French. 
A.   A.   A.,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

140.  Landscape  and   Cattle    (1234x21),   I.   Adams 725 

French,  Jan.  21,   1921. 

150.  Landscape  and  Cattle   (231^x34),  E.  F.   Albee 4,500 

Plaza,   Feb.    19,    1921. 

173.     In  the  Meadow    (10x14),   M.   Reeves 80 

Smithers,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

47.  Cow  Walking    (153/^x21^),   W.   F.   Heniot 310 

Van  Vliet,    K. 

Plaza,    Feb.    18,    1921. 

1212.     Sleighing   in    Belgium    (19x32),   J.    J.    Wilson 50 

Vecelli,    Francesco;  1473-1560,  Italian. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  14,   1921. 

60.     Catarina  Cornaro    (40x33  J^),  A.  Olivotti  &  Co 160 

Velasquez,  Don   Diego  Rodriguez  de  Silva;   1599-1660,  Spanish. 
Smith,  Feb.  3,  1921. 

81.     Queen    Mariana    of    Spain    (28x21) 325 

Velasquez,  School  of;  XVI  Century,  Spanish. 
A.   G.,    Jan.    14,    1921. 

47.  Portrait  of  a  Gentleman    (30^x24),   Miss   I.  Taylor 350 

Clarke,    Tan.    12,    1921. 

131.  Portrait  of  a  Bishop    80 

Vellert,  Dierick  Jacobsz;  active  1511-1544,  Flemish. 
A.   G.,    Jan.    14,   1921. 

n.  Adam  and  Eve   (19x15),  E.  Weyhe 350 

Velten,  Wilhelm;   1847-         ,  German. 
Cummings,  April  29,    1921. 

5.     The  Blacksmith    (8x10)    SO 

Venetian  School. 

A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   14,   1921. 

66.     Two  Senators  (61^^x28^),  A.  Olivotti  &  Co 100 

Venetian   School;   XIV  Century. 
Orselli,   Feb.    16,   1921. 

251.     St.   George   and  the  Dragon    (14x1 1^^^),   A.    Ferraro 75 

Venetian  School;  XVI  Century. 
F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

235.  Portrait    of    a    Geographer    (55x35),    Shields 105 

Venetian  School;  XVII  Century. 
Cattadori,    April    15,    1921. 

536.      (a)   The  Orchestral  Concert  (b)  The  Minuet   (overdoor  panels,  24^x36 

each),  C.  Erlanger    70 


284  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Venetian   School;  XVIII   Century. 
Orselli,   Feb.    16,    1921. 

252.     Madonna  and   Child    (19x16),    S.    Schepps $150 

Veneziano,    Bonifazio;    1487-1553,   Italian. 
Smith,  Feb.  3,  1921. 

88.     Adoration  of  the  Magi   (37j4x5lJ^),  A.   Olivetti  &  Co 425 

Verbeeck,  Cornelius   (?);  Late  XVI  Century,  Dutch. 
A.   G.,   Jan.    14,   1921. 

34.  The  Shipwreck  (113^x21) 80 

Verboeckhoven,  Eugene  Joseph;  1799-1881,  Belgian. 
A.  G.,  April  5,   1921. 

49.     In  the   Sheepfold    (24x32),    M.   T.    Lane 230 

Freeman  Gal.,   Feb.   26,    1921. 

752.     Cows  and  Sheep  at  Pasture   (19^x17^^) 70 

Smithers,  Jan.   20,    1921. 

48.  Cattle  (16^x22^4),  Miss  M.  H.  Dodge 300 

Verboeckhoven,  Eugene  Joseph;  1799-1881,  Dutch  and  Willem  Roelofs. 

A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,  1921. 

29.     Landscape,   Sheep  and   Shepherd    (18^x20),   D.   J.   R.   Ushikubo 525 

Verboeckhoven,   Eugene;  1799-1881,  Belgian  and  Theodore  Tourmois. 
Goossens,   Feb.   17,   1921. 

99.     Landscape,   Cattle  and   Sheep    (19^x29^),  J.    C.   Leslie 260 

103.     Landscape  with  Watermill  and  Cattle    (21^x28M),   Thos.   Footer 200 

Verboeckhoven,  Eugene  Joseph;   1799-1881,  Belgian  and  Louis  Verwee. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  14,   1921. 

54.     Winter  Landscape  with  Figures  (26x36>^),  A.  Olivotti  &  Co 105 

Verbruggen,  Caspar  Pieter;   1669-1720.  Dutch. 
Charles,   Nov.   18,    1920. 

651.  Flowers  and   Fruit    (18^x15^),    F.    B.    Thompson 100 

Vernet,  Claude;  1714-1789,  French. 
Cattadori,  April  15,  1921. 

534.     (c)   Sunset    (d)   The   Bay  of   Naples    (overdoor   panels,   40x23j^   each), 

McCarthy    50 

Orselli,    Feb.    16,    1921. 

257.  The    Great    Storm    (22x31^/^),    S.    Schepps 60 

258.  The   Great  Shipwreck    (22x31>4),   S.    Schepps 70 

Vernon,  Paul;  Deceased,  French. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,  May  7,   1921. 

879.     Approaching  Storm   (36x28),   Dr.  La  Porte 145 

Verocchio,    Andrea;    1435-1488,    Italian. 
Smith,   Feb.  3,   1921. 

17.     Madonna,    Child    and    St.    John    (20j4xl4^),    D.    D.    Sicher 375 

Verwee,   Louis;  XIX   Century,  Belgian  and  Eugene  Joseph   Verboeckhoven. 
A.    A.  A.,   Feb.    14,    1921. 

54.     Winter  Landscape  with  Figure   (26x36^^),  A.   Olivotti  &  Co 105 

Vestier,  Antoine;  1740-1824,  French. 

Fifty-seventh   St.   Gal.,   Feb.   24,    1921. 

274.     Mrs.  Baillot   (36x29),  R.  W.  Lehne 200 

Vibert,  Jehan  Georges;  1840-1902,  French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,  1921. 

28.  Entrance   to   the    Monastery    (25>4x21^),    Robert    Hyman 90 

Bostwick,  Jan.  20,   1921. 

39.  The  Reprimand  (21x26),  E.  F.  Albee 750 

Holmes,   Jan.   20,   1921. 

29.  Old  Letters   (18]^xlS),  Dr.  E.  Cadgene 1,300 

Plaza,  Nov.   5,   1920. 

Painting.     Dr.  J.  Dorr 70 

Vlgee  le  Brun,   Madame  Marie  Louise  Elizabeth;  1755-1842,  French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  3,  1921. 

80.     Portrait   of    Queen    Marie   Antoinette    (31i/^x25i4),    L.   A.    Biddle 325 

Smith,  Feb.  3,   1921; 

82.     A   Young    Nobleman    (28i^x23^),    A.    Olivotti    250 

Vlllavlcencio,   Don  Pedro   Nunez  de;   1635-1700,  Spanish. 

Clarke,   Jan.    12,   1921. 

140.  The  Guardian  Angel,  Brittain 190 

Vincent,   C;  XVIII  Century,   French. 
Bartlett,   March   7,    1921. 

49.  Madame    de    Chassanof     (31J^x25),    B.     R.     Kittredge 130 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  285 

Voiriot,  William;  active  1759-1791,  French. 
A.  G.,  Jan.   14,   1921. 

48.  Portrait  of  Abbe  Charles  Pierre  Louis  Honore  (29x23  J^),  Miss  I.  Taylor      $325 
Vollon,   Antoine;    1833-1900,   French. 
French,  Jan.   20,   1921. 

25.  Violets  and   Objects  of  Art    (10^^x11^4),  A.   Harper 400 

107.  Fruits  and  Object  of  Art   (24xl9M),  Seaman,  Agent 475 

108.  Still  Life    (28^x21  }4),   Mrs.   P.  Jennings 425 

Voltz,    Friederich  Joiiann;   1817-1886,   German. 

Smith  &  Jaffe,  May  20,   1921. 

1196.  Landscape  and   Cattle   .■ 250 

VoSj   Simon   De;   1603-1676,  Dutch. 

Peckham,    March   29,    1921. 

51.     Portrait  of  a  Child   (221^x16^),  B.  R.  Kittredge 140 

Wagner,    ? 

F.  A.  A.  R.,  Dec.   11,  1920. 

797.  The  Abduction    (58x82),   P.    Moscord 95 

Walden,    Lionel;    1862-        ,  American. 
F.  A.  A.    G.,    Nov.   27,    1920. 

298.  The     Ocean     (32x46),    Ellis 70 

Walker,   Horatio,   N.A.;  1858-        ,  American. 
Smithers,   Jan.    20,    1921. 

97.  Milking  Time   (22x16),   C.  J.   McDonough 625 

Walker,   Robert;    1600-1658,  British. 
Charles,  Nov.   18,   1920. 

660.  Sir   John    Lucas    (30x25),    H.    L.    Adams,    Jr 350 

Walter,    E.    A.;    Contemporary. 
A.   G.,   Nov.   26,   1920. 

106.  Landscape    (24x31),    Chas.    Oberwalder's    Sons.  .^ 55 

Wanter,  Carle. 

Smith   &   Jaffe,    May    21,    1921. 

1353.     Madonna  and   Child    100 

Washington,   Georges;  1827-1903,  French. 
Robbins,    Feb.   24,    1921. 

23.     A  Refreshing  Drink  (18^x15) ,  J.  Aron 60 

Watson,    Thomas    H.;    1839-         ,   British. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.  24,   1921. 

39.     Mountain  Sheep    (24x36) ,   S.  A.   Powell 220 

Watteau,  Antoine;  1684-1721,  French. 
French,  Jan.  20,  1921. 

13.  Young  Woman  and  Man    (43^x4),   Seaman,  Agent 80 

Watteau,  Antoine;   1684-1721,  French    (Attributed  to). 
A.    G.,   Nov.   26,    1920. 

47.  Nobility    at    Play     (40x52),    Metropolitan    Galleries 67 

Watteau,  School  of. 
Plaza,  Jan.  6,  1921. 

Fete   Champetre,   J.   J.    Wilson 85 

Watteau,    Louis   Joseph;    1758-1813,    French. 
Charles,   Nov.    19,    1920. 

658.  Portrait   of   an  Actress    (30x25),   C.    B.   Wilson 110 

Weber,  Anton;  1833-         ,   German. 
Smith  &  Jaffe,   May  20,   1921. 

1197.  Portrait   of  a  Lady 65 

Weber,    H.;    German. 

F.  A.   A.   G.,   Nov.   27,    1920. 

257.  A   Difficult   Moment    (24x30),    M.    Ready 85 

Weckendon,   R. 

Plaza,   Feb.    19,    1921. 

166.     Sunset    (36x50),    Weitemeyer    Bros ,j 

Weele,   Herman  Johannes  Van  Der;  1858-        ,  Dutch. 
Roebling,  Jan.  20,   1921. 

75.  Sheep  and  Shepherd   (21x26) ,  Kennedy  &  Co 270 

Weenix,  Jan;  1640-1719,  Dutch  (School  of). 
Weissbcrger,   April    27,    1921. 

494.     Pair  of   Still  Life  Pictures   (26x35j4),  Max  Kuehne 70 

Weir,    J.    Alden,    P.    N.    A.;    1852-1919,    American. 
Plaza,   Feb.    19,    1921. 

.248.     Spring  Landscape   (18x22),  David  Owens SO 

Smithers,   Jan.   21,    1921. 

162.  Lengthening  Shadows   (21J4x26J4),  Dudensing  Galleries 1.600 


286  PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Wcpff,  AdPiaan   Van   Der;   1659-1722,  Dutch. 

Charles,   Nov.   18,    192U. 

856.  The   Huntsman's   Surprise    (19^x15),   Ginsberg  and   Levy $7'5 

West,   Benjamin,   P.   R.   A.;   1738-1820,  American. 
A.  A.  A.,   Feb.   14,   1921. 

57.     The  Holy  Spirit  Descending  Upon  Christ  After  His  Baptism  (36i/2x28), 

F.  K.    Richards    65 

Lehne,  April   1,   1921. 

921.     Battle  of  La  Hogue,  May,  1692   (44x54),  C.  L.  F.  Allen 1,000 

Whistler,    James   Abbott    IVIcNeiil;    1834-1903,   American. 
Newman,   Feb.   24,    1921.     . 

3.      Greenwich     (6x10),     J.     Aron 410 

Whltcombe,  Thomas;  1760-1812,  British. 
Lehne,  April    1,    1921. 

911.     Battle  of  Amperdown,   October   11,    1797    (19x24),    Shoyer 150 

914.     Battle  of  the  Nile,  Aboukir  Bay,  August  1,  1798   (19x25) 160 

Wiggins,  Carlton,  N.  A.;  1848-        ,  American. 
A.  G.,  April  5,   1921. 

28.     Homeward   (20x24)    140 

Cummings,  April   29,   1921. 

24.     Cow    in    Pasture    (12x16) 50 

34.      Summer  Landscape   (17x23)    60 

41.     Landscape  with   Sheep   (6x8) > . .  65 

48.     Cattle    (14x31)    95 

59.     On  the  Way    (16x21) 227 

Wiggins,  Guy  C;  1883-         ,  American. 
Ferlov,   April   5,    1921. 

14.     Coast  Scene    (16x12),  A.   Drake 55 

Williams,   Frederick,   Ballard,  N.  A.;  1871-        ,  American. 
A.  G.,  April  5,   1921. 

57.     Landscape    (25x30),  Arlington 330 

Peckham,   March  29,   1921. 

21.  The  Little  Dryad  (16x12),  Babcock  Galleries 90 

33.     Fantasy    (16x12),    Babcock    Galleries 100 

Smithers,  Jan.   20,    1921. 

66.  Golden   Days    (16x24),  T.    H.    Russell 350 

164.  Vermont  Valley    (28x36),   Parke,   Agent 625 

Willems,    Florent;   1823-1905,  Belgian. 
Goossens,   Feb.    17,    1921. 

107.     The  Lady  of  the  Manor   (30J^x24H),  McCarthy 55 

Wilson,   G.    H. 

Plaza,    Feb.    18,    1921. 

106.     Highland    Cattle    (32x48),    A.    Pearson 65 

Wierusz-Kowalski,   Alfred   Von;   1849-        ,   Polish. 
Beck,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

22.  Merrymakers     (20x24>^ ) ,     S.     A.     Powell 275 

63.     The    Start    of    the    Journey    (30^x40>^),    E.    Takamine 900 

Worms,  Jules;   1832-1881,  French. 
Bostwick,   Jan.    20,    1921. 

84.  A  Proposal  of  Marriage  (27^x29^),  F.  H.  Brunei 370 

F.   A.   A.    R.,    May   7,    1921. 

875.     Spanish  Peasants   (11x16),   P.   Thompson 135 

Wouverman,  Philip;  1619-1668,  Dutch. 
French,   Jan.    20,    1921. 

22.  The  Departure    (19^4x17),    M.   E.    Kein 340 

50.  A  Hawking  Party   (21J^x27),   F.   M.  Donohue 325 

Wulffaerts,   Adriaen;    1804-       .,  Belgian. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,  Nov.  26,   1920. 

71.  Collin    Maillard     (33x48),    Benjamin 112 

Wyant,  Alexander  H.;  1836-1892,  American. 
F.  A.  A.  R.,   Dec.   11,    1920. 

837.  Woodland    Brook    (water   color),   A.    Jensen 90 

F.  A.   A.   R.,  April  9,    1921. 

859.     Smuggler's  Cave,  Jones'  Wood  (9x15),  H.  D.  G.  Rohlfs 130 

Wyatt,   Henry;   1794-1840,  British. 
A.   G.,  Jan.    14,    1921. 

56.  Portrait  of  a  Lady   (20^x17).  F.   Frazer 100 

Wynants,  Jan;   1615-1679,  Dutch. 
F.   A.  A.  R.,   March   18,    1921. 

309.     Castle    on    Hill,    Overlooking    Valley.       Leopold 50 


PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  287 

Wyrsch,   L.    M.  J.;   1732-1798,  French. 
Weissberger,  April  27,   1921. 

469.     Portraits  of  Two   Children    (18^x15) $135 

Ximinez,   Francesco;  XVI  Century,  Castilian. 
Weissberger,  April   28,   1921. 

519.     Retablo  Mayor  (6  panels  divided  by  pilasters)  (75x34),  S.  S.  Auchincloss        325 
Yates,  Cullen,  A.   N.  A.;   1866-         ,  American. 
Cummings,  April  29,    1921. 

33.     Moonrise    (12x18)    52 

65.     Autumn  Landscape    (26x36) 160 

67.     Meadowland    (25x32)    390 

Yen    Shi- Pin;    K'ang-hsi,    Chinese. 
Yamanaka,   Feb.   4,   1921. 

506.     Willow  Tree  and  Heron   (52^x23^),  C.  F.  Meyer 55 

Zamacois,    Eduardo;    1842-1871,   Spanish. 
Taft,    Feb.   3,    1921. 

1.     A   Gentleman   in  Waiting    (63^x3^),   C.   W.   Kraushaar   Galleries 110 

Zaragoza,  Lorenzo  de;  XV  Century,  Italian. 
Weissberger,   April   27,   1921. 

504.     Retablo    (40^x34),    Mrs.   E.    S.    Rothschild 410 

Ziem,   Felix    Francois;    1821-1911,   French. 
A.  A.  A.,  Feb.   3,    1921. 

33.     Marine     (16^x25^),    Warren    Smadbeck 300 

Burgess,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

54.     Scene  in  the   Orient    (18x30^^),  M.   B.   Philipp 875 

58.     Venice    (21x33),   W.    O.    Wood 875 

F.  A.  A.  G.,  Nov.  27,   1920. 

304.  The    Market    Place,    Constantinople    (24^x3554),    Lounes 205 

F.  A.  A.  R.,  Feb.   10,   1921. 

118.     Venice     (32x50),     F.     M.     T.     Lane 250 

French,    Jan   21,    1921. 

103.  Venice   (10^x16^),   Seaman,  Agent    1,050 

Goossens,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

11.     View    of   Constantinople    (10i/^xl6),   Prendergast 275 

Zorn,   Anders;    1860-1920,    Swedish. 
F.   A.   A.   R.,   March   19,   1921. 

508.      Portrait  of   a  Boy.      H.   Hendrik 75 

Zukuly. 

Smith  &  Jaffe,   May  20,   1921. 

1234.     Italian  Interior •    50 

Zurbaran,    Francisco;    1598-1662,   Spanish. 
Smith,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

70.     Head   of    an    Elderly    Man    (29j4x22^).. 175 

Zuccarelli,    Francesco;    1702-1788,   Florentine. 
Orselli,  Feb.   16,   1921. 

262.     Landscape    (32x44),    McCarthy 300 

Zucchero,   F.;   1543-1609,  Spanish. 
Peckham,    March   29,    1921. 

89.     Isabelle  de  Valcis   (44i^x38^),  Baumeister 350 

Zuloaga,   Juan;    1870 ,  Spanish. 

Medina,   April   5.    1921. 

72.     The  Walls  of  Segovia    (painted  on   24   faience  tiles)    (21x56^),   H.   E. 

Farrell    60 


Drawings  Sold  at  Auction 

Allegri,    Antonio    (Called    Correggio);    1494-1534,    Italian. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

37.     St.   Luke   and   St.   Anthony    (87/^x11^),    (drawing),    M.    Sloog 260 

Baldung,   Hans   (called  Grien);  1475-80-1545. 
A.  G.,   Feb.    18,    1921. 

39.      St.    Christopher   Carrying   the   Infant   Christ    (9^x6^1)    (pen   drawing), 

A.    W.    Graetz    310 

Baroccio,    Frederico    (Attributed  to);    1528-1612,  Italian. 
A.  G.,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

102.     The  Holy   Family   (chalk),  W.   C.   Dickerman 27 


288  DRAWINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

BIgl,   Francesco;   1483-1525,  Italian   (Attributed  to  Andrea  del  Sarto). 
A.  G.,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

104.     Head  of  a  "Woman   (crayon  and  water  color),  J.   P.   Sabin $29 

Boucher,    Francois;    1704-1770,  French. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

40.     Diana    and    Endymicn    (Ilj4xl5)    (chalk),    A.    W.    Graetz 310 

Parker,  Nov,  9,   1920. 

22.  L'Amant  Ecoute  (11x8)    (pencil),  Agent 415 

23.  Le  Trait  Dangereux   (sanguine  drawing),  The  Rosenbach  Co 760 

24.  Pastorale  (12^x9)    (charcoal  drawing),  M.  Sloog 325 

Browne,   Hablot  K.;  1815-1882    British. 

Smith,  Feb.  3,  1921. 

3.  Three  Drawings  for  "Bleak  House,"  Dr.  Rosenbach 95 

4.  Two  Drawings  for  "Martin  Chuzzlewit,"  A.  Jachne 100 

5.  Drawings  for  "Nicholas  Nickleby,"   J.    F.    Drake Yl 

6.  Drawings  for  "Nicholas   Nickleby,"    G.   Wells 100 

Buck,  Adam;   1759-1833,   British. 

Parker,  Nov,  9,   1920. 

25.  Countess  of  Cavan   (15^-^x11^4)    (water  color),  T.  J.   Gannon 275 

26.  Portrait   of   Miss   Bloomfield    (9x5 H)    (pencil),   T.  J.   Gannon 320 

Crulkshank,  George;  1792-1878,  British. 

Smith,  Feb.  3,  1921. 

10.     Finished  drawing  for  the  "Lay  of  St.  Nicholas,"  G.  E.  Smith,  Jr 110 

14.     Sketch  for   "Comic   Almanack,    1851,"    B.    Winthrop 55 

16.  Sketches  for  "Life  in  Paris"  and  "Pilgrims  Progress,"  Dr.  Rosenbach..         220 
Du   Maurier,  George;  1834-1896,  British. 

Smith,  Feb.   3,   1921. 

17.  "Things  One  Would  Rather  Have  Expressed  Differently,"  Hill 60 

Engelbrechtsen,   Cornelis;    1468-1533,  Dutch. 

A.   G.,   Feb.   18,    1921. 

45.  A    King    Feasting,    While    Outside    of    His    Palace    a    Saint    Is    Being 

Martyred   (circular,  diameter  9)    (ink).  Dr.  G.  F.   Muller 175 

Flagg,    James    Montgomery;    1877-         ,   American. 
Smith,  Feb.  3,  1921. 

18.  Caricature  Portrait  of  Theodore  Roosevelt,  Smith 35 

Fox,    H.    C;  XIX   Century.    British. 

Henkels,    March   28,    1921. 

23.     Driving    Ducks    (water    color),    A.    J.    Cameron 50 

Fragonard,   Jean    Honore;   1732-1806,  French. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

46.  Allegorical   Composition    (7^/^x10),    (drawing) 50 

47.  Two    Women    Playing    with    an    Infant    (6^x8^) 75 

Glllray,   James;    1757-1815,  British. 
Smith,  Feb.  3.  1921. 

20.     Introduction  of  Citizen  Volpone  and  His  Suite  at  Paris,  R.   Fridenberg  32 

Guardi,   Francesco;    1712-1793,   Venetian. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

50.  Group   of    about    Twenty-four   People    (5?^xll)     (pen),    M.    Sloog 725 

51.  Three   Groups   of  Venetians    (65^x8J^)    (pen  drawing),    M.    Sloog 725 

52.  Group  of  Three  Cavaliers  and  a  Woman    (5x5)    (Sepia  drawing),  Mrs. 

Bradley-Marten    480 

53.  Group    of   Two    Men    and    Two    Women    (5x5)     (pen    drawing),    Mrs. 

Bradley-Marten    480 

Howitt,   Samuel;    1765-1822,  British. 
Smith,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

23.  A  series  of  Animal   Drawings    (7j4x5^),    G.   C.    Smith,   Jr 80 

Huet,  J.    B.;   School  of. 

A.  G.,  Feb.  4,  1921. 

112.     Heads  of  Cattle,  Horses(  etc.    (drawings),  I.  Varan 30 

Jordaens,    Jacob;    1593-1678,    Flemish. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

49.     Christ   with   the  Disciples  at   Emaus    (10x11^)    (color   sketch),   A.   W. 

Graetz     250 

Lawrence,  T.;  School  of. 
A.  G.,  Feb.  4,  1921. 

114.     Head  of  a  Girl  (water  .color),  J.  D.  Karn 47 

Leech,   John;   1817-1864,  British. 
Smith,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

24.  Thames   Fishing    (sketch   in   oils)    (20x16),   Dr.    Rosenbach 55 

25.  Very   Alarming   Indeed    (sketch   in   oils)    (15^x21),    B.   Winthrop 55 

26.  While   They   Are   at    Scarborough    (sketch    in  oils)    (29x21),    Winthrop  25 


DRAWINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  289 

Leech — Ccntinucd. 

27.  The  Bishop  of  Durham    (water  color)    (4x5 1^).  J.   F.    Drake %77 

28.  The   Good    Little   Boy    (water   color)    (10//^x9i^),   J.    F.    Drake -40 

29.  Handley  Cross    (5   water  color  and   pencil   drawings),   G.   C.   vSmith,   Jr.         220 

30.  The  Race  for  the   Derby,   1851    (water  color)    (19Mxl2j4),   Dr.    Rosen- 

bach    155 

31.  Returning  from   a   Fancy  Ball    (water  color)    (12^x7^),   B.   Winthrop  92 

33.     A    Day    at    Biarritz    (water    color)     (20^x1234) 40 

35.     Album  of  Drawings  (water  color),  G.  C.   Smith,  Jr 210 

Lombard    School;    second   half   of    the  XV    Century. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

57.  Altar    Composition    (6^^x11)     (pen    drawing),    Dr.    G.    F.    MuUer 300 

Lorrain,   Claude    (Gellee);   1600-1682,   French. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

48.     Classical     Landscape     (63/1x9]^)      (pen),     M.     Sloog 110 

Master  of  the  Amsterdam   Cabinet;   middle  of  XV  Century,  German. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

54.  Coronation    of    a    Bishop    and    the    Martyrdom    of    the    Ten    Thousand 

(8^x5^)     (pen).    Dr.    G.    F.    Muller 550 

Master  of  the  Playing  Cards;  active  1430-1440,  German. 
A.   G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

55.  Christ    Tied    to    a    Column    (73^x5)     (pen    drawing),    A.    W.    Graetz.  .         275 

Mesdag,  Hendrik  Willem;  1831-1915,  Dutch. 
Fitzgibbons,   March   21,   1921. 

102.     Gathering  Potatoes    (water  color)    (13^x20^^) 25 

Millet,  Jean  Francois;   1814-1875,   French. 
Walpole,  April   13,    1921. 

193.     Woman  Pouring  Water    (drawing)    (9x7),   Otting 80 

Morland,   George;   1763-1804,  British. 
A.    G.,   Feb.    4,    1921. 

115.     An  Episode  from  "II  Pastor  Fido"    (water  color),  Dratwood 112 

Walpole,  April   13,    1921. 

199.     The  Lazy  Shepherd  (drawing  in  pencil  and   chalk)    (iSxlSJ^),  Otting..  45 

Orley,    Barent   Van;    1491-1542,   Dutch. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

67.  The  Adoration  of  the  Magi    (llj/8x7^)    (pen  drawing),  R.   Ederheimer        275 

Ostade,    Adrian    Van;    1610-1685,   Dutch. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

68.  Interior  of  a  Peasant's  House    (105^x15)    (drawing),   M.   Sloog 425 

69.  A    Woman     (3^/^x2^)     (water    color),     M.     Sloog 200 

70.  Old  Woman  Combing  the  Hair  of  a  Little  Boy  (3^x2^)  (water  color), 

M.    Sloog    130 

Pyle.    Howard;    1853-1911,  American. 
Moore,   Feb.   4,    1921. 

120.      Scene  in  New  York  during  the  Revolution   (drawing),  J.   F.  McCarthy.  40 

Reinagle,    P.;    1749-1833,    British. 
Smith,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

38.     Woodcock   Shooting    (sketch   in  oil)    (17^x13),   H.   J.   King 55 

Rembrandt,  Van    Ryn;   1606-1669,  Dutch. 
A.  A.  A.   March   21,    1921. 

109.     The  Holy  Family  (drawing  in  wash)    (8i^x7^) 37 

A.   G.,   Feb.    18,   1921. 

58.  Landscape:     Old    Farmhouse     Surrounded    by    Trees     (3  5/gx634)     (pen 

and     ink) ,     R.     Ederheimer .' 120 

Rowlandson,  Thomas;    1756-1827,   British. 
Smith,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

41.  Carried  in  Comfort   (water  color)    (8^x5^),  J.    F.  Drake 30 

42.  Clapping  a  Codicil  to  His  Will   (water  color)    (6x7^^),  Winthrop 32 

43.  The   Cockney  Hunt    (S^^xll),  J.   F.   Drake 25 

45.     The   Drinker    (water    color)    (6^4x8),    G.   C.    Smith,    Jr 25 

47.  The    Glutton    (water    color)     (1334x954),    J.    F.    Drake 62 

48.  La    Presentation    (water    color)     (834x8),    G.    C.    Smith,    Jr 50 

49.  Land  Stores  and  Sea  Stores  (water  color)    (9i4xl2j4),  G.  C.  Smith,  Jr.  55 

50.  Lone   Tree   Hill    (143^x91/^),    D.    L.    Brown 30 

51.  Man    Traps    in    These    Grounds     (water    color)     (10x7M).     Browning..  27 

52.  My  Aunt  and  Uncle   (water  color)    (M^^xlO),  J.   F.  Drake 52 

53.  Open  Air  Preaching  (water  color)    (15x934),  G.  C.  Smith,   Tr 85 

54.  The   Pigeon   Trap,   Covent   Garden    (water   color)    (11x17),   J.    F.    Drake  40 

55.  Sale   of    Curiosities   (water   color)     (12x9^),    G.    Wells 42 

57.  The  Wisdom's  in  the  Wig   (water  ^color)    (9^x11^),   D.   L.  Brown 35 

58.  A  Young  Spark  and  the   Money  Lenders   (8^x11),  J.  F.   Drake 40 


290  DRAWINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Rubens,   Peter  Paul;   1577-1640,  Flemish. 
A.   G.,   Feb.    18,    1921. 

59.  Academic  Study  o£  an  Athlete    (IIH^^H)    (pen  drawing) $90 

Sanzio,  Raphael;   1483-1520,  Italian. 

A.    G.,   Feb.   4,    1921. 

121.     The  Holy  Family   (chalk),  J.   F.    McCarthy 80 

Sarto,  Andrea  Del;  1486?-1531,  Italian,  or  Francesco  Bigi. 
A.    G.,   Feb.   4,    1921. 

104.     Head  of  a  Woman   (crayon  and  water  color),  J.   P.  Sabin 29 

Seymour,    Robert;    1800-1836,    British. 
Smith,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

60.  Will  You  Have  Some  Pickle?    (water  color)    (6x6j^),  J.  F.   Drake 52 

Sesto,  Cesaro  da;  1480-1521,  Italian. 

A.   G.,   Feb.    18,   1921. 

61.  The   Holy   Family  with   the   Infant   St.   John  and   an  Angel    (6§^x4^) 

(sanguine   drawing),    R.    M.    Macey 510 

Stimmer,   Tobias;    1539-1592,   Swiss-German. 
A.   G.,   Feb.    18,    1921. 

60.  The   Last  Judgement    (circular,    diameter    12>^)    (pen    drawing  touched 

with   color)    60 

Stuart,   Gilbert;   1755-1828,   American. 
Housman,   Oct.   30,   1920. 

378.  George  and  Martha  Washington    (pen  and  ink  sketches),  J.   Larocque.  .  25 

Tenniel,  John;  1820-1914,  British. 
Smith,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

61.  13  drawings  for  Alice  in  Wonderland  and  Through  the  Looking  Glass, 

H.    J.    Hill 140 

Thomson,   Hugh. 

Smith,    Feb.    3,    1921. 

63.     8  drawings  to  the  Vicar  of  Wakefield    (pen  and   ink),   B.  Winthrop...         110 
Timoteo,  Viti   (called  delle  Vite);  1470-1524,  Italian. 
A.   G.,  Feb.    18,    1921. 

63.     Full-Length     Figure     of     a     Saint     in    Armour     (14^x5^)      (charcoal 

drawing) ,    A.    W.    Graetz 8C 

Toorenvliet,  Jacob;    1641-1719,   Dutch. 
Parker,    March    9,    1920. 

86.  Woman    Feeding   Monkey    (9x7^)    (pencil),    P.   Lorillard 90 

Turner,  J.   M.  W.;  1775-1851,  British. 
A.   G.,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

128.     Architectural   Landscape    (water-color),  J.    D.   Kern 185 

Ucello,  Paolo  (Pacio  di   Dono);   1389-1422  Italian  (Attributed  to). 
A.   G.,   Feb.    18,   1921. 

120.     Warrior    in    Fantastic    Garb    Mounted    on    a    Horse    Which    Is    Rearing 

Over   a   Fallen    Fighter    (11^x6^4)    (ink).   Dr.    G.    F.    Muller        120 
Unknown. 

•Smith,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

99.     Pastoral    Scenes    (2    water   colors),    N.    Cohen 25 

Van    Dyck,   Anthony;   1599-1641,   Flemish.- 
A.   G.,   Feb.    18,    1921. 

66.     The    Count    of    Arenberg    on    Horseback,    an    Attendant    to    the    Left 

(9x9^)    (pen    drawing).    Dr.    G.    F.    Muller 350 

Veronese,  Paolo  (Paolo  Cagliari);  1530-1588,  Italian  (attributed  to). 
A.   G.,   Feb.    18,    1921. 

41.     Christ   Before    Caiphas    (12j4x8M)     (charcoal    and    ink) 50 


Prints  Sold  at  Auction 


Affleck,  Andrew   F.;  XIX  Century,  British. 
A.  G.,  Feb.  4,  1921. 

131.     Interior  of  the  Milan  Cathedral   (painter  etching),  C.   Klarkner 32 

Alix,    Pierre    Michel;    1762  1817,    French. 
Parker,   Nov.   9,   1920. 

1.  Eugene  de  Beauharnais   (engraving  printed  in  color),  The  Rosenbach  Co.  75 

2.  Le  Tourneur   (engraving  printed  in  color),  C.  F.  R.  Drake 125 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  291 


Aiken,   Henry;  XIX  Century,  British. 
Cooper,   May   19,   1921. 

63.     Something  Slap   (colored   aquatint),  P.  Whitney $25 

Smith,   Feb.   3,    1921.  _ 

70.     Fox  Hunting   (8  engravings),  H.  J.  King 50 

American    School,    Early. 

Rosenthal,    Dec.    14,    1920.  ,    „   .  „. 

135.  General  Washington    (mezzotint  colored  by  hand)    (12^x8  6-8) 110 

136.  General  Washington   (mezzotint  colored  by  hand)    (13-9x11-12) 120 

Bartolozzi,   Francesco;   1725-1815,  Italian. 

A.  G.,   Feb.  4,   1921.  .           .          ,.     ^    ,,    , 

144.     Venus  Attired  by  the  Graces   (stipple  printed  m  red),  F.  Meder 45 

72.'     October    (after    painting    by    W.    Hamilton)     (engraving),    M.    Sloog.  .  .         210 
Bell,  April  20,   1921.  ,   .         ,       . 

2.     The  Return  from  Shooting   (printed  m  colors) ^7 

Barton,   Loren,   R. 

Jones,  March  28,  1921. 

I.  George    Arliss    as    Disraeli     (etching) ^o 

Baumann,  I.  W. 

Housman,   Oct.  30,    1920.  ,  „,     ,  .  ,  s    tt  ,     t,       ■   • 

376.    (a)    George  Washington,    (b)    Death   of  Washington,    (c)    Hale  Receiving 

Instructions    from   Washington    (woodcut) 50 

Bell,   Edward;  XVIII  Century,  British-American. 

Bell,  April  21,   1921.  .      ,      ,  •         ,         ,r 

10.  Mutual   Confidence,  or,  the   Sentimental   Friends    (mezzotint  after  Mor- 

land,  printed  in  colors) •.  •  55 

11.  Delicate    Embarrassment,    or   the    Rival    Friends    (mezzotint    printed   in 

colors,    after    Morland) 60 

13.     The  Cottage  Sty    (mezzotint  printed  in  colors,    after  Morland) 32 

Benazech,  Charles;   1740-1803.  British. 

Parker,   Nov.   9,   1920.  .  .        ,    .  ,       x      tvt     -,- 

9.  Le    Couronnement    de   la   Rosiere    (engraving    printed    in   colors),    N.    K. 

Landau    10^ 

Bennett,  W.  J.;  1787-1844,  American. 

255.'     The  Fire   of    1835,    New  York.      The   Great   Fire   and   the   Ruins,    New 

York  (Colored  aquatints — after  a  painting) 55 

Bertinot,  Gustave   Nicholas;   1822-         ,  French. 

iV     La'Vierge  aux  Donateurs    (engraving,   after  Van  Dyck) SO 

Bispham,   Henry  Collins;   1841-1882,  American. 
Brewster,    May    19,    1921. 

7.     Coach  and  Four  (47x29)^),  J.  P.  'Sabin 80 

Bone,    Muirhead;   Contemporary,   British. 
Jones,   March  28,   1921. 

3.  Great    Yarmouth    (etching),    J.    F.    Drake 270 

4.  On  the   Clyde    (set  of  6   lithographs) 27 

5.  Walberswick   Ferry    (etching),    F.   Keppel 210 

6.  Evening,  Genoa  (etching) ,  Kennedy  &  Co 180 

Bonington,    Richard    Parkes;    1801-1828,    British. 

Jones,   March  28,   1921. 

7.  Rue  du   Gros  Horloge,   Rouen   (etching) 25 

Bonnemaison,   Fereol   de;    P-1827,  French. 

Brewster,    May    19,    1921. 

31.     Promenade  au  Bois  de  Boulogne Attelage  a  la  Daumont    (colored 

lithograph) ,  A.   B.   Maclay    38 

Bonnet,    Louis    Marin;    1743-1793,    French. 
A.    G.,  Feb.    18,   1921. 

74.     Offrande  a  I'Hymen   (engraving  printed  in  color),  B.  L.   Hollander....         150 
Parker,    Nov.    9,    1920. 

10.  Le  Dejeune  (after  J.  B.  Huet)    (engraving  printed  in  color),  The  Rosen- 
bach    Co 2,225 

II.  L'Amant  Ecoute   (engraving  printed  in  color).  The  Rosenbach   Co 340 

12.  Bazile  et  Laurette   (engraving),  A.  J.   Brader,  Jr 65 

13.  Head  of   a  Woman   (14^x11^)    (pastel),   Mrs.  W.    H.   Erharat 120 

14.  Le  Pas  de  Menuet   (engraving  printed  in  color) 310 

15.  The  Pleasures   of   Solitude    (engraving  printed   in   color) 85 

16.  The  Woman  Taking  Coffee   (engraving  in  color  with  gold  border),   E.   F. 
Bonaventure 600 

17.  The  Milk  Woman   (engraving  in  color,  gold  border),  E.  F.  Bonaventure..  600 

18.  Vertumnus  and  Pomone  (engraving  printed  in  color,  gold  border) 170 

19.  Zephire  and  Flore  (engraving  printed  in  color,  gold  border) 170 


292  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Brangwyn,  Frank;  1867-        ,  British, 
A.  A.  A.,  Dec.   10,   1920. 

11.  Cannon   St.    Station    (28x28^)    (etching) $27 

A.   G.,   Feb.   4,    1921. 

157.     The   Blacksmiths    (etching),    F.    Suval 40 

Hall,   March    10,    1921. 

21.  Hop    Pickers     (etching)     (24)4x37) 35 

22.  St.    Peter's,   Genoa    (etching)    (22^x25>^) 25 

26.     The   Bridge  of   Sighs,   Venice    (etching)    {27Jixl7H) 80 

Breton,  Jules  Adolphe;  1827-1906,  French. 
Bcstwick,   Dec.    10,   1920. 

10.  Return  from   Harvesting    (16^x32^)    (etched   by   Charles   Walters) 29 

11.  Eve  of   St.  John   (18x31)    (etched  by  Charles  Walters) 42 

Buhot,   Felix;   1847-1898.  French. 
Hall,   March    10,    1921. 

41.     Une  Matinee   d'Hiver  au  Quai  de  I'Hotel-Dieu   (etching)    (9^x12^).,  85 

A3.     L'Hiver   a   Paris   ou   la   Neige   a   Paris    (etching)    (10x135^) 100 

44.  L'Hiver  a   Paris  ou  la  Neige  a  Paris    (etching)    (10x13^) 85 

45.  L'Hiver  a  Paris  ou  la  Neige    (etching)    (9>4xl4) 55 

46.  La    Place    Pigalle    (etching)     (9?ixl35/^) 50 

47.  Une    Jette    en    Angleterre    (etching)     (Il34x7ji) 77 

48.  La    Dame    aux   Cynes    (etching)    (5^x7^) 30 

50.  Le   Peintre  de    Marne    (etching)    (55^x814) 25 

51.  Les  Voisins   de   Compagne    (etching)    (5^4x7) 160 

52.  Les    Petits    Chaumieres    (etching)     (4x5^) 60 

55.  Westminster  Bridge  or  Westminster  Clock  Tower  (etching)    (11^4^15^)  190 

56.  Les    Esprits    des    Villes    Mortes    (etching)     (12^x1734) 27 

57.  La   Place  des   Martyres   et   Taverne   du   Dagne    (etching)    (13 J'^xl73^)  .  .  150 

58.  La    Falaise    (etching)     (ll.>4xl55^) 70 

59.  The  Marine  Painter   (etching)    (5^x8^4) 25 

Walpcle,  April   13,   1921. 

26.  Westminster    Palaces    (etching)    52 

27.  Clock    Tower   Westminster    (etching) 55 

28.  La  Taverne   du  Bagne    (1st   state)    (etching) 37 

29.  Matinee  d'Hiver  sur  les  Quais   (etching  with   dry-point) 42 

31.     La  Place   Pigalle   (etching) 32 

Buncho,   Ippitsuai;  1746-1796,  Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

285.     Actor    Portrait.      A.    B.    Duel 45 

287.  Night    Scene.      A.    B.    Duel 80 

288.  The    Cake    Vendor.      H.    Mansfield 60 

Walpole,   Jan.  22,   1921. 

634.  The  3rd  Matsumoto  Koshiro  (12i/$x5 j/^),  Buckingham 210 

635.  Kikunojo   Dancing  Shakkyo    (12^x6),   Manning 110 

636.  The  2nd  Ichiwawa  Yaozo    (12)4x6),  Hume 80 

Walpole.   March   2,    1921. 

23.  Actor  Onoe   Matsusuke   as   Oiso  and  a  Young  Actor 60 

24.  The  Lovers,   0-Hatsu  and   Tokubei 52 

25.  Actor  Ichikawa  Yaozo  II  as  Akaneya  Hanshichi 65 

26.  Actor  Ichikawa   Danjuro   IV   as   Tenjiki   Tokubei 45 

27.  Actor  Sakata  -Hongoro  as  a  Wrestler  in   a  Play 32 

28.  Actors   Ichikawa  as   Kichisaburo   and   Ichikawa  Yaozo  II 42 

29.  Actor  Onoe    Matsusuke   as   Torinoumi   Yasaburo 40 

30.  Actor  Nakamura   Matsue  in  a   Female   Role 40 

31.  Actor  Ichikawa  Yaozo  as  Umeomaru  in   Sugawara 115 

32.  Actors   Ichikawa    Komazo   as   Kuranosuke 55 

33.  Actor   Sakata   Hongoro    52 

Bunkyo;   Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,   Feb.    13,   1921. 

823.     Matsubaya  Tea  House.     C.  H.  Chandler 25 

Bunro;    Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,  Feb.    13,   1921. 

827.     An  Oiran.     C.  H.   Chandler 25 

Buttre,  J.  C.   (After  Woolaston.) 
Housman,  Oct.    30.    1920. 

381.   Martha    Washington     (mezzotint) 70 

Cameron,    David    Young;    1865-         ,    Scotch. 
Hall,    March    10,    1921. 

61.  The    Unicorn     (77/^x3) 35 

62.  The    Crucifix     (etching)     (lli^x6^) 110 

63.  Henry  the  Seventh's  Chapel   (etching)    (6)4x5)^) 50 

64.  Siena    (etching)    (11^x5^) 190 

65.  Rue  Saint  Julien   le   Pauvre    (etching)    (8?4x64^) 75 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  293 

Cameron — Continued. 

66.  Old   Whitby    Bridge    (77Ax\2H) $100 

67.  The    Boddin     (5x6^     (drypoint) 35 

68.  Dinnetmoor      (drypoint)      (6^x117^) 110 

69.  Amboise    (etching)     (103/^x6i^) 125 

70.  A    Norman    Village    (etching)     (5^4x7) 90 

Walpole.    April    13,    1921. 

41.     Hermitage    Castle,    Liddesdale.      Cross 35 

Cassatt,    Mary;    1855-         ,    American. 
Hall,    March   10,    1921. 

73.  Mere    et    Tentant    (drvpoint)     (167^x12^) 60 

74.  Enfant   et    Fauteuil    (drvpoint)    {llji^^yj) 75 

Walpole,    April    13.    1921. 

49.  The  Letter    (dry-point,  printed   in  colors),  Perkins 100 

50.  Afternoon   Tea    (dry-point   printed    in    colors),   Perkins 60 

51.  Before  the   Looking  Glass    (dry-point  printed  in  colors),   Perkins 65 

52.  The  Fitting   (dry-point   printed   in  colors),    Keppel 85 

53.  In    the   Omnibus    (dry-point    printed   in    colors),    Harlow 75 

54.  Waiting   (dry-point   printed   in   colors),   Perkins 65 

55.  Baby's   Bath    (dry-point  printed   in   colors),   Harlow 95 

56.  Mother  and   Child    (dry-point) ,   Brand 55 

57.  Children   Reading  a   Paper   (dry-point) ,   Keppel 57 

58.  The   Toilet    (dry-point  printed    in   colors),  Hartshorne 115 

59.  Mother  and   Child    (dry-point  printed  in   colors),   Harlow IIS 

60.  Mother  and  Child   (dry-point  printed   in  colors),   Harlow 145 

61.  Before  the   Fire   (aquatint),  Harlow 42 

Whitney,   March  21,   1921. 

122.     The  Bath    (drypoint  and  aquatint)    (14i4xl0i^) 52 

Charlet,  Franz;   1862-         ,  Belgium. 
A.  G'.,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

164.      Grandpapa    (original   etching  printed   in   colors),  A.   Pevens 25 

Charreyre,    E.;  Contemporary,   French. 
Bcstcn   Museum.    Feb.    4,    1921. 

46.      Christ  Presented  to  the  People   (etching,  after  Rembrandt) SO 

Choki,   Yeisoai;   1764-1796,   Japanese. 
Schraubstadter.    Feb.    12,    1921. 

830.  The    Black    Box.      R.    A.    Bidwell 70 

831.  The  Interesting  Letter.     A.  B.  Duel 35 

Walpole.   Tan.   20,    1921. 

126.  Walking  in  New  Fallen   Snow   (143/^x95/^).   Ainsworth 80 

128.   Seiro  Kinugino  no  Ame   (14§^x28),   Miss  Buckingham 1,100 

Claessens,   Lambert  Anton;  1764-1834,  French. 
A.  G.,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

2.     La  Femme  Hydropique    (engraving,  after  G.   Dou) 75 

Couer,    Louis    Le;    end    of  XVIII    Century,    French. 
A.  G.,  Feb.  18,  1921. 

86.     La   Viellesse    d'Annette    et    Lubin    (engraving  printed    in    color),    R.    N. 

Moore     260 

Parker,   Nov.   9,    1920. 

69.   Le   Promenade   du   Jardin   du   Palais   Royal,    1787    (engraving   printed    in 

color) .    M.    Sloog 625 

Condit,   W.   J. 

A.  G.,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

250.     The    Government    House,    New    York     (lithograph    in    colors),     J.     M. 

Montgomery    32 

Coqueret,    Pierre    Charles;    1761-Circa   1832,   French. 
Parker,   Nov.   9,    1920. 

28.  On  Doit  a  sa  Patrie  le   Sacrifice  de  s;s  plus  Cheres  Affections   (engrav- 
ing   printed    in    color) 1 60 

Cormack,   IVIrs.   Minne;   1862-         ,  British. 
Hall,    March    10,    1921. 

76.      Miss    Farren,    Countess    of    Derby    (mezzotint)     (24x15^^) 25 

Corot,  Jean   Baptiste  Camille;  1796-1875,  French. 
Boland,    Dec.    2,    1920. 

35.   Souvenir  de  Toscane   (etching)    (4^^x7) 25 

37.  Un   Lac  du  Tyrol   (etching)    (4i^x6^) 25 

Cosway,    Richard;    1742-1821,   British. 
Parker,    Nov.    9,    1920. 

30.  Comtesse  de  Perigord  et  ses  Filles   (8^^3x65/^)    (pencil),  T.  J.  Gannon..  175 

31.  Duke   of   Marlborough    (9x5i/4)    (pencil),   R.    Ederheimer 300 

32.  Lady  Jersey  as  Hebe   (834-x7^0    (water  color),  T.  J.  Gannon 175 

33.  Madame  Recamier   (9x5^)    (drawing),  T.  J.   Gannon 500 

34.  Portrait  of  a  Young  Man   (9x5  K),  R.  Ederheimer 200 

35.  Views  of    London    (6)    (aquatints),  A.  Ackerman  &  Son 3Q0 


294  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Cousins,  Samuel;   1801-1887,  British. 
Walpole,   April   13,    1921. 

79.     Robert   Burns   (mezzotint  after  Alexander   Nasmyth),   McGuire $110 

Daubigny,  Charles  Francois;  1817-1878,  French. 
Boland,  Dec.  2,   1920. 

53.  L'Automne,   Souvenir   de  Morvan    (etching)    (45^x7^8) 25 

56.  La  Pecherie    (etching)    (6^x5^) 25 

59.  Les  Cerfs  au  Bord  de  I'eau   (etching)    (4^x6p^) 25 

60.  Le  Buisson    (etching)    (13x15^)    (after  painting  by  Ruysdael) 37 

61.  Le  Bac  de  Bezons    (etching)    i3Hx6V&) 35 

62.  Les  Cerfs  Sous  Bois    (etching)    (6^x4^/^) 62 

63.  Les  Vaches  au   Marais    (etching)    (4%x8^) 35 

67.  Le  Brintemps  (etching)    (4f^x95'^) 25 

69.  Le  Chant  du  Coq  (etching)    (5)4x4^) 25 

85.  Voyage  en  Bateau  (etching)    (4^x6) 55 

41.  La  Noce  de  Village   (etching)    (3x5^-^) 26 

45.  L'Orage   (etching)    (4^x8^)    77 

Jones,   March   28,    1921. 

10.  Le    Petit    Pare   aux    Moutons    (etching),    A.    H.    Harlow 310 

11.  Les    Bords    du    Cousin    (etching) 150 

Hall,  -March    1.0,    1921. 

79.     Voyage  en  Bateau    (set  of   16  etchings)    (average  size  4J/^x6) 52 

Dawe,    Philip;    active    about    1760. 
A.  G.,  Feb.    18,   1921. 

76.  Death  of  Robin  (mezzotint  in  color),  J.  F.  Drake,  Inc 410 

77.  Robin's    Interment    (mezzotint    in    color),    J.    F.   Drake,    Inc 410 

Debucourt,    Philibert    Louis;   1755-1852,  French. 
A.  G.,  Feb.    18,   1921. 

78.  Le    Compliment    ou    La    Matinee    du    jour    de    I'an    (engraving),    J.    F. 

Drake    610 

79.  Les    Bouquets,    ou    la    Fete    de    la    Grandmaman    (engraving   printed    in 

color),    J.    F.   Drake,    Inc 590 

Parker,    Nov.    9,    1920. 

36.  La  Promenade  Publique   (engraving).  The  Rosenbach  Co 2,150 

37.  Promenade   de    la   Galerie   du   Palais   Royal,    1787    (engraving    printed   in 
color) ,   Paul  A.    Isler 385 

38.  La   Noce   de   Village   (engraving  printed   in   color),   Paul   A.   Isler 420 

39.  Le  Menuet  de  la  Mariee,  1786   (engraving  printed  in  color),   M.   Sloog..  600 

Demarteau,   Gilles;    1722-1776,   French. 
A.  G.,  Feb.    18,  1921. 

80.  Pastorale     (engraving    printed    in    .color),    J.     S.    Phipps 250 

81.  Pastorale    (engraving    printed    in    color),    J.    S.    Phipps    240 

Parker,    Nov.    9,    1920. 

40.  Pastorale     (engraving     in    2     colors) 120 

Descourtis,  Charles   Melchior;   1753-1820,  French. 
Parker,    Nov.    9,    1920. 

41.  Foire   de  Village   (engraving  printed   in   color),   Paul   A.    Isler 400 

42.  La   Rixe    (engraving  printed    in   color),    Paul   A.    Isler 375 

43.  Noce   au   Chateau,    1789    (engraving   printed    in    color) 450 

44.  La  Tambourin    (engraving  printed   in   color) 375 

45.  L'Amant   Surpris    (engraving   printed   in   color),   T.   J.    Gannon 890 

46.  Princess  Frederica  Louise  Wilhelmina,   Margravine  of  Beireuth   (engrav- 
ing printed   in   color) 425 

Desnoyers,   Auguste   Boucher;  1779-1857,  French. 
A.    G.,   Feb.   4,    1921. 

4.  La  Belle  Jardiniere    (engraving,   after   Raphael) SO 

5.  La  Belle  Jardiniere  de  Florence    (engraving,   after   Raphael) 50 

Desrais,    Charles    Louis;    1746-1816,    French. 
Parker,    Nov.    9,    1920. 

47.  La   Promenade   du   Boulevard   Italian    (etching  finished   with   the   graver, 
colored  by  hand) 80 

Devere;    XVIII    Century,   French    (After  Trumbull). 
Housman,   Oct.    30    1920. 

383.  Battle  of  Bunker  Hill  (36x56),  A.  C.  Haight 25 

Dickinson,   William;    1746-1823,   British-French. 
Parker,  Nov.   9,   1920. 

48.  The    Garden    of    Carleton    House     (engraving    printed    in    bistre),    Mrs. 

W.    H.    Erharat 120 

Durer,  Albrecht;   1471-1528,  German. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,  1921. 

44.     The    Owl     (2^x8^)     (wood    cut).    Agent 1,600 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  295 

Durer — Continued. 

Hall,  March  9,   1921. 

86.  Virgin   with    Child    in    Swaddling   Clothes    (engraving)    (5^x3^) $35 

87.  The   Virgin   Crowned   by  Two  Angels    (engraving)    (5^x3^^) 25 

90.     The    Betrothal   of   the    Virgin    (115^x8^0    25 

Walpole,  April  13,   1921. 

97.  Jesus  Christ  Expirant  sur  la  Croix   (engraving),  Burton 70 

98.  Christ   Descending   into   Hell    (engraved    1512),    Skoyles 40 

100.  La  Joueur  de  Cornemuse   (engraving) 35 

101,  Albert    de   Mayence   (engraving) 30 

Duthe;   active   1800-1840,  French. 
A.    G.,   Feb.   4,    1921. 

184.  The    Four    seasons    (stripple    and    line    engraving    after    Duvivier),    E. 

Collins,   Agent    41 

Edwards,  S.  Anient;   Contemporary,  British. 
A.  A.  A.,  Dec.   10,   1920. 

28.  The  Duchess  of  Devonshire   (15x12) 105 

A.  A.  A.,  March  21,   1921. 

11.  Bosom  Friends    (14^x11^^) 90 

15.  Duchess      of     Devonshire      and      Child      (mezzotint      after      Reynolds) 
(14^x1 6H)    60 

16.  Lady  Dudgeon    (mezzotint  after  Raeburn)    (20J4xll) 85 

20.     George  Washington    (mezzotint  after  E.   Savage)    (10x8^) 45 

29.  Lady  Hallett    (mezzotint  after   Gainsborough)    (14^x7/>8) 95 

30.  Lady  Sheffield   (mezzotint  after  Gainsborough)    (19x11) 85 

41.     Madame    le    Brun    and   Child    (mezzotint    after    Mme.    Vigee    le    Brun) 

(13J4xll>4)     135 

48.      Princess  Beaujolais    (mezzotint  after  Nattier)    (18^xl3M) 130 

54.     Sympathy   (mezzotint  after  Greuze)    (M^/^xll^^) 145 

62.  William,   Prince  of  Orange    (mezzotint  after  Van   Dyck)    (18^x12^)..  150 

63.  A  Lady  of  Bruges  (mezzotint  after  Van  Dyck)    (13^x11^) 45 

66.     Louise  de  Bourbon   (mezzotint  after  Mignard)    (16^x13^) 115 

69.     The    Lute   player    (mezzotint   after    Hals)    (13^x11^) 40 

A.   G.,  Feb.   4,   1921. 

185.  Miranda  (mezzotint  printed  in  colors,  after  John  Hoppner),  J.  B.  Foley  35 
Ely,   March   21,   1921. 

25.  La  Belle  Ferronniere  (mezzotint  after  Leonardo  da  Vinci)    (HJ^xll^)  125 
Fitzgibbons,   March   21,   1921. 

7.  Anne  of   Cleves   (mezzotint  after   Holbein)    (19xl2i^) 55 

9.      Baptista  Tornabucni    (mezzotint  after  Ghirlandaio)    (19xl2i/^) 95 

10.     Beatrice  d'Este    (mezzotint  after  Leonardo  da  Vinci)    (23^x9^) 125 

14.     Duke    and    Duchess    of    Cumberland     (mezzotint    after    Gainsborough) 

(18x13)     55 

23.  Joseph   Jefferson    (mezzotint)    (7x5) 32 

27.  Lady   Dudgeon    (after  Raeburn)    (21xlli^) 70 

28.  Lady   Elizabeth   Compton    (mezzotint  after   Reynolds)    (17^x8^) 45 

32.  Louise  de   Bourbon    (mezzotint   after   Mignard)     (17x14) 135 

35.     Ludovica  Tornabuoni  (mezzotint  after  Ghirlandaio)    (13x9) 105 

38.  Madonna   (mezzotint  after   F.    F.   Lippi)    (15^x9^) 180 

39.  Madonna   (mezzotint   after   Botticelli)    (16^x10^) 310 

45.     Nature    (mezzotint  after  T.   Lawrence)    (13->4xllM) 150 

47.     Princess  Beaujolais   (mezzotint  after  Nattier)    (18x14) 130 

50.     Saskia  Van  Ulenburg   (mezzotint  after  Rembrandt)    (19x13) 100 

52.     Simonetta   Vespucci    (mezzotint    after   Pollajuolo)     (15x11) 35 

56.     The  Lute  Player   (mezzotint  after  Frans  Hals)    (ISi^xU^^) 35 

60.  Visit  to  the  Boarding  School   (mezzotint  after   Morland)    (18x22) 130 

61.  William,  Prince  of   Orange   (mezzotint  after   Van  Dyck)    (19xl2J^) 120 

Flanagan,    March   21,    1921. 

1.  Princess  Beaujolais  (mezzotint  after  Nattier)    (18^x14) 130 

2.  A  Gentleman  of   Bruges   (mezzotint  after  Memling)    (16^x11^) 40 

3.  A   Gentleman   of  Bruges    (mezzotint  after   Memling)    (17^x15) 27 

4.  A  Lady  of  Bruges  (mezzotint  after  Jan  Van  Eyck)    (ll^^xlQi/g) 45 

5.  A  Lady  of  Bruges   (mezzotint  after  Jan  Van  Eyck)    (17^x15) 30 

6.  Anne   of   Cleves    (mezzotint   after   Holbein)    (185/^x12) 60 

8,  Baptista    Tornabuoni    (mezzotint    after    Ghirlandaio)     (18J^xll%) 105 

12.  Countess   Grosvenor    (mezzotint  after   Sir   T.    Lawrence)    (Ilj4x8^)...  50 

13.  Duke    and    Duchess    of     Cumberland     (mezzotint    after    Gainsborough) 
(173/^x125/^)     55 

17.  Elvira    (mezzotint   after   Piero   della   Francesca)    (iSYzxlOU) 80 

18.  Francis  II    (mezzotint  after  J.  Clouet)    (12^x10^4) 40 

24.  La  Belle  Ferronniere   (mezzotint  after  Leonardo  da  Vinci)    (H^xllJ^)  135 

26.  Lady    Dudgeon    (mezzotint    after   Raeburn)    (20^x11^) 75 

31.  Louise  de  Bourbon   (mezzotint  after   Mignard)    (17x14) 100 

33.  Lucrezia   Tornabuoni    (mezzotint  after   Betticelli)    (12^x9^) 45 

40.  Madonna   (mezzotint    after    Perugino)     (14J4xllJ^) 115 


296  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 


Edwards — Continued. 

46.     Patience    (mezzotint    after  '  Romney)     (12)4x10) $60 

49.      Saskia   Van  Ulenburg    (mezzotint   after  Rembrandt)    (18j4xl2^) 100 

51.      Simonetta    Vespucci    (mezzotint    after    Pollajuclo)     (15x11^) 30 

55.     The   Lute  Player    (mezzotint   after   Frans   Hals)    (14x12) 40 

58.  The   Young   Princess    (mezzotint   after   Netscher)    (19^x13^/8) 55 

53.      Sister    Catherine    (mezzotint   after   Van    der   Weyden)    (15x12) 55 

70.     William,   Prince  of  Orange   (mezzotint  after  Van   Dyck)    (18J4xl2J4)  •  •  160 

Hall,   March   21,    1921. 

19.      Francois   II    (mezzotint   after   Clouet)    (lO^/^xS^^) 35 

21.      Good   Night    (mezzotint   after   Henry   Hosier)    (11^x8%) 45 

34.      Lucrezia  Tornabuoni    (mezzotint  after   Botticelli)    (123/^x9^) 45 

36.     The   Lute   Player    (mezzotint  after  Frans   Hals)    (11^x10^) 40 

42.      Martin  van  Nieuvenhove  (mezzotint  after  Memling)    (13^x10^) 40 

44.      Nature    (mezzotint   after    T.    Lawrence)     (1334x11^'^) 160 

59.  The   Young   Prin^cess    (mezzotint   after   Netscher)    (16^x105^) 50 

64.  Anne  of  Cleves   (mezzotint  after  Hans  Holbein)    (16^x10^) 90 

65.  Francois  II    (mezzotint  after  Clouet)    (17x141.-8) 35 

67.  Princess    Beaujolais    (mezzotint    after    Nattier)     (15?/8xl2i/^) 120 

68.  Simonetta   Vespucci    (mezzotint    after   Polajuolo)     (13J4x10) 35 

Ehninger,  J.   W.;   1827-1889.  American   (Copy  by  G.  R.  Hall). 

Housman,   Oct.    30,   1920. 

380.  Washington's    First    Interview    with    His    Wife    (mezzotint) SO 

Eiri;    Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,  Feb.   12,   1921. 

813.  The    Saltmakers.      C.    H.    Chandler 50 

814.  The    Tattooer.      Mr.    Henderson 32 

Eiri,   Rekisentei;   active  circa    1780-1810,    Japanese. 
Walpole,    March   3,    1921. 

251.      Bust    Portrait    of   Tomimoto    Buzendayn    II 800 

Eisen,    Keisai;    1789-1848,   Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,   Feb.    10,    1921. 

97.  The  Sham  Battle.     A.   B.  Duel 25 

98.  The  Wrestling   Arena.      Towne 40 

Walpole.  Jan.   22,    1921. 

552.  Chrysanthemums  (14^x9%),   Mann   110 

Walpole,    March   2,    1921. 

121.     A  White-headed   Bird    55 

279.      Cormorant    Fishing-boats    on   the    Nagara    River 25 

Eisen  and  Hirosliige. 

Walpole.   Jan.   21,    1921. 

283.  Travellers   Plodding  Along   the   Road   Through   Deep   Snow    (8^x13^), 

Keck    72 

387.   Karuizawa:  View  of  the  Station  at  Night   (8i^xl3i/2),  Hall 25 

392.   Moonlight  View  of  the  Station  at  the  Foot  of  Yatsu-ga-take   (8^x13 H), 

Mann    27 

401.  Fishing  by  Night  with  Cormorants  from  Boats  on  the   Nagara  River  at 

Koto,  The  Kiso  Road  Station   (8i/^xl3^),   Spaulding 63 

Eishi,    Hosoda;    1783-1829,  Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,   Feb.    10,    1921. 

309.     A.   Tayu.      Yamanaka  &  Co 30 

311.     The    Kamuro's    Mischief.      C.    H.    Chandler 55 

314.  In   the    Salon.      C.    H.    Chandler 100 

315.  Boating  on  the   Sumida  River.     Yamanaka   &  Co 90 

Walpole,  Jan.   20,   1921. 

131.  Takihime  of  Ogi-ya    (153^x10^),  Nott 175 

132.  Suzumishi    (143^x9^),    King    SO 

133.  The   Tayu   Misyama   of  Shoji-ya    (14i^x95/g),    Fuller 505 

134.  Prince  Genji  at  Suma  Beach   (15^x10),  Miss  Buckingham 90 

135.  A    Modern   Poet    (135^x8^),   Le    Roy. 50 

136.  Viewing    Her    Back    Hair    (12^^x834),    Rogers 50 

137.  Another   Modern   Poet    (13x8%),   Hall $50 

138.  A   Pleasure  Party  on   the  River   (14><x2854),   Yamanaka 100 

320.  Sotori-hime   (14^x9^),   Kellogg    310 

321.  A   Modern   Komachi    (14^x934),   Oshima 190 

322.  The  Oiran   Kagamiyama   (14^x95^),  Ainsworth 40 

323.  Large  Head  and  Bust  Portrait  of  a  Woman  (15i4xlO^),  Oshima 130 

324.  Ono  No  Komachi   (141^x9^).   Rogers 28 

619.  Ukifune  and   the   Evening   Snow    (14^x9^/^),    Root 80 

620.  Hashinihime   and  the  Evening  Glow    (14^x95^),   Tetsuka 75 

621.  Returning   Sails  at   Suma    (143/^x9i^).   Tetsuka 95 

622.  Matsukaze  and   Night   Rain    (14^x9i/^),    Oshima 75 

623.  Geese  Flying  Down  in  the  Twilight  (143^x9i/2),  Metropolitan  Museum..  75 
625.  The  Autumn   Moon  at  Akashi    (14^^x91^),   Mann 55 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  297 

Eishi — Cmtinucd. 

626.  Singing  Insects  and  the  Vesper  Bell   (14.>^x9H),  Oshima $30 

624.  Usugumo    in    Clear    Weather    after    a    Storm    (145/^x9i/^),    Metropolitan 

Museum    105 

627.  The  Dragon  Fountain   (15x9^),  Duel 50 

628.  Temptation   {lAY^^9y&),  Duel   35 

629.  Applying  Rouge  to  Her  Lips  (14^8x9^),  Hall 35 

631.  Ogi-ya   Mise  Ryaku    (I5i4x9§^),   Carter    250 

Walpcle,    March   2,    1921. 

240.  An  Oiran   (painting)    40 

241.  Oiran   Hinazuru    70 

242.  Matsukaze:     Prince  Genji  Paying  Lady  Akashi-no-ue  a  Visit   (triptych).  230 

243.  Three  Groups  of   Graceful   Ladies    (triptych) 85 

244.  Two    Under   a    Parasol 100 

247.  The  Yujo  Takigawa  of  the  House  of  Ogiya 310 

248.  Butterflies    40 

249.  A   Party   of   Oiran  under   Wistaria 45 

Eisho;    Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,    Feb.    12,    1921. 

772.     The    Goldfish.      A.    B.    Duel 150 

774.     The   Two   Poets.     Yananaka   &  Co 27 

Eisui,  Ichirakutei;  about  1800,  Japanese. 

Walpole,   Jan.   22.    1921. 

632.  Large  Head  and  Bust  Portrait  of  the  Beauty  (15x10),  Oshima 50 

633.  Portrait  of  Yoshiwara  Beauty    (1434x9 j^),   Oshima 45 

Eizan,  Kikugawa;  1800-1829,  Japanese. 

Walpole.    Ian.   21,    1921. 

364.  A 'Geisha  Girl   Climbing  the   Stairs   (155/^x10^),   Manges 32 

Enshi;   Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

509.     Cherry    Viewing.      J.    T.    Spaulding 90 

Fantin-Latour,    Henri;    1836-1905,   French. 
Jones,    March   28,    1921. 

18.     L'Etoile    du     Soir     (Tannhauser)     (etching) 25 

Fitton,   Hedley;   1859-        ,  British. 
A.   G.,   Feb.   4,    1921. 

190.     The  Gateway  of  Naples  (painter  etching),  Kennedy  &  Co 40 

Hall,  March  9,   1921. 

94.  Chateau    de    Comtes,    Ghent    (etching)     (14j^xl5j4) SO 

95.  St.    Andrew's    Castle    (etching)     (lli^xll) 70 

96.  St.   Etienne,   Beauvais    (etching)    (17^x11) 55 

97.  Rue    Pirouette,    Paris     (etching)     (IS^^xS^) 35 

99.     Gateway,  Genoa   (etching)    (13  5^5^) 70 

100.      Saint    Bartholomew    the    Great,    Smithfield    (etching)     (12x7^4) 80 

Walpole,    April    13,    1921. 

107.  The  Rose  Window,  Notre  Dame    (etching),   Schwartz 230 

108.  Gateway  to  the  Abbey  of  'St.  Bartholomew  (etching),  Walton 37 

Folo,    Pietro;    XIX   Century,   Italian. 

A.   G.,   Feb.   4,    1921. 

7.      La   Madonna  di   Foligno    (engraving,   after   Raphael) 50 

Freudenberger,    Sigismond;    1745-1801,    Swiss-French. 
Parker,   Nov.   9,    1920. 

49.  Le  Retour   du   Soldat   Suisse  dans  le  Pays   (aquatint),   T.   J.   Gannon....  125 

50.  Les  Chanteurs  du  Mois  de  Mai   (aquatint),  T.  J.   Ganncn 120 

Gakutei;    XIX    Century,    Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

582.     The  Dance.     Yamanaka  &   Co 30 

Gaugain,    Thomas;    1748-1805,    British-French. 
Parker,   Nov.   9,   1920. 

51.  An  Airing  in  Hyde  Park   (engraving  printed  in  2  tints  colored  by  hand), 

The   Rosenbach    Co 660 

Gardiner,    William    Nelson;    1766- 
A.    G.,   Feb.    18,    1921. 

7Z.     January    (after    painting    by    W.    Hamilton)     (engraving),    M.    Sloog.  .  .         210 

Georges,    F. 

Hall,    March    9,    1921. 

7Z.      Lady   Scott   (mezzotint  after  Gainsborough)    (1954x15^) 50 

Bell,   April   21,    1921. 

109.  Fox   Hunting    (set  of  4   lithographs  after    J.  F.   Herring,   Sr),    (colored 

by   Hand)    135 

Smith,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

80.     Stable   Scenes    (4  lithographs),  G.   C.   Smith,  Jr 50 


298  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Gogaku;   Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,  Feb.   10,   1921. 

79.     Ishibashi    at    Shinzan.      A.    B.    Duel $25 

Gokyo;   Japanese. 

Walpole,   March  3,   1921. 

250.     The  Yujo  Hanando  of  the  House  Ogiya,  with  Attendants 32 

Grsenhead,   H.  T,;  Contemporary,  British. 
Hall,    March    21,    1921. 

75.  Peggy    (mezzotint   after    Morland)    (13^x11^) 25 

Gulland,   Elizabeth;   Contemporary,  British. 

A.  G.,  Feb.  4,  1921. 

201.  Parmela    (mezzotint  printed  in  colors,  after  Lariviere),  P.   Suval 100 

Fitzgibbons,    March   21,    1921. 

76.  Lady  Waldgrave  and   Child   (mezzotint  after  Reynolds)    (25x21) 55 

11.     Mrs.  Robinson  as  Perdita  (mezzotint  after  Romney)    (18xl5j4) 55 

78.  Mrs.    Stewart    (mezzotint    after    Raeburn)     (8x15^) 120 

79.  Pamela   (mezzotint  after  Raeburn)    (23x18) 100 

80.  Lavinia  Countess  Spence    (mezzotint  after  Reynolds)    (9^-^x71/^) 150 

Haden,  Sir  Francis  Seymour;   1848-1910,  British. 

A.  G.,  Feb.  4,  1921. 

202.  Mount's  Bay   (original  etching),  M.  Goodman 30 

204.  A  Lancashire  River   (painter  etching),  Kennedy  &  Co 30 

205.  A  Lancashire  River   ( (etching),  E.  A.   Mere 32 

206.  Breaking  Up  of  the  Agamemnon  (mezzotint),  F.  V.  Chappell 47 

Hall,   March    10,    1921. 

104.  Kensington    Gardens    (etching)     (6^x4^) 95 

105.  Kensington  Gardens   (etching)    6^^x45/^) 45 

106.  Egham    Lock    (etching)    (57^x83^) 60 

107.  Sub    Tegmine    or    Greenwich    Park    (etching    and    drypoint)     (6^x5^)  35 

108.  Out  of   Study   Window    (etching)    (4^4x10^4) 32 

109.  On    the    Test     (etching)     (6x9) 60 

112.     The    Water    Meadow    (etching)     (6x9) 55 

114.     Shere    Mill    Pond    (etching)     (6^^x13)... 25 

116.  Whistler's    House    Old    Chelsea    (etching)     (6^x13^) 70 

117.  Thames  Ditton  with  a  Sail   (etching)    (6x9^) 30 

122.  The  Three   Sisters    (etching)    (5^x8^^) 85 

123.  The   Three  Sisters    (etching)    (5j^x8^) 60 

124.  The   Island    Opposite    Boyle's    Farm    (etching)     (7x9^^^) 40 

125.  A  Likely  Place  for  Salmon   (etching)    (4J4xl0i4) 27 

126.  The  Two  Sheep  (etching)    (4i/^x5%) 25 

128.     Breaking  Up   of  the  Agamemnon    (etching)    (7^x16^) 100 

139.     Thames     Fisherman     (etching)      (6x8^) 65 

143.      Lancashire    River     (etching)     (llxlS^) 50 

147.  Breaking  Up  of  the  Agememnon   (etching)    (11^x18^) 65 

148.  Grayling  Fishing    (mezzotint)    (7^x11^) 148 

Jones,  March  28,   1921. 

22.     Harry    Kelly's    Putney    (etching) 37 

Haig,  Axel    Herman;   1835-         ,  Swedish. 
A.  G.,  Feb.  4,  1921. 

209.     Tarragona   Cathedral    (etching),   Kennedy  &  Co 28 

Hall,    March   9,    1921. 

162.  Interior,     Burgos     Cathedral     (etching)      (27;^xl7^) 250 

163.  Toledo    Cathedral:     Interior     (etching)     (26i^xl734) 90 

164.  The  Basilica   St.   Giles  at  Aries    (etching)    (28^x20^^) 42 

173.     St.  Mark's,  Venice   (etching)    (23^31^) 45 

Hankey,   W.    Lee;   XIX   Century,   British. 
A.  G.,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

213.     The  Spinning  Wheel   (etching),   M.   Goodman 33 

Walpole,   April   13,   1921. 

128.     The   Blind   Grandmother   (etching).   Rose 50 

Hamamatsu. 

Walpole,  Jan.  21,   1921. 

425.  A  Storm  Approaching  Across  the   Sea   (8J^xl3J^),  Wright 42 

Harunobu,    Suzuki;    1703-1770,   Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,   Feb.    10,    1921. 

35.     The    Night    Rain.       K.     Oshima 60 

38.  Whispering.     R.  Glendenning 95 

39.  Daikoku.      M.    Klein 25 

42.  On   the   Porch.     A.    B.    Duel 35 

43.  The  Angler.     C.   H.   Chandler 35 

44.  Girl  and  Monkey.      K.    Oshima 27 

46.     The  Garden.     C.  H.  Chandler 210 

49.  Narihira.      C.   H.    Chandler 75 

50.  At    the    Window.      Yamanaka    &    Co 85 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  299 

Harunobu — Continued. 

51.  The   Maple    Leaf    Fire.      S.    C.    Bosch-Reitz $30 

52.  The    Bird-Seller.      K.    Oshima 45 

54.     The    Toothpick    Store.      K.    Oshima 75 

56.  The  Toy   Rabbit.      Yamanaka  &   Co 100 

57.  Hide  and  Seek.     T.  E,  O.  Kellogg 35 

Walpole,  Jan.  21,   1921. 

201.     A  Young  Lady  Gazing  at  the  Moon 85 

203.  Two  Men  Playing  with  a  Tea-House   Girl 70 

204.  The   Girl   in   White 300 

205.  A   Young   Man  Playing   Foootball 55 

206.  Watching  the  Sparklers    190 

207.  A  Young  Lady  Escorted  by  a  Maid  near  a  Stream 80 

208.  Two  Girls  in  the   Snow 310 

209.  A  Woman  and  Her  Girl-Servant 90 

Walpole,  March  3,    1921. 

237.  Reading  His  Letter   (10j^x7^^),  Buckingham 400 

238.  Mother  and   Child    (11^x8^),   Hilton 42 

239.  The  Going  Away  of  the  Bride  (8^x11^),  Duel 34 

240.  The   Bed-time  Sake  Cup    (8i^xll^),   Duel 26 

241.  Combing  His  Hair   (11^x8^),  Metropolitan  Museum 210 

242.  At  the  Bath  Room  Door   (85^x4^),  Miss  Buckingham 80 

243.  An  Interview  through  the  Mise-Goshi    (11^x8^),   Nott 285 

244.  Onna  Azuma  Kudari  (8x10%),  Bassett 85 

245.  A  Young    Samurai    on   Horseback    (11^x8^),    Mansfield 310 

246.  The   Mouse  Toy    (10^^x81.^),    Hilton 140 

247.  Dispatching  a  Love  Letter   (12^x8!^^),    Mann 310 

248.  Ushiwaka  and  "Bekel   (ll->^x8i^),   Hall 35 

249.  The  Clinging  Crab    (10^x8^),    Metropolitan    Museum 82 

547.  Chrysanthemums  and   Moon    (11^x85-^),  Miss  Buckingham 775 

Havell,   Daniel;  XIX  Century,  British,  and  Sutherland,  T. 
Parker,    Nov.   9,    1920. 

85.  Views    of    Paris    (6)     (aquatints) 400 

Henderson,  Charles  Cooper;  XIX  Century,  British  (After). 
Brewster,    May   17,    1921. 

43.  Fore's  Sporting  Traps:  Going  to  the    Moors;  Going  to  Cover   (aquatints 

in  color) ,   G.  C.  Mercer,  Jr 60 

44.  Fore's  Sporting  Traps   (pair) 45 

Henderson,  Will;  Contemporary. 
Hall,    March    21,    1921. 

81.  Miss  Byng  (mezzotint  after  Hoppner)   (10f^x8j4) 25 

82.  The  Love  Letter   (mezzotint  after  Greuze)    (13^x9^) 45 

Hill,    I. 

Smith,   Feb.  3,    1921. 

82.     Ramsgate  with  a  View  of  the  Lighthouse  (2  aquatints),  H.  J.  King.  ...  52 
112.     New  York  from  Weehawken  and  New  York  from  Heights  near  Brooklyn 

(aquatints  after  Wm.   G.  Wall),   Agent 120 

Walpole,  April  11,   1921. 

194.  New  York   City    from   Weehawken   (engraving   after   painting  by   Wm. 

G.    Wall),   Williams    130 

195.  New   York   from    Heights  near   Brooklyn    (engraving   after   painting   by 

Wm.    G.    Wall)    Williams 130 

HIroshlge,  Ichiryusai;  1796-1858,  Japanese. 
Metzgar,  April   4,   1921. 

31.     Fujikawa:      A    Delicate    Snow    Scene $27 

41 .     Numadzu   Snow    82 

153.     Monkey  Bridge:    SaruHashi:    Kahi  Province 28 

173.     Upright  Takaido  Set  (57  prints) 43 

188.     The  Bow   Moon 36 

265.     Kameido    Drum    Bridge    and   Wistaria 26 

278.     Hill  of    Snow,   Drum   Bridge,   Meguro 32 

289.  Rain  at  Ohashi  on  the  Bridge  (signed  margins) 81 

290.  Rain  at  Ohashi    27 

466.     Fuji  Scene  from  Numazu:    Snow   Landscape 26 

Schraubstadter,   Feb.   10,    1921. 

132.     Yoshiwara.      W.Fleischer 25 

163.     Shono.      Edw.   W.    Root 65 

215.  The    Trout.      Horace 35 

478.     The     Snow     Rabbit 65 

648.     The  Kiso   Snow  Gorge.     A.   B.   Duel 100 

664.     The  Bridge  in  a  Storm.     Yamanaka  &  Co 52 

Walpole.  Jan.   20,    1921. 

216.  Pines  by  the  Sea  (14^x10),  Keck 32 

217.  Fujikawa    (13^x8^),  Ziegler 29 


300  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

H  iroshige — Ccntimicd. 

218.  View  of  Nippon  Bridge  in   Snow   (13?^x4^),  Rogers $25 

219.  The  Autumn  Moon  at  Mokuboji   (8^xl2j^),  Yamanaka 40 

220.  Evening    Snow    at    Mimeguri    (8^xl2§^),    Tuttle 60 

223.  Seve-ri   Beach,    Province   of   Soshu,   Raymond 42 

413.  The  Autumn    Moon  at  Takanawa    (9i4xl35^),   Yamanaka 31 

459.  Mii  no   Bansho    (9^x14^),    Bidwell 52 

460.  A  Snowy  Evening  at  the   Station    (8%xl33.4),  Tetsuka 52 

461.  Travellers  Crossing  the  Tenryu  gawa   (8%xl3^),  Root 27 

465.  Kameyama  (8^x13^),  Hall 52 

466.  Twilight   Shower  at  Tadasu-ga-wara    (9^x145^),  Ainsworth 87 

471.  The  Gion  Yashiro  Setchu   (8i^xl4^),  Mansfield 65 

472.  Twilight  Moon,  at  Ryogoku  Bridge   (934x145^),   Mann 135 

473.  Full   Moon  at  Takanawa    (10^^x15),   Mansfield 300 

474.  Picture  of  the  Shonbu-ga-oka  Lotus  Pond   (9^x147^),  Hall 55 

475.  Sunrise  at  Susaki  on  New  Year's  Morning  After  a  Snowfall  (9j4xl4%), 
Mansfield      35 

476.  View   of   Massake  in   Late   Spring    (10^x15),   Van  Bleck 125 

477.  The  First  Cuckoo  of  the  Year  at  Esukuda  Island   (9x14),  Yamanaka 55 

478.  View  of  Cherry  Trees  in  Leaf  on  the  Bank  of  the   Sumida    (9^x14%) 
Ainsworth      ., 110 

479.  The  Vesper  Bell  at  Ikegami  Temple   (10x14^^),  Carter 85 

484.  Sudden  Shower  of  Rain  at  the  Big  Bridge   (14J4x95^),  Eli 320 

485.  Taiko  Bridge  and  the  Yuhi  Mound  at  Meguro  (14J4x9J^),  Rosenzweig.  .  77 

486.  Fukagawa    Susaki    Ju-man-tsubo.      Stillman 25 

488.  The  Raftsman    (13^x3),   Hall 50 

490.  Buyp   Kanazawa    Hassho    Yakei    (14x29),    King ' 520 

491.  View  of  the  Narut  Whirlpool,  Province  of  Awa  (13^x28^),  Gay 100 

492.  Mountains  and  Streams  on  the  Kiso  Highway.     Hilton 125 

527.  Roses   and    Sparrow    (14]^x5),    Church 40 

528.  Asters  and   Crane   (14^x4^),    Maxwell _ 27 

530.  Camellia  and  Sparrows  in  the  Falling  Snow  (13j4x45^),  Bidwell 27 

531.  Yellow  Flowered  Water  Plant  and  Kingfisher  (13S/^x4^),  Mansfield 37 

534.  Unsevered   Tanzaku  Triptych    (13^x8^),    Mansfield 30 

535.  Maple   Tree    in   Autumnal   Foliage,    and   a    Peacock    (13J^x5),    Mansfield  50 

536.  Weeping  Cherry  and  Japan  Warbler   (14^x4^),   Smith 80 

537.  Large-flowered  Flat  Bell  and  Susuki  Grass   (14x43/^),  Church 75 

538.  Mandarin  Drake  and  Duck  in  the  Water   (14^x6^),  Mansfield 35 

539.  Chrysanthemums  and  Peacock  on  a  Projecting  Ledge  of  Rock  (15j^x6%) 

Duel 55 

540.  Two  Wild  Ducks  in  the  Water  (14.}4x65^),  Tetsuka 120 

541.  Sakura  no   Eda  ni  Kotori    (15x6^),  Ainsworth 75 

542.  Dogwood  and  Kingfisher   (14x4i/4),  Church 27 

543.  Peacock  and    Peonies    (28^x9^),   Smith 200 

Walpole,    March   3,   1921. 

280.      Misty    Moonlight    210 

283.     Weather  Hill  in  the  Tobo  Harbor 25 

285.  A  Snowstorm  on  the  Sea-Coast 27 

286.  Vesper   Bells   at  Ikegami 92 

287.  Alighting  Geese  at  Haneda 130 

288.  Return   Sail   Boats  at   Gyotoku 175 

293.     The  Autumn  Moon    75 

303.     Cherries   in  Full   Bloom 77 

307.  The  Fox-Fires  on  New  Year's  Eve  by  the  Isho  Enoki  at  Oji 100 

308.  Sail   Boats  along  the   Sand  in  the  Bay  of  Myazu 30 

310.     Fujikawa   in    Snow    27 

Hiroshige   and    Kunisada. 

Metzgar,   April  4,    1921. 

214.     Snow  Triptych  with  Two  Figures 40 

Hokkei,    Aogaoka;    1800-1840,    Japanese. 
S.chraubstadter,   Feb.    10,    1921. 

550.     The  Great   Wave.      Yamanaka   &   Co 35 

564.     The  Moon   Palace.     A.    B.    Duel 30 

Walpole,   Jan.    20,    1921. 

195.  A  Ferry  Boat  Crossing  the  River.     Tuttle 200 

196.  Going  up   the   Mountain   from   Omiyaguchi  in   Sunshu.      Spaulding 150 

197.  The  Fudo  Protector  of  the  Mikuni  Pass.     Church 50 

198.  Mt.   Tate    in   Etchu.      Church 45 

199.  A  Village  in  the  Musashi  Plain.     Church 200 

200.  Shimotzuke,    Nikko-san    Urami-ga-taki.       Spaulding 75 

201.  The   Big  Flume  at  Chinuki   in  Izu.     Church 159 

202.  Sesshu,    Sumiyosha.       Spaulding 170 

203.  Shinto  Ceremony  at  Makari,  Province  of  Nagato.     Spaulding 150 

204.  Soshu,   Hakone  no   Seki.      Church    260 

205.  The   Stone-Horse   Mida,   Province  if  Izu.      Spaulding 150 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  301 

Hokuju,  Shotel;  active  about   1820-1830,  Japanese. 
\\  alpole,    Jan.    21.    1921. 

367.  View  of  Tsukuda  Island  in  Edo  Bay  at  the  Mouth  of  the  Sumida  River 
(9^x141^^),    Bidwell $30 

368.  View    of    Takanawa,    the    Entrance    to    Shinigawa    Station     (lGi4xl4j4). 
Coffin 27 

371.  Picture    of    the    real    Floating    Monkey-Bridge    in    the    Province    of    Kai 

(lOKxlS),    Rogers    30 

Hokuju,  Shotei;  active  about  1820-1830,  Japanese. 
Walpole,   March   2,    1921. 

103.     View  of  Massaki  on  the  Sumida  River " 32 

Hokusai,    Katsushika;    1760-1849,  Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,   Feb.    10,    1921. 

320.      Yujcva.      A.    B.   Duel 30 

357.  The   Cranes    30 

358.  The-  Monkey  Bridge.     A.   B.   Duel 45 

362.     Toro    No    Daijin.      A.    B.    Duel 40 

364.     Shonenko.       A.     B.     Duel 50 

Walpole,    Jan.    22,    1921. 

507.  Illustration    of   Poem    by   Chunagon    Yakamochi    (10x14^4).    Buckingham  60 

509.   Illustration  of   Poem  by  Gon-Chunagon   Sadaiye   (10x14^),   Fletcher....  35 

511.  Travellers    Viewing    Fuji    (93^x143/^),    Mansfield 30 

512.  The  White    Cap    of    Fuji    (10x145/^),   Ainsworth 425 

513.  Fuji   seen  from   Koishikawaon   a  Snowy   Morning    (9^x145^),   Carland..  85 

514.  The   Cone  of  Fuji  in   Fair  Weather    (95/^x14^),  Ainsworth 300 

515.  Fuji   Mirrored   in   Lake   Misaka    (9^^x14^),   King 100 

516.  Kajikasawa,    Kai    (10^x14)4),    Lang 35 

517.  Fuji    Seen  from   the  Inume    Pass    (9?^xl4^),   Bidwell 70 

518.  Fishing  from  the  Rocks  at  Uraga   (674x9^),   Gay 170 

519.  The  Bridge  of   Boats  at  Sano   (6%x9^),  Twinny 80 

520.  The  Seven  Fortune   Gods  in  a   Lion  Play   (8x20^),   Spaulding 30 

521.  Watching  Them   Pass    (9^x45,^,   Duel 35 

522.  A   Day's   Outing    {95/^x45/^),   Twinney 37 

523.  The  Bokudo   (9->^xl4i^),  Buckingham 60 

554.  Poppies    (9^x14^),    Mansfield 500 

555.  Magnolia  Flowers  and  Unidentified  Bird  (95/^x7]^),  Root 50 

556.  Thistles  and   Crossbill   (934x7 '4),    Mansfield 90 

557.  Azaleas  and  Cuckoo   (93/^x7'/^),   Bidwell 45 

558.  Peonies  and  Butterfly   (lO^xlSj^),  Mansfield 130 

Walpole,   March   2,    1921. 

85.  A  Party  of  Four  en  the  Bank  of  a  River 25 

86.  Ri    Haku    Gazing   at    the    Waterfall    of   Lo-Shan 235 

88.     A   Waterfall    at    Aoigaoka 27 

90.  Tempozan  at  the   Mouth  of  the  Ajikawa 55 

91.  Temma   Bridge,   Settsu   Province 32 

93.  The  Suspension   Bridge  Connecting  the   Provinces  of   Hida  and  Etchu .  .  52 

94.  Mt.   Fuji   Seen   from    Sekiya-no-Sato 70 

96.      Mt.   Fuj  i   Seen   from   Shimo-Megure 27 

101.      On  New  Year's  at  the   Shrine  of  Mekari   Myojin 90 

Howarth,    Albany    E.;    Contemporary,    British. 
Hall,   March  9,  1921. 

215.     St.    Mark's,   Venice    (etching)     (21^x31^) 27 

Houben,   Henri. 

Moore,  April  18-25,    1921. 

1580.     At  the   Well.     Col  Wigton 200 

Huet,   Jean    Baptiste;    1745-1811,   French. 
Parker,    Nov.    9,    1920. 

52.  Le   Gouter   de  la  Bergere    (13x17^)    (water  color),   M.    Slocg 2,250 

53.  Le   Repos   au   Crepuscule    (13x17^)    (water   color),    M.    Slocg 2,350 

54.  Nymph   with   Swans    (9x6K),   N.   E.   Landau 160 

54a.  Nymphs  au  Raisins   (engraving  printed  in  2   colors),   N.  E.   Landau....  160 

Hunt,   Charles;    XIX    Century,    British. 
Bell,    April   21,    1921. 

113.     a.   Start   for   the    Derby,      b.   Coming   in  for    the   Derby    (aquatints   after 

F.   C.  Turner,  colored  by  hand) 52 

115.     Read  Riders,  or  Funkers.     The  Few  not  Funkers   (aquatints  after  R.  B. 

Davis,  in  colors)    60 

Israels,  Josef,  R.   I.;  1824-1911,  Dutch. 
Bostwick,   Dec.    10,    1920. 

15.   Children   Sailing  a  Boat    (15x27)    (etched   by   Carl  L   Dake) 25 

Hall,    March    10,    1921. 

228.      Girl    with    Basket    Seated    on    the    Shore    (etching)     (6x9) ■  35 

Jcnes,   March   28,    1921. 

27.     Girl   with   Basket    Seated   on    Shore    (etching),    H.    M.    Dunbar 52 


302  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Jacque,  Charles  Emile;  1813-1894,  French. 
Boland,   Dec.    2,   1920. 

111.  La  Bergerie    (etching)    (11^x17^2) $72 

137.  La   Vachere    (etching)    (9^x6^) 25 

145.  La  Bergerie   Bearnaise    (etching)    (18xl4j4) 35 

Hall,   March    10,    1921. 

232.     La    Bergerie    (etching)     (Il-}4xl7j4) 62 

Jakuchu;    Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,  Feb.   10,   1921. 

605.     The   Cockatoo    : 30 

James,  Clifford   R. 

A.  G.,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

218.     The  Countess  of  Westmeath   (mezzotint  printed  in  colors,  after  painting 

by  Sir  Thomas  Lawrence) ,  P.  Suval 75 

Janinet,    Francois;    1752-1813,    French. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

82.  Mademoiselle    du    T — ,    1779     (engraving    printed    in    color),    Agent...         775 

83.  L'Indiscretion    (engraving    printed    in    color),    J.    F.    Drake,    Inc 1,600 

84.  La    Crainte   Enfantine    (engraving   printed    in    color),    A.   W.    Graetz...         325 

85.  La  Confidence  (engraving  printed  in  color),  A.  W.  Graetz 310 

Parker,    Nov.    9,   1920. 

55.  Ha!   le  joli  petit   Chien    (engraving  printed   in   color) 360 

56.  La   Bacchante   Enivree    (engraving  printed    in    colors),   R.    Ederheimer.  .  95 

57.  Le   Petit  Conseil    (engraving   printed   in   color) 360 

58.  Le   Satyre  Impatient    (engraving  printed   in   color),   R.    Ederheimer 90 

59.  Les  Plaisirs   du  Jeu    (engraving  printed  in  color),   C.    F.   R.   Drake 160 

60.  Les   Restes  du  Palais  du   Pape   Jules    (engraving  printed   in   color),   The 
Rosenbach    Co 360 

62.  L'Indiscretion    (engraving    printed    in    color),    The    Rosenbach    Co 1,550 

63.  Mademoiselle  du  T ,   1779    (engraving  printed  in   color),  The  Ro- 
senbach   Co 675 

64.  Nina   or   la   FoUe    par   Amour    (portrait  de   Mme.    Dugazon)     (engraving 
printed  in  color),  The  Rosenbach  Co 600 

65.  Venus  a  la  Colombe   (engraving  printed  in  color),  The  Rosenbach  Co..  625 

66.  Le  Sommeil  de  Diane   (engraving  printed  in  color).  The  Rosenbach  Co.  610 

Jones,  John;   1740-1797,  British. 
A.    G.,   Feb.   4,    1921. 

220.     Carolina    Duchess    of    Marlborough     (mezzotint    after    the    painting    by 

George   Romney),   W.   C.   Dickerman 140 

Jones,   S.  J.    E,;  XIX   Century,   British    (After). 
Brewster,   May  17,   1921. 

56.     Elephant  and  Castle,  Newington  (aquatint  in  colors),  G.  C.  Mercer,  Jr.  .  67 

Kaigetsudo;  Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

243.     The    Beauty    (24x12^),    E.    E.    Miller 2,100 

Kauffman,  Angelica;    1741-1807,  Swiss-British. 
Bell,   April  21,   1921. 

61.  Cupid  and  Euphrosyne    (stipple  by  Thos.   Burke  and  Chaillou) 31 

Kikumaro;  1789-1829,  Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,  Feb.   10,   1921. 

545.     Writing  Tablets.     A.   B.   Duel : 35 

Walpole,   Jan.   22,    1921. 

553.  Cranes  (13^x9),  Rogers 30 

Kiyohiro;  Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

27.     At  the  River  Side.     C.  H.   Chandler 170 

Kinney,    Troy;    1871-         ,  American. 
Jones,   March  28,   1921. 

30.     Lopkova   and   Nijinski   in   les   Sylphides    (etching) 47 

Klyomasa,   Torii;    1789-1800,  Japanese. 
Walpole,    Jan.    22,    1921. 

638.  Kotofif   (9^xl4J^),   Pepper 35 

Kiyomasu;    1700-1750,   Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

20.     Actor   Portrait.      K.   Oshima 80 

22.     The    Little    Cobbler.      C.    H.    Chandler 55 

Kiyomine;    1786-1868,  Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

85.     The    Belle.      M.    Spaulding 65 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  303 

Kiyomitsu,    Torii;    active   about   1735-1785,   Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

23.  Player   Portrait    (11^x554),   A.    B.    Duel $30 

24.  Actor  Print.     F.    E.   O.    Kellogg 50 

25.  The     Flute     Player.       H.     Mansfield 60 

26.  Urashima.      W.    D.    Stowell 35 

Van   Caneghem,    March    2,    1921. 

11.  Actor  Segawa  Kikunojo  II  as  Shosho  in  a   Soga  Play 150 

12.  A  Picnic   Party   Under   a   Blossoming   Cherry   Tree 650 

13.  Actor    Bando    Hikosaburo    as    Sanado    no    Yoichi    in    Play    Ume   ya    Izu 

Irifune 55 

15.  The  Actor  Bando  Hikosaburo  II 60 

16.  Actor  Segawa  Kikunojo  II  as  O-Sugi  in  Edo  Murasaki  Kcngen   Soga.  .  170 

17.  Actor  Matsumoto  Koshiro  III  as  a  Samurai 60 

Walpole,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

18.  Plum  Blossoms  and  Beauties  (11x17),  Ainsworth 110 

21.  An  Actor  of  Woman's  Roles    (Ilj4x5^),   Buckingham 135 

Klyonaga,    Torii;   active   1789-1800,   Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

292.  Actor    Print.      A.    B.    Duel 80 

293.  Echigoya  Emporium  on   Suruga  Street    (16j4x27j4),  Mrs.  J.  Takamine  165 

299.  Mount   Fuji.      K.    Oshima 60 

300.  Mitate   Kojima  Takanori.      Mrs.  W.   S.   Kellogg 140 

301.  On  the  Way  to  the  Picnic.     K.   Oshima 25 

302.  Degetari.      A.    B.    Duel 25 

303.  Sanno    Procession.      R.    Glendenning 50 

304.  In   the    Riverside   Tea-House.      K.    Oshima 140 

306.  The    Promenade.       C    H.     Chandler 37 

307.  Cherry    Blossom   Picnic.      C.    H.    Chandler ■ 50 

308.  The    Komuso.       Mansfield 45 

Walpole,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

61.  A  Winter  Visit  to  a  Shrine  (155-^x10^),  Miss  Buckingham 500 

62.  The  Iris   Garden    (14i^x9i^),   Church 850 

63.  Out   for    a  Walk    (14i/^x95^),    Buckingham 310 

64.  Sports  of  the   Chrysanthemum  Fete    (15x9^),   Spaulding 310 

66.  At  Hagidera    (15x10),   Ainsworth 625 

67.  The  Botan   Show   (14i^x9^),   Chandler 275 

68.  Boating   Party   Under  Ryogoku  Bridge    (143^x95^),   Ainsworth 80 

69.  Scene  from  a  Shosa  Act    (15^x10^),   Yamanaka 55 

70.  Scene   from   a   Drama    (13^x9^2),    Miss    Buckingham 110 

71.  A  Gay  Party  in  the  Southern  Quarter   (15^x10^),   Spaulding 1,500 

12.  The  Shiohumi    (15x10),  Miss  Buckingham 575 

-     73.  Two    Edo   Views    (5^^x12^),   Ainsworth 25 

74.  Looking  at  Picture  Books    (9§^x7^),    Carter 80 

75.  Scene   from   Shushingura    (IS^^sxlO),    Carter 25 

n.  On  the   Balcony    (15^x10),  Ainsworth 700 

78.   Mutsuki   (1st  month)    (10^x7^),   Miss  Buckingham 325 

19.  Minatsuki  (6th  month)    (8^x6^),  Miss  Buckingham 90 

80.  Shimotsuki   Kikuzuki    (1014x7^^),   Mansfield 360 

81.  Tsugomori   Yukimizuki    (12th   month)    (10^x7^^),    Kellogg 110 

82.  The  Fifth  Month    (10J^x7^),   Hilton 50 

83.  Visitors  to   Mimeguri   Yashiro    (14^x10),    Smith 475 

84.  The  Hour  of  the  Horse   (8^x61^^),  Austin 45 

85.  New  Year's  Day    Sports    (15x10^),    Rogers 37 

264.  Under  the  Maple  Trees  in  Autumn  (14^x95^),  Miss  Buckingham 950 

265.  Cherry  Flower  Viewing  at  Gotenyama   (14^x19^),  Smith 3,150 

266.  Tenugui   Gake   Kiban    (8^x6^),   Duel 30 

267.  Ushiwaka  Serendaing  Joruri-hime   (14^x10),   Duel 170 

268.  Ushiwaka  Serenading  Joruri-hime   (15^^x10^),  Miss   Buckingham 125 

269.  A  Noted  Actor  in  Private  Life  (14§^^x9M),  Spaulding 300 

270.  The   Flower    Vendor    (15^x10^^),    Spaulding 220 

271.  Scene  from  a   Shosa  Act   (iSj^xlOJ^),   Spaulding 230 

272.  The  Shosa  of  Musume  Dojoji  (15^x10^),  Miss  Buckingham 100 

273.  New  Year's  Day  in  the  Yoshiwara  (12^x8?^),  Ledoux 52 

274.  Scene   from   a  Drama    (15^x19^),    Spaulding 150 

275.  The  First  Horseback  Ride  in  the  New  Year   (9^x15),  Twinny 75 

276.  New   Year's   Morning   in   a   Great  House    (9^x15),   Hall 30 

277.  Actors  in  a  Festival  Procession   (121.^x534),  Fuller 120 

278.  Picnic  in  a  Nobleman's  Garden   (145/^x10),   Nott 150 

279.  Another   Sheet   of   the   Same.      Carter 90 

280.  Handing  Him   His   Sword    (10x754),   Ainsworth 430 

282.  Evening  Cooling  on  the  River  Bank  (14^x10),  Hilton 450 

284.  An  Actor's   Boating   Party    (14x28),    Mann 230 

285.  Nippori,    Hotel    (9^x7^),   Ainsworth 65 

572.  A  Popular  Actor    (14i4x9^),    Spaulding 625 

573.  Scene  from  a  Drama   (15j4x10J4).  Carter 110 


304  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Kiyonaga — Continued. 

574.  Women  Washing   Clothes    (14^x9^),   Oshima - $110 

575.  The    Passing    Fan-mount   Vendor    (145^x9^),    Oshima 60 

576.  The   Dropped   Lantern    (9f/^x7i^),    King 75 

577.  In  the  Yoshiwara   Parade    (14^x10),    Yamanaka... 27 

578.  Geese   Flying   Down   at   Mukojima    (8^x7^),    Colburn 105 

579.  Overhearing   Their    Story    (10i4x7^),    Miss   Buckingham 360 

580.  Michi-yuki  Tamagawa  no  Dan   ( 1 0  ^  x7  H  )  •   Hilton 185 

581.  Trials  of  the  Newly  Wed  (95/^x7^),  Smith 220 

582.  Segawa   of   Matsuba-ya    (14x9H),    Mann 110 

583.  Scene  from  a   Soga   Play    (I5i4xl0^),  Carter 110 

584.  The   Pet   Kitten    (9/^^x7^),    King 55 

585.  Under  the  Cheery  Trees    (15x9^),   King 90 

586.  The  First  Month   (10^^x75^),  Peters.. 50 

587.  Respect  the   Honest  Poor    (10^x75^),   Church 230 

588.  Tago    (95/^x7^),    Pepper 30 

589.  Suruga  Cho   (9^x7^),  Ainsworth 50 

590.  Mado  no  Naka   (9^x7^),  Ledoux 50 

591.  The  Autumn   Moon  in  the  Mirror    (8^x6^),   Duel 27 

592.  Yoimitsu  Hunting   Deer    (14^x9^),   Spaulding 35 

593.  The    Ferry    Boat    (15x10^),    King 460 

594.  Waiting   for  the   Ferry    (14^x10),    Miss   Buckingham 300 

Walpole,    March    2,    1921. 

34.  Actor  Segawa  Kikunojo  II 75 

35.  A   Girl   in   Black   Headdress 30 

36.  Young   Women    45 

2>7.     Two  Yujo   en   a   Veranda 100 

38.  The  Third    Month    38 

39.  Two   Salt    Maidens   on  a    Shore 125 

40.  "A    Young   Woman   with    a    Parasol 100 

41.  A   Geisha  with   an   Umbrella 130 

43.  A  Scene  from  the  Drama  Tsuzure  Nishiki 52 

44.  Scene  from   the   Drama  Tsuzure  Nishiki    (a  Actors) 40 

45.  Two  Women  Approaching  the  Shinto  Shrine 225 

46.  The  Oiran  Toji   of  the  Ogiya   House  and  Her  Suite 50 

47.  Viewing  the   Cherry   Blossoms  at   Gotenyama 410 

48.  A  Young  Lady  Attended  by  Two  Women 30 

49.  A  Young  Lady  Attended  by  Two  Women 27 

50.  The  Umbrella 100 

51.  Before   the    Shrine    of    Jizo 70 

53.  A  Young  Man  and  Two  Maids  of  a  Tea-House 130 

54.  The  Terrace   by   the   Sea 400 

56.  A  Ycung  Man' and  Two  Girls  at  a  Tea-House  overlooking  Shinegawa  Bay  27 

57.  A  Young  Lady  and  Her  Maid  in  the  Garden  of  Sodegaoka 105 

58.  Evening   Snow   in   Late   Winter 25 

59.  A  Boy  "Wearing  Hakama,"   accompanied  by  Three  Women 62 

60.  A  Girl  Accompanied  by  Three  Women  and  a  Nursemaid  on  Her  Way  to 

the  Shrine  on  the  Occasion  of  Her  Kamioki 52 

61.  A  Princess  of  the  Green-House 80 

63.  Nakasu    District    35 

64.  A   Party  of   Oiran 32 

65.  Scene  at  a  Dyer's  Establishment 55 

66.  Two  Salt  Maidens  on  the  Shore 30 

Kiyonobu,  Torii;  active  about  1740-1756,  Japanese. 
Van   Caneghem,    March   2,    1921. 

1.  Actor   Kichikawa   Danjuro   II   as    Soga   no   Goro 62 

Walpole,   Jan.   20.    1921. 

13.  Ichikawa  Ebizo  as  Yanone  Goro  (I5>^x6^),  Mann 160 

Klyoshige,  Torii;  active  about  1758,  Japanese. 
Walpole,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

15.  The  4th  Ichikawa  Danjuro   (15^x6-^8),  Hilton 200 

Kiyotada,   Torii;  XVIII   Century,  Japanese. 
Van   Caneghem,    March   2,    1921. 

2.  Actor  Nakamura  Kichibei  in  a  Theatrical  Role Z7 

Kiyotomo,  Torii;   active  about  1739,  Japanese. 
Walpole.   Jan.    20,    1921. 

28.  Nazuna  Uri   (11^^x6),  Ainsworth $45 

Kiyotsune,  Torii;   active  about   1740-1770,  Japanese. 
Walpole.    Tan.   20,    1921. 

26.  An  Actor's   Card    (llf^xS^^),   Ainsworth 25 

Kiinger,    iVIax;    1857-         ,   German. 
Walpole,   April    13.    1921. 

150.     Brahms   Phantasy    (etching),   Meder 52 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  305 

Kokon,   Shiba;    1747-1818,   Japanese. 
Walpole,    Tan^21,    1921. 

251.  A    Harunobu    Forgery    (10^^x7^),    Miss    Buckingham $190 

Komatsuken;   active   1765-1776,    Japanese. 

Van    Caneghem,    March    2,    1921. 

20.     Young  Woman  Conversing  with  Two  Nuns 65 

Walpcle.    Jan.   20,    1921. 

252.  Oiran   and   Kamuro    (10?'^x7H),    Spaulding 300 

Koryusai,    Isoda;   active   about    1766-1786,  Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,   Feb.    10,    1921. 

263.      On   the   Bridge.      T.    M.    Mathews 25 

274.     The   Letter.      H.    H.    Hall 32 

284.     An  Oiran.     A.   B.  Duel 32 

Walpole,    Jan.    21,    1921. 

42.  Nanaaya   of   Kadokane-ya    (15xl0i4),    Yamanaka 55 

43.  Meizan  of   Choii-ya   (I5i.^xl0^),  Oshima 55 

44.  Shioginu    of    Tsuta-ya    {ISYaxIOVa),    Oshima 55 

45.  Takamura   of    Komatsu-ya    (15^x10^),    Kellog 70 

46.  Harukano    of    Nyka-Tawaraoya    (I5i4xl0!/^ ),    Yamanaka 35 

47.  Hayma  of  Asahi  Maru-ya   (15x10^),   Miss  Buckingham 35 

48.  Kichijuro   of   Kogemanji-ya    (15x105^),    Yamanaka 35 

50.  Painting    (10x7 V2),    Miss   Buckingham 170 

236.  Musume   Dojoji    (iS^^xlQi/^),    Mann 30 

567.  Botan  ni  Shishi   (7^x11^),  Mann SO 

595.  Modern  Sages  of  the  Bamboo  Grove  (10^x714),  Miss  Buckingham 275 

596.  Chidori   no   Tamagawa    (10^x7i-4),    Yamanaka 52 

297.  Too  Much  in  View    (7^xlOi/4).   Pepper 25 

598.  Chusingura  Mitate    (10K'x7^),  Duel 27 

599.  Toeizan  Hanami  no  Bashc   (1054x7§^),  Mann 55 

601.  The  Sign   of  the  Horse   ilOlix7ys),   Duel 32 

Walpole,    March    3,    1921. 

210.  Kyo  Shi   80 

211.  The   Plum    Viewing    Month 35 

212.  The   Flower  Hat   Dance .^ 45 

214.  A   Maiden  Leading  a  Horse  en  Which   Rides  a  Youth 30 

215.  A  Youth  Exchanging  a  Glance  with  a  Maiden  Across  a  Fence 32 

216.  A  Girl  on  Horseback  Fording  a  Stream 3C 

Kunimasa,    Utagawa;   about   1810,   Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,   Feb.    10,    1921. 

453.      Danjuro  and  Two  Other  Actors.     J.  T.  Spaulding 130 

544.     A   Player.     J.   T.   Spaulding 70 

Walpole,    Jan.    21,    1921. 

360.  The   1st  Bando   Mitsugoro    (14i/4x9?^),    Spaulding 125 

362.  The   2nd    Nakamura    Ncshio    (15x10),    Spaulding 250 

363.  The  Sixth  Ichikawa  Danjuro    (15x9^),   Hall 45 

Kunisada,    Utagawa;    1797-1861,   Japanese   and    Hiroshige. 

Metzgar,  April  4,   1921. 

214.     Snow   Triptych   with   Two   Figures 40 

Schraubstadter,   Feb.    10,   1921. 

366.  The     Mist.        H.      Mansfield 90 

367.  Asazuma  Bune.      C.   H.    Chandler 70 

Walpole,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

167.   Driving  the  Dogs  Away   (9^4x14^),  Ely 52 

170.  View  of  the  Tamura  Watashi  Ferry  on  the   Road  to  Oyama   (10x14^/^), 

Keck      35 

Kuniyoshi,   Utagawa;   1797-1861,  Japanese. 

Rockwell,   Part   V,    May   4,    1921. 

250.     Forty-four  sheets  from  the    100   poets.      K.    Matsuki 51 

Schraubstadter,   Feb.    10,   1921. 

575-576.      Preparing   to   Wade    and    Hakone.      R.   A.    Bidwell 100 

855.     Nichiren    in   the   Snow.      Robert    Laurent 65 

880.     The    Great    Shark.      P.    Thompson 52 

914.     Mongaku   Shonin.     H.  H.   Hall 32 

Walpole.   Jan.    20,    1921. 

172.   Shin   Yoshiwara    (10x14),    Mann 27 

175.  Yanagi   Bridge  from  Ryogoki    (9^x14),  Ainsworth 26 

176.  Rycgoku  no  Suzumi   (10x14^),   Bidwell 30 

177.  Asokusa    Imado    (9^x13?^),    Yamanaka 30 

180.   Usui  Toge  Yori  Asama  o  Miru   (95^x14^),  Bidwell 62 

182.  A   Shinto   Festival.     Bidwell 36 

183.  Hara.      Ainsworth 34 

184.  Hara.      Ainsworth 31 

188.   Shono.      Bidwell 26 

191.   Oyama  sekison   Oudki   no  zu    (10x14^),   Bidwell 35 

493.  Distant  view  beneath  the  new  great  Bridge  (9^x135^),  Bassett 100 


306  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Kuniyoshi — Continued. 

496.  The  Prayer  for  Rain  Answered   (9j^xl4^),  Ludlam $50 

497.  Exile   in   Sado-ga-shima    (91^x141^),  Kellogg 200 

501.  Toto   Onmaya-gashi  no  Zu   (10^x14^),   Mishil 325 

503.  Tonase  and  Kinami  Journeying  to  Yanashina   (9§^xl4^),  Bidwell 25 

504.  The  Ascension  of  Toei's  Wife  (85^x13%),  Ledoux 37 

505.  The    Penance   of   Mongaku   Shonin    (421^x9^),    Bidwell 60 

506.  Akama  No  Ura   (14^x28^4),  Pellen 25 

Walpole,   March  2,   1921. 

104.     A  Large  Sailing  Vessel 30 

107.     An  Old  Man  with  a  Lantern 35 

109.     Tiger   35 

112.  Dog   27 

113.  View   from   Under  the  Bridge   Shi-o-hashi 110 

114.  The   Night  Attack    75 

116.  Kato    Kiyomasa    60 

117.  The    Urami    85 

118.  Scene  at  Hashiba,   Edo    75 

119.  0-Kane,   Stopping  a  Runaway  Horse 100 

Klyosai,  Shojo;   1831-1889,  Japanese. 

Sichraubstadter,   Feb.    10,   1921. 

118.     The  Two   Crows.      F.    E.    O.    Kellogg 70 

Lalanne,  Maxime  Francois  Antoine;  1827-1886,  French. 
Boland,   Dec.  2,    1920. 

161.  Bordeaux,    Effet  de  Neige   (etching)    (5j4x8^) 25 

186.  Chez  Victor  Hugo    (etching)    (set  of  12,  average  size  3^x2^) 37 

Laurie,    Robert;    Circa    1740-1804,    British. 
Parker,    Nov.   9,    1920. 

68.  The   Full  Honeymoon    (mezzotint  after  F.  Wheatley),   F.   L.  Harrison..  250 

70.  Le   Bal   de   la    Bastille    (engraving   printed   in   color),    M.    Sloog 110 

Leader,  Benjamin  Wiiiiams,  R.  A.;  1831-        ,  British. 

Bostwick,    Dec.    10,    1920. 

17.  A  Wet  Roadside    (etched  by  T.  N.  Chauvel) 30 

Legrand,   Auguste;    1765-circa   1808,  French. 

Parker,    Nov.   9,    1920. 

71.  Jamais   d'Accord    (engraving   printed   in   color) 370 

Legrand,   Louis;   1863-        ,   French. 
Parker,    Nov.   9,    1920. 

72.  Le    Serin   Cheri   (engraving   printed   in   color) 330 

Legros,    AipKionse;    1837-1911,    French. 
Hall,    March    10,    1921. 

247.     Beggar  with  a  Crutch,  His  Hat  in  His  Hand   (etching)    (8?^x6^) 25 

Jones,    March   28,    1921. 

36.  La    Peche    au    Tambour    (etching),    Knoedler 55 

37.  Le  Coup   de  Vent    (etching),   F.    Keppel   &  Co 50 

39.     Les    Faiseurs   de    Fagots    (etching),    W.    Cowan 67 

42.  Bords    de     la    Marne     (etching) 30 

43.  L'Entree    du    Champ    (etching) 29 

44.  Les  Bouleaux  au  Bord  de  I'Eau   (etching) 50 

45.  Les  Bouleaux:  Bord  de  I'Eau  Efifet  du  Matin  (etching) 47 

47.     Le    Petit    Bruleur    d'Herbe    (etching) 27 

49.  Masure    su    la    Colline    (etching),    H.    G.    Cowen 50 

50.  Chateau     des     Revenants 27 

51.  Abbey   Farm    (etching)^    R.    M.    Hogue 52 

52.  Chailli,    Efifet    d'Orage     (etching) 28 

53.  Souvenir   d'ltalia    (etching)     34 

54.  Les   Paysage   aux    Meules    (etching) 110 

55.  Le  Petit  Lavoir    (etching) 40 

56.  Une    Valee    en    Bourgoyne    (etching),    M.    Ferry 67 

57.  Repos  de  Voyage  (etching)    35 

58.  La    Mort    du    Vagebond    (etching),    H.    G.    Cowen 65 

59.  La    Ferme     du     Bienheureux     (etching) 40 

61.  Pecheurs  de  Truites   (etching) 30 

62.  Paysage   aux    deux  Arbres    (etching) 27 

63.  Les    Bords    de   la    Liane    (etching) 35 

64.  Bord    de    la    Venelie     (etching) 35 

67.  Le    Paysage    a    la    Mare    (etching),    A.    H.    Harlow 105 

68.  La    Mort    du    Bucheron,    No.     2     (etching) 27 

69.  La   Paysage   a   la    Mare    (etching),    A.    H.    Harlow 230 

Lepere,   Louis  Auguste;   1849-1918,  French. 
Jones,    March   28,   1921. 

70.  Promenade  du   Dimanche  Crevecoeur    (etching),   M.    Ferry 54 

71.  Marche  a  la  Volaille,  a  St.  Jean-de-Mont   (etching),  H.   M.  Dunbar 60 

72.  Toits  de  mon  Atelier  a  Jouy   (etching),  Dunbar 65 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  307 

Lepere — Continued. 

73.  Nivellement    de    la    Place    Maubert    (etching) $45 

76.  Une  Ruelle  a  Beauvais   (etching) 45 

77.  Chemin    de    la    Briquetrie  ■'  (etching) 42 

78.  L'Ondee    (etching) ,    Knoedler    &    Co 72 

79.  La    Cathedrale    de    Reims    (etching),    H.    M.    Dunbar 450 

80.  La    Chaumiere    du    Vieux    Pecheur    (etching) 130 

81.  Souvenir   de    St.    Denis    (etching),    H.    M.    Dunbar 50 

82.  Pommier    Mort     (etching) 37 

83.  Une  Rue  du  Quartier  Juif  a  Amsterdam   (etching) 30 

84.  L'Arrivee    au    Moulin    (etching) 47 

85.  Haarlem    (etching),    Dunbar 55 

,              86,  Vieille    Bourrine,    Maison     du    Marais,     Vendee     (etching) 40 

87.  Au  Bord  du  Petit-Morin  a  Verdelot  (etching),  Knoedler  &  Co 80 

88.  Provins    (etching),    R.    M.    Hogue 150 

89.  La  Chaumiere  a  Rousseau   (etching),   B.  D.    Eisler 70 

90.  Juillet    en    Picardie    (etching),    M.    Ferry 77 

92.  Dimanche    au    Cabaret     (etching) 35 

93.  Le  Petit  Pont  (etching) 37 

94.  L'Arc-en-ciel    (etching),    H.    M.   Dunbar 52 

96.  Decharge  Publique,   Quai   de  la  Gare    (etching) 32 

97.  Route    de    la    Houssoye    (etching) 45 

99.  Le   Remouleur    (etching) 45 

100.  La  Croix   du   Bois-Macon-"Bel  Automne"    (etching),    R.    M.   Hogue....  170 

101.  Vue   de    St.   Jean-de-Mont,    Vendee    (etching) 40 

102.  Amsterdam,  Vue  de  Victoria  Hotel   (etching),   H.   M.  Dunbar 80 

103.  La  Maison  du  Roi  de  Pologne,  Angers   (etching) 45 

104.  Vue   de   Jouy-le-Moutier    (etching) 32 

105.  L'Etang    St.    Nicholas,    Angers    (etching),    H.    M.    Dunbar 62 

106.  Les    Arbres    Tordus     (etching) 42 

107.  Javelles    de     Seigle     (etching) 27 

108.  La  Guinguette,    Route    de   Billancourt    (etching),    H.    M.    Dunbar 75 

109.  Au  Puits    (etching) 37 

110.  La  Masure    Innondee    (etching),    A.    H.    Harlow 80 

111.  La    Masure     (etching),    H.     M.     Dunbar 60 

112.  La    Grande    Maree,    Rochers    de    Sion    (etching) 40 

113.  Demolition   de   la   Maison  de   Sabra    (etching),    H.    M.   Dunbar 62 

114.  Une    Petite     Mare     (etching),    W.     H.     Soloman lip 

117.  Chemin    dans   le    Marais    (etching),    P.    Thompson 85 

118.  Zwanen  Burgwall,   Amsterdam    (etching),  Dunbar 85 

119.  La    Mare    de   la   Prairie    (etching),    Knoedler    &    Co 80 

120.  La  Vieille   Passerelle,    Bords   du  Petit-Morin    (etching),   A.    H.   Harlow  85 

121.  Sur  la   Seine,   la   Nuit    (etching) 30 

123.  L'Abreuvoir  au    Pont    Sully    (etching),    Knoedler   &    Co 65 

125.  L'Orage   sur   la   Dune    (etching),    P.    Thompson 60 

126.  Retour    du    Troupeau 32 

127.  Pecheurs    de    Crevettes    (etching) 42 

129.  Dimanche   aux    Fortifications    (etching),    Knoedler   &    Co 55 

130.  Procession   de   la  Fete   Dieu   a   Nantes    (etching),    Knoedler   &   Co 75 

131.  Les  Fugitives    (etching) 45 

132.  La    Seine    au    Pont    d'Austerlitz     (etching) 32 

134.  Y'a    un    Noye    (etching) 32 

Levachez,  Charles   Francois  Gabriel;  latter  half  of  XVIII  Century,  French. 

A.   G.,  Feb.    18,   1921. 

87.  Louis    Seize     (Aquatint),     M.     Sloog 135 

Parker,   Nov.   9,    1920. 

73.  La  Danse  des  Chiens    (engraving  printed  in  color),   R.   A.    Reader 210 

Leyden,    Lucas  Van;    1494-1533,  Dutch. 

A.   G.,  Feb.   18,    1921. 

91.  The     Musicians     (engraving) 45 

Longueil,  Joseph    De;    1730-1792,  French. 

Parker,   Nov.   9,    1920. 

74.  Le  Retour  de  la  Vertue    (engraving  printed  in  color) 200 

Lorraine,  Claude    (Claude    Gelee);    1600-1682,   French. 

Jones,  March   28,    1921. 

28.  Le    Bouvier    (etching) ,    H.    M.    Dunbar 450 

29.  Le    Soleil    Couchant    (etching),    H.    M.    Dunbar 625 

MacLaughlin,   Donald   Shaw;    1876-         ,  American. 

Hall,    March    10,    1921. 

283.  Sunlight   and    Shadow    (14^x10^) 32 

284.  House   of    Ceres    (etching)    (14^^x10%) 27 

285.  The    Market,    Venice    (etching)    (10^x15) 35 

286.  Treviso   Waters    (etching)     (10xl2i^) 52 

287.  Venetian    Noontide    (etching)     (9^x11^^) 102 

289.  The    Forge    of    the    White    Horse    (6x5^) 32 


308  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

McBey,    James;    Contemporary,   British. 

Jones,  March   28,    1921. 

143.  Poena    Jetty,    Aberdeen    (etching),    P.  ^Thompson $60 

144.  Portsoy     Harbor     (1903)      (etching) 45 

145.  Cowgate,  Edinburgh   (1905)    (etching) 45 

146.  Enkhuisen    (1910)    (etching),    H.    G.   Cowen 55 

147.  Old    Castle    (1911)     (etching),    Knoedler   &    Co 52 

148.  Old  Castle   (1911)    (etching),  Knoedler  &  Co 65 

149.  The   Lumber   Mill    (overrockie,    1813)    (etching),    H.    M.    Dunbar 55 

150.  Sunset,    Wadi    un   Muksheib    (1917)    (etching) 65 

151.  Sunset,  Wadi  un  Muksheib    (1917-19)    (etching),   F.   Keppel 55 

152.  Kites   (1814)    (etching),   T.  F.   Drake 215 

153.  A    Deserted    Oasis    (Sinai,    1917-19)     (etching),    P.    Thompson 70 

154.  A   Deserted   Oasis   (Sinai,   1917-19)    (etching),   F.   Meder 65 

155.  The    Mid-day    Halt    (1917-19)    (etching),    P.    Thompson 80 

156.  The   Mid-day  Halt    (1917-19)    (etching),   T.   A.   Keck 75 

157.  Penzance     (1913)     (etching),    J.    F.     Drake 485 

158.  Strange    Signals     (Sinai,    1917-19)     (etching),    T.    Hetzler 175 

159.  Dawn,     Camel     Patrol     Setting     Out     (Zerapeum,     1917-19)      (etching), 

F.   Keppel    310 

160.  Desert    of    Sinai    (1917-19)     (etching),    Knoedler    &    Co 145 

161.  Ras-el-ain    (1918-19)    (etching 40 

162.  Ras-el-ain   (1918-19)    (etching),  T.   Hetzler 50 

163.  Early    Morning,    Catterline    (1919)     (etching),    C.    E.    Milmine 65 

164.  The    Pianist    (1920)     (etching),    R.    M.    Hogue 120 

165.  Point   Law,  Aberdeen    (1902)    (etching), 30 

166.  North    Bridge,    Edinburgh     (1904)     (etching) 35 

167.  Warriston    Close    (1905)     (etching),    Hildahourne    Farms 50 

168.  Fish    Market    Close,    Edinbourgh    (1905)     (etching),    G.    Busse 55 

169.  Lion  Brewery    (1914)    (etching),   R.    M.    Hogue 475 

170.  Evening,     Port     Lethan      (etching) 30 

171.  Plumstone  Close,  Edinburgh  (1905)    (etching) 45 

172.  Logie    Buchan    Ferry    (etching).    P.    Thompson 55 

173.  Edinburgh     Castle     (etching),     Hildahourne     Farms 55 

174.  Volendam    Girl     (etching) 45 

175.  Runsdorp  Church    (1910)    (etching),  Keppel 50 

176.  Enkhuisen   Harbor    (1910)    (etching).   Kennedy   &   Co 100 

177.  Enkhuisen   Harbour    (etching).    C.    M.    Hogue 80 

178.  Saw-Mill,    Monnickendam    (etching),    P.    Thompson 50 

179.  Saw-Mill  Monnickendam    (1910)    (etching),   H.   G.  Cowen 60 

180.  The  Mill  Zanndijk  (1910)    (etching) 35 

181.  The  Mill,  Zanndijk   (1910)    (etching),  P.  Thompson 55 

182.  Benachie  (1911)   (etching),  C.  S.  Brand 85 

183.  Burgos    (1911)     (etching),    G.    Busse 80 

184.  Avilla      (1911)      (etching) 45 

185.  The  Picador  Incites  the  Bull    (1911)    (etching),  De  Witt  Statten 150 

186.  Picador   Unhorsed    (1911)    (etching),  Keppel 115 

187.  The  Skylark  (1912)    (etching),  T.  F.  Drake 180 

188.  Valencia  Beach  (1911)    (etching),   P.  Thompson 65 

189.  Carmathan    (1911)    (etching),   Knoedler  &   Co 65 

190.  View  in  Wales    (1911)    (etching),  Keppel 110 

191.  April    in    Kent    (1912)     (etching),    A.    H.    Harlow* 125 

192.  Ebbesfleet    (Sandwich,    1912)    (etching),  P.   Thompson 80 

193.  Richborough     (1912),    Keppel 130 

194.  Benicarlo    (1911)     35 

195.  Thanet   from   Richborough    (1912)    (etching),   P.   Thompson '•. 65 

196.  The    Foveran   Burn    (1912)     (etching) 45 

197.  1588    (etching),  Knoedler  &  Co 55 

198.  1588    (etching),    Knoedler  &    Co 60 

199.  The    Story    Teller    (etching),    T.    Hetzler 200 

200.  Beggars,    Tetuan    (1912)     (etching),    F.    Meder 70 

201.  The   Gunsmiths,   Tetuan    (1912)     (etching),    Purnell   Art    Co 50 

202.  El    Soko,  Tetuan    (1913)    (etching),   F.    Meder 70 

203.  The    Orange    Seller,   Tetuan    (1912)     (etching).    F.    Straus 50 

204.  The   Bread    Market,    Tetuan    (1912)     (etching) SO 

205.  Dispute     in     the    Jewish     Quarters,     Tetuan     (1912)     (etching),     C.     E. 

Milmine    65 

206.  A    Moroccan    Market    (1913)     (etching),    F.    Meder 50 

207.  The    Pool     (1914)     (etching),    J.    F.    Drake 320 

208.  Approach  to  Tetuan   (1913)    (etching),  P.  Thompson 65 

209.  Tetuan    (1913)     (etching),    H.    M.    Dunbar ^  65 

210.  The   Ford,   Tangiers    (1913)    (etching),   P.    Thompson 70 

211.  Tangiers    (1913}     (etching),    R.    M.    Hogue 145 

212.  Grimmessesluis    (1913)    (etching),    H.    M.    Dunbar 65 

213.  The  Studio   (1914)    (etching),   W.    M.   Hill 55 

214.  Newburgh    (1914)     (etching),    R.    M.    Hogue 130 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  309 

McBey — Continued.    ' 

215.  Buchan    (1914)    (etching),   P.   Thompson $55 

216.  Sea  and  Rain    (Macduff.   1914)    (etching),   Dr.    P.   Bechtel 60 

217.  Gamrie     (etching),    J.     F.     Drake 400 

218.  A    Norfolk    Village    (1915)     (etching),    Knoedler   &    Co 180 

219.  Ely,    Night    (1915)     (etching),    E.    D.    Levinson 400 

220.  The  Isle    of    Ely    (1915)    (etching),    Keppel 135 

221.  Surrey    Downs    (1915)     (etching).    R.    M.    Hogue 60 

222.  France  at  the  Furnace   (1917)    (etching),  De  Wirr  Stetten 70 

223.  Francais  Inconnus   (1917)    (etching),  Wallace  E.  Meyers 50 

224.  The   Carpenter  of   Hesdin    (1917)    (etching) 40 

225.  Albert     (1917)      (etching) 40 

226.  The    Somme    Front    (1917)     (etching),    A.    C.    Dickens 65 

227.  Boat   Building,   Vinaroz    (etching)     30 

228.  Boat  Building.   Vinaroz    (1911)    (etching),   P.   Thompson 55 

Walpole,   April    13,    1921. 

169.  Ebbesfleet    (etching)    52 

170.  Spring,   1917   (etching),    Keppel 55 

171.  The  Carpenter  of  Hesden    (etching),  Thompson 35 

Mallet,  Jean    Baptiste;   1759-1835,  French. 
Parker,    Nov.    9,    1920. 

75.  Ah!  qu'il  est  joli   (engraving  printed  in  color) 175 

Manet,    Edouard;    1832-1883,    French. 
Jones,    March  28     1921. 

137.     Les    Petits    Gitancs     (etching).    H.     M.    Dunbar 160 

141.  Le   Gamin    (etching).   J.    M.    Dunbar 52 

142.  Le    Guitariste     (etching) 42 

Marchetti,   Pietro;  XIX  Century,  Italian. 
A.   G.,  Feb.   4,   1921. 

8.     The  Holy  Family    (engraving) 50 

Marriot,    F. 

A.    G.,   Feb.   4,    1921. 

232.     The  Gateway  at   Bruges    (mezzotint  printed   in  colors),  R.   H.   Kieland..  30 

Masonobu,    Kitao;   1761-1816,   Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,    Feb.    12,    1921. 

848.     The  Toy   Beat   (8i/.x6),   H.   Mansfield 50 

832.     Looking   back   at   Fuji.      C.    H.    Chandler 25 

Walpole,  Jan.   20,    1921. 

639.  Arranging  Her  Coiffure  (9^x7^^),  Manning SO 

Walpole,   March   3,    1921. 

238.     A   Young  Lady  and   Maid 350 

Masanobu,  Okumura;  active  about  1685-1768,  Japanese. 
Walpole,    Jan.   20,    1921. 

6.  Kanzan    and    Jittoku    (12^x554).    Ainsworth 300 

7.  Oiran   and  Kamuro    (12^x6^),    Sanborn 80 

8.  The  2nd  Ichikawa  Danjure  (12^x6^4),  Miss  Buckingham 140 

Walpole,  March   3,   1921. 

4.      Oiran  Reading  a  Letter 160 

Masayoshi,    Kitao;    1761-1829,   Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

77.     The    Pheasants.      J.    P.    Sabin 25 

Walpole,    March   2,    1921. 

7Z.     A  Pair  of   Partridges  Beside  a  Waterfall . 32 

Masson,  Antoine;  1636-1700,  French. 
Hall,    March    10,    1921. 

264.      Marin  Curcau  de  la  Chambre  (engraving)    (1054x8.}4) 25 

Meisho,  Toto;   Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

692.     Fireworks   at   Ryogoku   Bridge.      C.    H.    Chandler 30 

Meisho,  Yedo. 

Metzgar,   April   5,    1921. 

427.     Snow  at  Ochanomizu    32 

Meryon,  Charles;   1821-1868,  French. 
Hall,   March    10,    1921. 

295.     La    Galerie   Notre-Dame    (etching)     (9x6§^) 70 

297.  La    Pompe    Notre    Dame    (etching)     (6^x9.H) 45 

298.  Le  Grand    Chatelet   Vers    (etching)     (6  15/16x9  13/16) 45 

Jcnes,    March  28,    1921. 

229-230.      Nouvelle    Zelande     (etching),    original    pencil    drawing    for    etching, 

J.    F.    Drake 410 

Walpole,  April   13,    1921. 

178.     San  Francisco,   California   (etching,  4th  state),  Spencer 30 


310  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Melssonler,  Jean  Louis   Ernest;   ISIS-ISPI,  French. 
Bostwick,    Dec.    10,    1920. 

29.  Annibal  (height  5)    (etched  by  himself) $32 

31.  Tavern  Exterior  with  French  Soldiers  Engaged  in  Game  of  Cards  (15x12) 
(etched   by   A.    Boulard) ^ 72 

32.  Partie  Perdue    (13^xl7j^)    (etched  by  Felix  Bracquemond) 60 

34.  Les  Amateurs  de  Peinture  (31x10^^2)    (etched  by  Achille  Jacquet) 37 

35.  Chess  Players    (4^/^x12)    (etched  by  Jules  Jacquet) 32 

36.  The  Sargeant's  Portrait   (1534x13)    (etched  by  Jules  Jacquet) 65 

ZT.  Marshal  de  Saxe  and  his  Staff  (1434v2034)    (etched  by  Jules  Jacquet)..  25 

38.  The  Stirrup  Cup   (16x14)    (etched  by  Jules  Jacquet) 30 

39.  The   Stirrup  Cup   (15^x13^)    (etched  by  L.   Marzies) 60 

Millet,   J.    F.;    1814-1875,  French. 
A.   G.,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

233.     Peasants   Going  to  Work   (original  etching),   M.   Goodman 30 

Boland,   Dec.   3,    1920. 

233.  The  Churner  (etching)   (7x4^^),  David  Keppel $95 

234.  Peasant  with  a  Wheelbarrow   (etching)    (6^x5^4) 30 

235.  The  Gleaners   (etching)    (7^x10),  David  Keppel 185 

236.  The   Diggers    (etching)    (9^xl3j4) 50 

237.  The  Wool  Carder   (etching) 60 

239.  Shepherdess    Knitting    (etching)    (12i^x9^) 32 

240.  Peasants  Going  to  Work   (etching)    (I5j^xl2) 35 

242.  The  Sower  (7^x6^4 )    (lithograph) SO 

243.  Set   of    wood   engravings    (subjects    drawn  by    Millet   and   blocks   cut   by 
Lavieille    (5j4x3) 11 

Bostwick,   Dec.    10,    1920. 

41.  The  Angelus   (I7j4xl9^)    (etched  by  Charles  A.  Walters) 60 

Hall,   March    10,    1921. 

300.     La  Couseuse  (etching)    (3 /^x2M) "^^ 

Jones,    March    29,    1921. 

231.     Peasants   Going  to   Work    (etching),   J.    F.    Drake 1,500 

Miiner,  E.   E. 

A.   G.,   Feb.   4,    1921. 

235.  Lady  Anne  Lambton  and  Family  (mezzotint  printed  in  colors,  after  the 

painting  by  John   Hoppner),   P.    Suval 25 

236.  The  Tompkison  Boys   (mezzotint  printed  in  .colors,  after  the  painting  by 

Gainsborough) ,  P.  Suval   32 

IVlinko,   Tacliibana;  active  about   1760-1770,  Japanese. 
Walpole,   Jan.    20,    1921. 

29.  Benzaiten  seen  in  Incense  Smoke   (1034x7|^),  Miss  Buckingham 360 

IVloret,  Jean    Baptiste;   XVIII   Century,   French. 
Parker,   Nov.   9,    1920. 

76.  Caffee    (sic)    des    Patriotes    (engraving    printed    m    color),    Mrs.    Hugh 

Murray    135 

IVIorland,    George;    1763-1804,    British. 
Smith,    Feb.   3,    1921. 

85.     Fox   Hunting    (set    of    6    engravmgs),   H.    J.    King 130 

IVloronobu,    Hisliiicawa;   active   circa   1660-1700,   Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,    Feb.    12,    1921. 

701.     The    Gods    of    Luck    (12x15),    A.    B.    Duel 25 

Walpole,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

1.  Ho-o    Maru    (12^x173,4),    Wheeler So 

2.  A  Temple  in  Kyoto  (10x13^4),  Smith 105 

3.  Tengu  at  Fencing  Practice   (8?4xl274),   Miss  Buckingham 40 

4.  Nio  ni  Tengu    (8i/^xl23/i),   Miss   Buckingham 30 

5.  Chinese   Soldiers   Resting    (8^^x12^^),    Wheeler 30 

Parsons,   C. 

Smith,   Feb.    3,    1921. 

108.     Panorama    of    Halifax     (after    J.    W.    Hill),    Agent 27 

Pavon,   Ignazio;  XIX  Century,  Italian. 

A.   G.,   Feb.   4,    1921.  ,.  ^     .     ,. 

16.     The  Transfiguration  (engraving,  after  Raphael),  with  Veduta  di  Conicoli 

in   Tivoli    (engraving),   and   another — three   pieces,   one   lot....  75 

Pennell,  Josepli;  1860-         ,  American. 
Boland,   Dec.   3,    1920. 

244.  Westminster  Abbey,  London    (etching)    (12x7^) 32 

245.  St.   Paul's,   London   from   Fleet   Street    (etching)    (10x7^^ 30 

247.  London   Bridge   Stairs    (etching)    (lli/^x7^) 25 

252.  Rossetti's    House,    London    (etching)    (7^x11^) 40 

255.  The  Tower  Bridge   (etching)    (75^x11]^) 27 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  311 

Pyall,    H. 

Brewster,   May   17,    1921. 

91.     Hunters  on   their  Way    to  the  Hunting   Stable     (colored   aquatint   after 

James   Pollard),  A.   B.   Maclay $35 

Raffet,   Auguste;   1804-1860,   French. 
Jones,    March    29,    1921. 

244.  La  Revue  Nocturne    (etching),   H.    M.   Dunbar 70 

245.  Retraite   du   Bataillon   Sacre   a  Waterloo    (etching),   E.   Weyle 60 

Raimundo,   Marc  Antonio;  about   1488-1534,  Italian. 

A.   G.,   Feb.    18,    1921. 

88.     Dance   of  Cupids    (engraving),   J.    S.    Phipps 175 

Reeve,  R.  G. 

Walpole,    April    13,    1921. 

221.  View  of  the  Port  of  Liverpool  (aquatint  printed  in  colors  after  painting 

by  Samuel  Walters) ,   Williams 31 

Rembrandt,  Van   Rijn;    1606-1669,  Dutch. 
A.   G.,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

263.     Petrus  and  Johannes    (original   etching),   M.    Goodman 45 

265.  Utenbigardus    (original    etching),    B.    Emmett 47 

266.  Old  Man  and  Child    (original   etching),   Dickerman 80 

267.  Portrait   of  a   Man    (original   etching),   B.   Emmett 45 

Hall,    March    10,    1921. 

308.     Adoration   of   the   Shepherds    (etching)    (434x3^) 52 

310.     The    Great   Jewish    Bride    (8>^x6i^)     (etching) 320 

Walpole,    April    13,    1921. 

222.  The  Pancake  Woman    (etching,  2  state),  Skoyles 11 

Revere,   Paul;   1735-1818,  American. 

Housman,   Oct.   30,    1920. 

321.  The    Boston    Massacre    (engraving) 285 

Ride;    XVIII    Century,    French. 
Parker,    Nov.   9,    1920. 

80.  Sainte  Madelaine  Repoussant  les  Vanites  du  Monde   (engraving  printed 

in  color),  T.  J.  Gannon , 75 

Rissen;  Japanese. 

Walpole,   March   3,   1921. 

278.     A    Goose  and  Reeds 110 

Roberts,    P. 

Walpole,   April    13,    1921. 

226.     L.  G.  Otto,  Minister  from  Napoleon  I  to  Great  Britain   (stipple  engrav- 
ing printed  in  colors  after  painting  by  Turnbull),  Anderson..  37 
Rodin,   Auguste;    1840-1917,    French. 
Jones,    March   29,    1921. 

246.  Portrait   of   Victor  Hugo    (etching),   A.    H.    Harlow 110 

Rosenberg,   F.;   1758-1833,  German. 

Brewster,    May    17,    1921. 

98.     Opposition    Coaches    at     Speed    (colored    aquatint   after    C.    Newhouse), 

Lagerman    25 

Rosenthal,  Albert;   1863-         ,  American. 
Housman,   Oct.   30,   1920. 

353.  George    Washington    (etching   of  Field    Miniature) 50 

Rousseau,  Pierre  Etienne  Theodore;  1812-1867,  French. 
Boland,    Dec.   3,    1920. 

291.  Chenes  de   Roche   (etching)    (5x65i) 45 

Rowlandson,  Thomas;   1756-1827,  British. 
Parker,    Nov.   9,   1920. 

81.  Vauxhall    (engraved  by  R.   Pollard  and  aquatinted   by   Jukes),  The  Ro- 
senbach    Co 925 

Sadahide,    Utagawa;    1820-1864,   Japanese, 
Schraubstadter,   Feb.    12,   1921. 

851.     The    Combat.      A.    B.    Duel 40 

Sadler,  W.  Dendy;  1824-        ,  British. 
A.  A.  A.,  Dec.   10,   1920. 

Ti.  Darby   and  John    (etching)    (18x23) 220 

74.  End  of  the  Skein    (18^^x23^)    (etched  by   W.   Boucher) 90 

Bostwick,    Dec.    10,    1920. 

48.  Darby  and  Joan    (135^x191^)    (etched  by  W.   H.  Boucher) 48 

49.  The  End  of  the  Skein    (133^xl9i^)    (etched  by  W.   H.   Boucher) 90 

50.  For  Fifty  Years   (13^^x19^)    (etched  by  W.  H.   Boucher) 100 

51.  Home  Sweet  Home  (18x24)    (etched  by  W.  H.   Boucher) 50 

52.  Nearing  the  End   (15x20)    (etched  by  W.  H.  Boucher) 60 

53.  My  Love  to  You  (14^x11)    (etched  by  W.  H.   Boucher) 205 

54.  Same  to  You  Dear  (14^x21)   (cached  by  W.  H.  Boucher) 60 


312  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Sadler— Continued. 

55.  The  Widow  at  Home   (14i4x20)    (etched  by  W.  H.  Boucher) $30 

56.  At  the  Wayside   Inn    (22xl9i^)    (etched   by   Guy   Chiquet) 37 

57.  After  Dinner  Rest  Awhile   (etched  by  James  Dobie)    (133^x19) 70 

58.  London  to  York   (18i/^x25)    (etched  by  James  Dobie) 35 

59.  Long-,   Long   Ago    (1154x1434)    (etched   by   James   Dobie) 30 

60.  Long,   Long  Ago    (1134x14^-4)    (etched    by   James   Dobie) 27 

61.  The   Old   and  the   Young    (13x17^)    (etched   by   E.    Gaujean) 45 

62.  The  Widow's  Birthday    (13x1 7^^)    (etched   by  E.   Gaujean) 60 

63.  Offer  of  Marriage   (17^^x24)    (etched  by  A.  Mongin) 35 

Saillar,   Louis;  1748-1793,  French. 

Bell,   April   21,    1921. 

95,     William  II   of   Nassau    (stipple   after  painting  by   Honthurst) 26 

Savage,    E.;   Contemporary,  American. 
Housman,   Oct.   30,    1920. 

349.  George  Washington    (mezzotint),   Max  Williams 100 

350.  George  Washington   (engraving),  A.  C.  Haight 70 

Schlavonetti,   Luigi;  1765-1810,  Italian. 
Bell,  April   21,    1921. 

147.  Two  Bunches   a   Penny  Primroses,   Two   Bunches   a   Penny    (stipple    in 

colors  after  Francis  Wheatley)    (Plate   No.    1    of  the   Cries   of 
London)     140 

148.  Milk  Below  Maids  (stipple  printed   in  colors)    (Plate  No.  2  of  the  Cries 

of  London)    250 

Schongauer,   Martin;  About  1445-1491,  German. 
Boston  Museum,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

88.      Christ   on   the   Cross    (engraving),  J.   F.    McCarthy 185 

87.     Christ  on   the   Cross   (engraving),  J.   F.    McCarthy 62 

Sergent,   Antoine   Francois;    1751-1847,   French. 
Parker,   Nov.   9,    1920. 

82.  General   Marceau    (engraving  printed  in  coIot) 160 

83.  Monsieur  Frere  du  Roi  (engraving  printed  in  color),  A.  J,  Riddle,  Jr...  70 

Sharaku,  Tosiiusai;    active    1790-1795,    Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,   Feb.   12,    1921. 

818.  Actor    Portrait.       J.     F.     Spaulding 370 

819.  The  Actor  Ichikawa  Danjuro.     A.   B.  Duel 170 

820.  The    Man   with    the   Fan.      A.    B.    Duel 180 

821     The    Man   with   the    Pipe.      Mrs.    A.    Friedler 110 

822.     Actor    and    a    Woman.      C.    H.     Chandler 420 

Walpole,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

30.  Ichikawa  Ebizo  as  Ko  no  Moronao  (I5j/^x9^),  Mann $490 

31.  Three  Actors  in  a   Shosa   (8>^xl2),   Spaulding 170 

32.  Scene  from  a  Drama    (8^^x12),    Spaulding 200 

23.  Nakajima  Wada-emon    (12^x5^),    Spaulding 350 

34.  Nakayama   Tomisaburo    (12^x5^),    Spaulding 370 

35.  The  2nd   Ishikawa   Komazo    (14^x9^),    Mansfield 1.200 

36.  The  4th  Matsumoto  Koshiro  as  Banzuin  Chobei   (14j4x9^),  Bassctt 350 

27.  The  1st  Ichikawa  Omezo  (143^x9^),  Yamanaka 370 

38.  The  2nd  Ichikawa  Monnosuke    (13^x9i4),   Mann 280 

39.  Otani  Tokuii   (14i^x9^),  Yamanaka 300 

40.  The  3rd  Nadno  Hikosaburo  as  Yuranosuke  (14J4x9^),  Mann 310 

41.  The   1st  Onoe  Matsusuke    (I5i^xl0),  Oshima 825 

Walpole,    March  3,    1921. 

276.  Actor  Ichikawa    Omezo   I    310 

277.  Actor  Sawamura    Sojuro   III    150 

Sliauland,   E. 

Hall,    March    10,    1921. 

323.     Rheims    Cathedral    (etching)     (23^x15^4) 27 

Shigemasa:    active   about    1765,    Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,   Feb.    10,    1921. 

493.  The    Flirtation.       B.     Matsuki 62 

494.  Juro    and    the    Maid.       B.     Matsuki 30 

Shigenaga;    active   about    1743,    Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,   Feb.    12,    1921. 

708.     Kyoyu.       Yamanaka    &    Co 80 

Shigenobu,    Yanagawa;    1782-1832,   Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,   Feb.    12,    1921. 

482.     Actor.      A.    B.    Duel SO 

702.     The  Three   Metropoli.     Yamanaka  &  Co 230 

Walpole,   Jan.   2U,    1921. 

224.  Hanazono  of  Nakaori-ya  (15x10),  Metropolitan  Museum 25 

225.  Konami  of  Kurahashi-ya  (15x10),  Metropolitan  Museum 25 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  313 

Shucho,   Tamagawa;  active  about   1790-1800,  Japanese. 

Walpole,  Jan.   20,   1921. 

130.  Woman  with  a  Fan   (15x9^),  Miss  Buckingham $750 

Shuncho,    Katsukawa;    active    1775-1800,   Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,   Feb.   12,   1921. 

759.  In    the    Parlor.      K.    Oshima 45 

760.  A    Stage    Scene.     A.    B.    Duel 30 

762.     Shinobazu    Fond    at    Ueno.      R.    A.    Bidwell 32 

765     The   Gathering.      A.    B.    Duel 95 

Walpole,   Jan.  21,   1921. 

89.  The  Botan  Show  (iSj^xlO).  Church 325 

90.  The  Votive  Offering    (14^x19%),   Miss  Buckingham 80 

91.  Admiring  the  Tree  Peonies  (14^x28^).  Buckingham 950 

92.  A  Picnic  Party  at  Hagidero   (13i^x29^),   Miss  Buckingham 300 

93.  View  in  Fifth   Street    (14^x9^),   Bassett 65 

94.  Kyo  Shijo  Kawara  Yuryo   (12j4x8M),  Bassett ; 25 

95.  Narcissus   (10x7^),  Keck 50 

257.  Famous  Actors  at  a  Tea-House   (14^x9^),  Colburn 500 

258.  The  Little  Cascade  at  Meguro   (9^x7^),  Ainsworth 90 

259.  The    Inari    Festival    (15x10^),    Miss    Buckingham 110 

260.  Natsu  Omoi:  A   Summer   Fantasy    (10x7j4),   Penner 30 

261.  The   Seventh  and   Eighth    Months    (I5j4xl0),    Carter 125 

262.  Visitors   to   the   Sankoim   Shrine    (15x10),   Garland 100 

263.  Oiran  and  Attendants   (15 J^xlO^^),  Mann 160 

607.  Komazo  at  the  Sea  Shore    (12%x8M),  Garland 120 

608.  Yoshiwara    Beauties    (15^x10),   Boynton 25 

609.  Two  Popular  Favorites    (IS^xlOi-^),   Oshima ISO 

610.  On    Parade    (143^x9%),    Mann 45 

611.  Crossing  the  Bridge  (14j4x9j^),  Miss  Buckingham 55 

Walpole,    March   2,    1921. 

67.  Three    Women    under    a   Cherry   Tree 180 

68.  New  Year's  Promenade    ' 230 

69.  Ryogoku   120 

70.  The   Ins   Viewing   Party 120 

71.  Sumidigawa    180 

72.  Gotenyama    140 

Shunei,    Katsukawa;    1769-1919,   Japanese. 

Walpole,   March   3,   1921. 

233.  Actor  Sakata  Hangoro  III 32 

234.  Actor  Sawamura  Sojuro  III    30 

236.     Act  II   from   Chushingura 25 

Shunjo;  XVIII  Century,  Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,   Feb.   12,   1921. 

67.  Two    Actors.      A.    B.    Duel 35 

68.  An  Actor.      H.    Mansfield 40 

69.  The   Awakened    Beauty.      H.    Mansfield 65 

Shunko,    Katsukawa;    active   about   1760-1790,   Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

58.     The    Court    Lady SO 

Walpole,   Jan.    20,    1921. 

51.  The  2nd  Ishikawa  Komazo  (llO^xS^)^),  Miss  Buckingham 65 

53.  Actor  in  a  Woman's  Role   (12x53^),  Church 185 

54.  Onoe    Matsuke    (12^^x5^),    Colburn 205 

56,  The  2nd  Ichikawa  Monnosuke   (12x5j/2),  Yamanaka 25 

58.  The  2nd  Nakumaru  Nakazo  (14>^xl0>^),  Mann 100 

59.  Scene  from  a  Drama   (12x55^),  Bidwell 35 

Walpole,   March   3,   1921. 

231.  Actor  once   Matsusuke    55 

232.  Actor  Ichimura  Uzaemon  IX    35 

Shunman;  XVIII  Century,  Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,   Feb.    12,    1921. 

767.     The    Pleasure    Party.      K.    Oshima 250 

Walpole,   March   3,   1921. 

239.     Three    Women    125 

Shunsho,    Katsukawa;    1726-1793,    Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,    Feb.    12,    1921. 

715.     Gion  Abura  Tori.     C.  H.   Chandler 80 

717.  Soga    no    Taimen.      H.    H.    Hall 50 

718.  Actor   as    Soga   no  Juro.     A.    B.    Duel 60 

719.  Actor  Portrait.     A.  B.  Duel 35 

720.  The    Samurai.      Yamanaka    &    Co 75 

721.  The    Hobby    Horse.      Yamanaka    &    Co 40 

726.     Player    Portrait.      A.    B.    Duel 55 

728.  The    Man    Behind   the  Gun.      Yamanaka   &   Co 45 

729.  Actor    Portrait.      A.    B.    Duel 40 


314  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Shunsho — Continued. 

72,7.     In  the   Shower  Bath.      Gookin $80 

739.     The    Ghost.      A.    B.    Duel 30 

746.     The     Tayu.       H.     Mansfield 52 

748.     Mitate    Chushingura.       H.    H.    Hall 30 

Walpole,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

86.  The  3rd  Segawa  Kirkun  no  Jo   (15x6J4),  Land 1,350 

87.  Two  Famous  Wrestlers    (15^x10),  Ainsworth 50 

88.  Two  Popular  Actors    (ll?^xSj4),  Gookin 35 

253.  The  5th  Ichikawa  Danjuro  (125^x55^),  Colburn 225 

254.  The  Sth  Ichikawa  Donjuro.     Duel 35 

255.  The  1st  Nakamura  Nakazo    (12^x5^),   Colburn 370 

256.  The  Actor  Nakayama  Kumetaro  (11^x5^),  Duel Z7 

602.  The  3rd  Sawamura  Sojuro  (12j/^x5H),  Gookin 70 

603.  Scene  from  a  Drama    (125^x55^),   Mann 45 

604.  The   1st  Nakamura  Riko    (12^x5^4),  Duel 70 

605.  The  4th  Ichikawa  Danjuro    (10x7j^),  Gookin 160 

Walpole,  March  3,   1921.  i     . 

219.  Actor  Nakamura  Nakazo  I    125 

220.  Actor  Ichikawa  Danjuro  V   55 

221.  Actor  Otani  Hiroemon  III    47 

222.  Actor  Arashi    Sangoro    115 

223.  Actor  Ishikawa  Monnosuke  II    25 

224.  The  Actor  Makamura  Sukegoro  II 32 

226.  A  Pilgrim  Offering  a  Prayer    95 

227.  A  Demon  Tugging  at  the  Helmet  of  Watanabe  no  Tsuna 35 

229.     An  Oiran  and  Two   Kamura 27 

Shuntei,    1769-1820,   Japanese. 

Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

71.     The  Wrestler.     Towne 25 

Shunyei,    Katsukawa;    1726-1793,   Japanese. 
S.chraubstadter,    Feb.    12,    1921. 

503.     Actor.       Yamanaka     &     Co 57 

Walpole,   Jan.    20,    1921. 

139.  The  2nd  Nakum-ura  Noshio  (14j4x9),  Land 510 

140.  A  Noted  Actor  of   Womens  Roles   (Il%x5j4),  Lang 42 

141.  The   3rd   Sawamura   Sojuno    (125^x5§^),   Miss   Buckingham 80 

144.  A  Famous  Comedian    (12x5j^),    Gookin 110 

325.  The    3rd    Segawa    Kikunojo.      Ainsworth 220 

327.  The  4th   Matsumoto   Koshiro    (11^x5^),    Mann 75 

328.  An  Oshi-e  Gata    (14%x9H),   Bruce 270 

329.  A  Noted  Actor   (12>ix5^i),  Hall 30 

614.  Portrait  of  a  Kojo    (11^x5^^),   Spaulding 150 

615.  The  Actor  Arashi  Tyuzo  (11^x5^),  Duel 25 

617.  The  4th   Iwai  Hanshiro    (12^x85^),   Hall 35 

618.  Three  Actors  in  a  Soga  Play   (12x5^),  Mann 55 

Shunzan,   Katsukawa;   1776-1800,  Japanese. 

Walpole,   Jan.   22,    1921. 

640.  Katachi-uchi   no    Dan    (9^x7),    Manning 110 

Skrimshire,  Alfred  J.;  Contemporary. 
Hall,  March  21,   1921. 

85.  Lady    Sheffield    (mezzotint   after  Gainsborough)    (20^x14^) 35 

86.  Mrs.  Sheridan   (mezzotint  after  Gainsborough)    (20J4xl3>^) 75 

Smith,  John   Raphael;   1752-1812,   British. 
Smith,   Feb.   3,    1921. 

95.     Peasant   and  Pigs — A   Conversation    (mezzotints),    E.    B.    Springs 7C 

Soiron,   F.   D.;  active  circa  1790,   British. 
Parker,   Nov.  9,   1920. 

84.  The  Promenade  in  Saint  James's  Park  (engraving  printed  in  2  colors  and 
colored  by  hand),  The  Rosenbach  Co 630 

St.  Aubin,   Augustin   de;   1736-1807,  French. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

89-90.     Le    Concert   and    Le   Bal   Pare    (etching),    Mrs.    de    Bernard 485 

Sterner,  Albert;  1863-         ,  American. 
Walpole,  April   11,   1921. 

241.     Amour  Mort   (lithograph  in  red),  Read 45 

Sutherland,  Thomas;  circa  1785-        ,  British,  and  D.   Havell. 
Parker,   Nov.   9,    1920. 

85.  Views   of   Paris    (6)    (aquatints) 400 

Taltl,   Katsushlka;  1816-1853,  Japanese. 
Walpole,  Jan.  22,   1921. 

524.  The   Monkey   Bridge    (10^x9 J4),   King 240 

560.  Chrysanthemums  and   Sparrow    (14x4^).   Ely 60 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  315 

Toshlnobu,  Okumura;  active  about  1725-1742,  Japanese. 
Walpole,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

9.  Sakata  no  Kintaro   (12^x6^),   Hall $35 

Taso  School;  Japanese. 

Metzgar,  April  5,   1921. 

465.     The   Girl   in   White 41 

Toshinobu,    Okumura;   active  about    1725-1742,   Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,   Feb.   12,    1921. 

706.  Daikoku.      A.    B.    Duel 30 

707.  Tenjin.      Robert    Laurent 50 

Toyoharu,  Utagawa;  1733-1814,  Japanese. 
Walpole,  Jan.  21,   1921. 

335.  Ukive  Wakoku  keideki  Shin  Yoshiwara  Naka  no  Cho  (9j^xl454),  Horter  25 
Walpole,   March  2,    1921. 

21.  Evening  Scene  in  a  Street  of  the  Yoshiwara 27 

22.  Shogun  Yoritomo's  Hunting  Party  at  Foot  of   Mt.  Fuji 30 

Toyohiro,  Utagawa;   1769-1825,  Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,  Feb.   12,   1921. 

833.  The    Shower    35 

834.  The  Cuckoo.     A.  B.  Duel 35 

835.  In  the  Palace  Grounds   50 

837.     The  Chrysanthemum    Garden    110 

Walpole,  Jan.  21,   1921. 

340.  The  Snow-Laden   Chozubachi    (13^x9),   Colburn 220 

341.  The  Third  Month    (14^^x9^),  Raymond 50 

342.  Woman  Arranging  Flowers    (14^x9%),   King 140 

345.  The  Autumn  Moon  in  the  Mirror  Pond   {7y&x4}i),  Pepper 62 

544.  Flower  Arrangement    (14^x9^),    Mansfield 140 

545.  Horses     (13^x9i^),     Mansfield 55 

;        546.  Cranes   and   Reeds    (13^x93^),    Mansfield 140 

Walpole,    March  3,   1921. 

252.     A  Young  Woman  Stepping  Inside  a  Boat 585 

Toyokuni,  Utagawa;  1769-1825,  Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,    Feb.    10,    1921. 

512-513.     The  Lady  and  the  Cranes.     The  Thread   Seller.     A.    B.  Duel 30 

519.  Snow  Scene.     A.  B.  Duel 27 

520.  Kaomis.     G.  E.   Miller 150 

522.     The  Dyer.     Yamanaka  &  Co 35 

526.     Actor.     J.  T.  Spaulding 70 

530.     Actor's  Portrait.     Edw.  H.  Root 75 

532.     Night  Scene.     J.   T.    Spaulding 190 

534.     Danjuro.     J.   T.   Spaulding 85 

536.     Actor's  Bust.     J.   T.   Spaulding 90 

538.     Peeping  at  the  Star.     A.  B.  Duel 30 

542.     The  Falcon    30 

Walpole,   Jan.   20,    1921. 

146.  The  3rd  Segawa  Kikunii   (14^^x10),  Hall 75 

148.  Onua     Shichi-fuku-jin     (women     masquerading     as     the     Fortune     Gods) 
(15x9^),    Bersels 27 

149.  Amagoi    Komachi    (14^x95^),    Miss    Buckingham 105 

152.  The   3rd    Sawamura    Sojuro    (15x10),    Miss   Buckingham 130 

156.  Chofu  no  Tamagawa   (147^x10),  Ainsworth 825 

157.  A  Women's  Kuokusui  Party  (14^-29^),  Miss  Buckingham 250 

158.  Oiran  of  Ogi-ya    (14>ix28j^),   Yamanaka 90 

159.  The  Face   in  the  Mirror    (14^x29^),   Church 150 

341.  The  1st  Onoe  Matsusuke  (12x5^4),  Duel 37 

346.  Three  Shinagawa  Beauties   (14^x9 J^),  Miss  Buckingham 550 

347.  Scene  from  a  Drama    (15x9^),   Duel 52 

349.  The  Dream  of   the   Fox's   Wedding    (15x9^),   Yamanaka 40 

350.  At  Shinagawa   (13^x10),   Miss  Buckingham 25 

352.  The  2nd  Ichikawa  Romazo   (14^x9i^),  Spaulding 115 

353.  The  5th  Matsumoto  Koshiro  as  Sadakuro   (15J4x10J4),  Spaulding 50 

357.  Boating  on   Edo    Bay    (13^x29),    Kellogg / 120 

358.  The  Second  Floor  of  Choji-ya   (14^x29^).   Mann 90 

643.  Two  Distinguished  Actors  (Mi^xlOi^),  Duel 27 

649.  Early  Evening  in  the  Edo   Machi    (14Mx30j4),  Mann 225 

650.  The    Dressmakers     (145^x28^),    Hilton 210 

651.  The  2nd  Ichikawa  Monnosuke   (14^x9^),  Spaulding 200 

652.  The  1st  Onoe   Matsusuke  (14j4x9%),   Spaulding 200 

653.  The  4th  Matsumoto  Koshiro   (14^x10^),   Spaulding 210 

654.  The    3rd    Segawa    Kikuojo    (14^x10^^),    Duel 125 

655.  The   3rd    Sakata  Hangoro    (14^x10),    Spaulding 775 

656.  A  Famous  Actor  of  Women's  Roles  (15^x10^),  Spaulding 600 


316 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 


Toyokuni — Continued. 
Walpole,  March  2,   1921. 

74.  Actor   Matsumoto   Koshiro   IV    $475 

75.  A  Youth  and  Maiden  on  a   Shore  by  a  Boat 52 

76.  A  Young  Lady  and  a  Girl  in  a   Boat 50 

77.  Narihira's  Journey  to  the  East 85 

79.  The  Actor  Takinoya    130 

80.  A  Woman   Out  in   the  Snow  at  Night 50 

81.  Dreaming  of  Fox  Wedding   35 

82.  A  Party  of  Actors 55 

83.  An   Oiran   and   Peony   Blossoms 40 

Toyomassa,    Ishiikawa;   active  1179-1780,  Japanese. 

Walpole.   Jan.    22,    1921. 

569.  Cranes  by   the   Sea    (lOj^xSJ^),    Spaulding 310 

Toyonobu,    Shikawa;    1769-1825,    Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,   Feb.    10,    1921. 

254.     After  the  Bath.     C.  H.   Chandler 25 

256.  Taking  It  Easy.     E.    E.    Miller 55 

257.  Butai   Tobi.      A.    B.    Duel 40 

Walpole,    Jan.    20,    1921. 

25.  The   Harugoma   Odori    (16^ixllJ4),   Ainsworth 500 

Walpole,   March   2,    1921. 

6.     A  Girl  Walking  by  a  Stream,  Apparently  in  a  Pensive  Mood 110 

8.  Actors:     Nakamura   Kumetaro  and   Sanokawa  Ichimatsu 225 

9.  Actor  Sanokawa  Ichimatsu  as  Young  Samurai  Riding  en  Horseback..,.  40 
10.     A  Young  Woman  After  a  Bath  Tying  a  Cloth  About  Her  Waist 70 

Trenchard,   J. 

Hcusman,  0.ct.  30,   1920. 

362.   George  Washington  framed  with  portrait  of  Arthur  Y'oung   (engraving)  .  SO 

Tresca,    Sali;    XVIII    Century,    Italian. 
Parker,    Nov.    9,    1920. 

87.  La   Precaution    (engraving  printed  in  color),   D.    O.    Brown -100 

Turner,  F.  C.   (After). 

Brewster,    May    17,    1921. 

92.     The    Celebrated  Tom  Thumb   (aquatint  in  colors),  P.  Whitney 42 

Unknown. 

A.   G.,  Feb.  4,    1921. 

251.     Washington     Grays,    8th     Regiment,    N.  Y.  S.  T.     (colored    lithograph), 

P.    Suval    27 

288.     Portrait    of    Daniel   Webster    (chromo) 50 

Brewster,    May    17,    1921. 

35.     The    Road,    1825 — (Commercial     Traveler)     (colored    aquatint),    J.    W. 

Mettler     25 

Housman,   Oct.   30,   1920. 

356.  George   Washington   with   View   of    New   York  Harbor    (print   on   cotton, 

very  scarce) ,  W.  M.  Nolen SO 

Parker,    Nov.    9,    1920. 

3.  Louis  XVIII  after  the  painting  by  Pasquier    (engraving) 25 

4.  Marie    Antoinette    after    Mme.    Vigee    le    Brun     (engraving    printed    in 
colors)     280 

Smith,  Feb.  3,    1921. 

100.      Equestrian   Portrait   of   Washington    (mezzotint),    R.   Fridenberg 27 

Warwick,   March  28,   1921. 

82.  The   Battle    (colored   aquatint),   A.    J.    Campbell 105 

83.  His   Majesty's    Ship   Shannon    (colored    aquatint),    A.    J.    Campbell 105 

103.     Plan  of  the  Province  of  Pennsylvania  and  East  and  West   New  Jersey, 

showing  the  operations  of  the  Royal  Army,    1777  to    1778,  H. 

D.  Parson    S5 

Unknown;  Japanese. 

Walpole,    Jan.    21,    1921. 

2S0.  Love  Making  in  the  Air  (7^^x10^),  Spaulding 105 

Schraubstadter,   Feb.    12,    1921. 

735.     Fan  Portrait:    Actor.     Edw.  H.  Root SS 

Utamaro,   Kitagawa;  1753-1806,  Japanese. 
Schraubstadter,  Feb.   12,    1921. 

777.  A  Tayu.      E.   Twinning 32 

778.  The  Oiran.     Yamanaka  &  Co 37 

780.     An   Oiran.      R.    Glendenning 35 

782.     Yamamba  and   Kintoki.      Edw.   W.    Root 50 

784.  The  Two  Beauties.     A.  B.  Duel 25 

785.  A   Courtesan.     K.   Oshima 40 

786.  The   Housewife.      Yamanaka   &   Co 70 

787.  Amusing  the   Baby.     R.   A.   Bidwell 50 

788.  Brocade  Portrait  of  a  Young  Girl.     H.  Mansfield 220 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  317 

Utamaro—CcntiiiHtd. 

789.  The   Summer  Costume.     A.   B.   Duel $3,2 

790.  Good-bye.      H.H.Hall. 27 

791.  A   Tayu.      R.    Van   Iderstine 35 

792.  Reading  the  Letter.     C.  H.  Chandler 610 

793.  The  Shadow  Lantern.     A.  B.  Duel 30 

794.  The  Snake  Hour.     Yamanaka  &  Co 50 

796.     The  Tiger.     H.    H.    Hall 35 

799.     The  Oiran  and  Her  Lover.     A.   B.  Duel 30 

807.  Viewing  the  Cherries.     Harris 40 

808.  The  Taiko  and  His  Favorites.     C.  H.  Chandler 170 

809.  A  Women's   Procession.     T.   Tryotta 30 

810.  Flower  Arrangement   25 

811.  The   Procession.      Yamanaka  &   Co 45 

812.  House  Cleaning.     A.  B.  Duel 450 

Walpole,    Jan.    20,    1921. 

97.  Utamaro's    Self    Portrait    (15x9^4),    Spaulding 210 

98.  Saru    No   Koku    (14x10),    Miss    Buckingham 975 

99.  Amusing  the  Child  (10x954),  Yamanaka 35 

100.  At  the  Naniwa  Cha-ya  (14^x9^^),  Spaulding 100 

101.  The   Seventh  Day  of  the  Seventh  Month    (I5^xl0j4),   Spaulding 40 

102.  An  Oiran  of  Choji-ya   (1454x10),   Hilton 45 

103.  Hinazuru  of  Choji-ya  (145^x9)4),  Mann 80 

105.  Painting  a  Self  Portrait   (14^x9^),  Yamanaka 35 

106.  The    Hairdresser    (15^x10^^),    Bassett 200 

107.  Sayonara    (15^x10^),   Pratt 70 

108.  The  Autumn    Moon   (15x9M),   Mann 110 

110.  Two   House    Maids    (15^^x10),    Spaulding 460 

111.  A   Boating   Party  on   a    Moonlight   Evening   (15J4x10J4)i    Spaulding....  42 

112.  The  Young  Married  Woman   (lSxlO>^),   Ely 45 

113.  Reading  It  Over   (15x10),   Carter $65 

114.  Dojoji    (15x9%),    Mann 310 

lis.  The    Kawabiraki    Bight    Festival    (143^x29^).    King 525 

116.  Holiday   Makers   at  Enoshima    (14%x29i4),    King 310 

117.  Yakusha    Rokkasen    (125^x554),    Boston    Museum 90 

118.  The    Susuhaki    (14^x2954),    Hilton 310 

119.  A  Poet  of  the  Yoshiwara   n5x934),   Bassett 100 

120.  Hanashi-zuki    (14^x9%),     Yamanaka 35 

121.  Sake-zuki    (1454x10),    Rowinson 40 

122.  Sawagi-zuki    (14^x9?^),    Hilton SO 

123.  Kodomo-zuki    (14^x10),    Hilton 70 

124.  De-zuki   (14^x10),   Mann 30 

125.  Making  Faces   at   Him    (15x10),    Bidwell 70 

286.  A    Yoshiwara   Beauty    Seated   Facing   the    Left    (1454x954),    Miss   Buck- 
ingham     750 

287.  Picture    of    the    Pleasures    of    the    Taiko    and    Five    Wives    at    Rakuto 
(14^x29),  Miss  Buckingham   190 

288.  The  Sheltering  Tree    (15x28-34),   Miss   Buckingham 425 

289.  Pleasure   Boats   under  Tyokuku  Bridge    (15^x10^),   Yamanaka 55 

290.  Okaru  Putting  on  Her  Obi  (155/^x10^),  Miss  Buckingham 250 

292.  Two  Women  Looking  at  a  Whirling  Lantern,  a  Japanese  Moving  Picture 
Machine    (I5^xl0i4),    Pepper 30 

293.  A   Bov's   Daimvo  Procession    (15x10),    Kellogg 60 

294.  The  Mirror  (I5i4xl0>4),  Bidwell 45 

295.  The  Owl    (15xl0i4),   Carter 45 

296.  The  Bath    (14^x9%),  Pepper 62 

299.  Tying   Her    Obi    (14i/^x9?-^),    Hall 220 

300.  An  Oiran  of  Shinagawa   (13^4x9^),  Mann 170 

301.  Picture  of  Women    Lodgers    (13^x9^),   Pepper 70 

303.  Evening  Cooling    (IS^^xlO^),   Peale 25 

304.  Exorcising  the   Demons.     Hall 25 

306.  Gompachi  and  Komurasaki    (14^x954),   Bruce 30 

307.  Within   and    Without    (15x103^),    Bassett 125 

308.  The    Nightmare     (1454x9%)      Perrine 50 

309.  Chushingura  Act  I    (14^x9%),    Mann 50 

310.  Chushingura  Act  II   (14^x9%),  Hilton 35 

311.  Chushingura  Act  III    (14i4x9%),   Perrine 40 

312.  Chushingura  Act  IV    (14^x9%), Miss  Buckingham 40 

313.  Chushingura  Act  V     (14^x9%),     Carter 50 

314.  Chushingura  Act  VI    (14i4x9%),   Boston    Museum 42 

315.  Chusingura  Act  VII    (14^x9%), Miss  Buckingham 42 

316.  Chushingura  Act  VIII    (14i4x97/^),    Miss    Buckingham 60 

317.  Chusingura  Act  IX     (14^x9%), Miss    Buckingham 30 

318.  Chushingura  Act  X    (14^x9%),   Miss  Buckingham 25 

548.   Peonies  and   Butterfly   (13%x3j4),   Ainsworth 55 

550.  Japan   Robin   and    Manchurian   Great   Tit    (9%xl4S^),   Duel 32 

657.  Somenosuke  of   Matsuba-ya  n4%x9%),   Spaulding 525 


318  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

UtamarO' — Continued. 

658.  Yamauba  and  Kintaro  (14^xlOJ^),  Ainsworth $25 

659.  Whispered    Instructions    (12^x9^),    Manning 120 

660.  The  Hour  of  the  Monkey  (15x10),  Spaulding 200 

661.  The  Awabi  Shell  Divers  of  the  Ise  (14^x9^),  Hall 110 

662.  The  Boy  and   the  Crab    (15^x101-^),   Duel 37 

663.  Kinuta  no  Tamagawa    (13^x97-8),   Twinny 25 

664.  Tokimune  and   Shoso    (14J4x9%),    Mann 35 

665.  Mumegawa    and    Chubei    (15i4xlO),    Fuller 230 

666.  Chushingura   Act   VI    (14^x9^4),    Root 50 

667.  Scene  from  Act  VI   (14^x9%),  Duel 37 

668.  Chushingura  Act  X   ilSysxlOVs),  Root 80 

670.  Hana-murasaki  o^"  Tama-ya   (14%xlO>^),  Pepper 55 

678.  On   Tyogoku    Bridge    (15x9^),    King 170 

679.  Yukihira  and   Matzukaze    (15x10^4),   Hilton 100 

680.  A  Puppet  Show   (14J4x9§^),   Mann 55 

681.  Playing   Sugoroku    (15x10),  Oshima 35 

682.  After  the  Bath    (15x10),   Spaulding 160 

683.  Evening    Cooling    (14MxlOJ^)    Erlanger 30 

684.  Cherry  Flower  Viewing  on  Gotenvama   (14^x10),   Casey 25 

685.  Two   "Brother   Pictures"    (13^x9^),   Duel 27 

686.  Shaving  the  Boy's  Head  (14^x9->4),  Pepper 60 

687.  Morning  at  Futami  Beach   (15x29H),  Duel 47 

688.  Fishing  on  Edo  Bay  (13x26K),  Carter 130 

689.  The  Awabi  Shell  Divers  at  Ise    (14^x29^),   Carter 135 

690.  The  Hour  of  the   Rat    (15xl0K).   Duel 35 

Walpole,   March  3,    1921. 

256.  The  Geisha  Group  of  the  Masquerade  Fete  of  the  Tea  House  People..  120 

257.  A  Mistress  at  the  Hour  of   Snake 160 

258.  Omu  Komachi:    Incident  of   Komachi's  Life 350 

259.  A  Lesson  in  Penmanship   50 

260.  A  mother  Awakening  Her  Boy  from  a  Bad  Dream 35 

263.     Farmer  and  Landscape   25 

265.     Oiran  Shizuka  of  the  Tamaya  Composing  a  Line 75 

267.     A  Tea-House  Maid    190 

269.     Awabi-shell  Divers  of  Ise   175 

271.  A  Young  Mother  Looking  at  Her  Baby 115 

272.  The  Frivolous   Type    410 

273.  The  Staying  Women  Guests 85 

274.  A  Young  Woman  Playing  wi*^h  a  Pom-Pin 95 

275.  A  Princess  Party  and  Young  Falconer 60 

Van   Leyden,   Lucas;  1494-1533,  Dutch. 
Boston  Museum,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

73.     Christ  Crowned  with  Thorns   (engraving),  J.  F.  McCarthy 26 

Vendramini,  Giovanni. 

A.  G.,  Feb.  4,   1921. 

280.     Cupid  Refusing  Love  to  Desire   (stipple  printed  in  colors,  after  drawing 

by   F.  Bartolozzi) ,   Pitcher 25 

Viviani,  Antonio;   1797-1854,  Venetian. 
A.  G.,   Feb.  4,   1921. 

18.  The  Pesaro  Family  in  Adoration   (engraving,  after  Titian) 50 

19.  The   Holy  Family    (engraving,   after  Veronese) 50 

Ward,   William;    1766-1826. 
A.   G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

92.  The    Soliloquy    (engraving    printed    in    color),    J.    F.    Drake,    Inc 575 

93.  Alinda    (engraving    printed    in    color),   A.    W.    Graetz,    Inc 325 

Watson,  James;   1740?-1790,  British. 
A.   G.,   Feb.  4,    1921. 

284.  Barbara,    Countess   of   Coventry    (mezzotint,    after  the   painting   by    Sir 

Joshua  Reynolds) ,  J.   P.   Sabin 55 

285.  Mrs.    Bunbury    (mezzotint,    after    painting    by    Sir    Joshua    Reynolds), 

J.   P.    Sabin    47 

Webster,    Herman   A.;   1878-         ,  American. 

Hall,   March   10,   1921. 

343.     La  Route   de  Louviers    (6x8 J4)    (etching) 27 

355.     Lowenplatzchen,     Frankfurt      (etching)      (8x6j4 ) 27 

Jones,    March    29,    1921. 

247.     Old  Court  Sachsenhausen   (etching) 32 

Whistler,  James  Abbott  McNeill;  1834-1903,  American. 
A.  G.,   Feb.   4,   1921. 

289.  Liverdun    (etching),    M.    Goodman 35 

290.  The   Rag   Gatherers    (etching),   B.   Emmett 42 

291.  Bibi   Valentin   (etching),   Goodman 52 


PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  319 

Whistler — Continued. 

Hall,   March   10,   1921. 

364.     The  Unsafe  Tenement   (etching)    (6^x8^) $32 

366.  Street    at    Saverne    (etching)     (8 J^x6^ ) 50 

367.  La   Marchande   de   Moutarde    (etching)    (6^x3^) 25 

368.  The    Rag    Gathers    (etching)     (6x3^) 35 

373.  Reading  by  Lamplight   (etching)    (6%x4ys) 25 

374.  Landscape    with    a    Horse     (etching)     (5x8) 25 

375.  Nursemaid   and   Child    (etching)     (3^x5^) 25 

376.  Eagle    Wharf    (etching)     (53^x7%) 100 

377.  Black    Lion   Wharf    (etching)     (6x8%) 280 

378.  Black   Lion   Wharf    (etching)    (55^xX8^) 160 

379.  Thames    Police    (etching)     (6x9) 100 

380.  Longshoremen    (etching)    (6x9) 35 

381.  The    Lime-Burner    (etching)     (9^x6^^) 230 

382.  Billingsgate    (etching)     (6x8/^) 70 

384.  Soupe    a    Trois    Sous     (etching)     (6x9) 32 

385.  Bibi    Lalouette    (etching)     (9x6) 95 

386.  Bibi     Lalouette      (etching)      (9x6) 60 

387.  Becquet,    the    Fiddler    (etching)     (10x7^^) 370 

388.  Rotherhite    (etching)     (10x7%) 345 

389.  The     Forge     (drypoint)      (7^x12^) 50 

390.  Vauxhall    Bridge    (etching)     (4^xx5^) 25 

391.  Milbank    (etching)     (4x5) 25 

392.  Old    Hungerford    Bridge    (etching)     (5i^x8^) 85 

399.  Adam  and  Eve  Tavern,  Old  Chelsea    (etching)    (6%xl2) 95 

400.  Adam  and  Eve  Tavern,  Old  Chelsea   (etching)    (7x11%) 25 

401.  The  Adam  and  Eve  Tavern,   Old  Chelsea   (etching)    (6%xl2) 110 

402.  Little    Venice    (etching)     (7^x10%) 1,475 

403.  Nocturne    (etching)     (7%xll^). 1,850 

404.  The    Traghetto    (etching)     (9^x12) 550 

405.  Long    Venice     (etching)     (5x12^^) 625 

406.  Wheelright     (etching)     (4%x6%) 90 

408.  The  Little  Putney    (etching)    (5^x8^^) 27 

409.  Early    Morning    Battersea    (lithotint)     (6!^x10J4) 40 

411.  Old    Battersea    Bridge     (lithograph)     (5^x12) 40 

412.  Old    Battersea    Bridge    (lithograph)     (5^^x13) 45 

413.  Drury    Lane    Rags    (lithograph)     (5%x6^) 50 

415.  Cants    de   Suede    (lithograph)     (8^x4) 25 

416.  Cocks  and  Hens   (lithograph)    (7^^x55^) 40 

417.  Tete-a-Tete    in    the    Garden     (lithograph)     (75^x6^) 30 

419.  Girl    with    a    Bowl    (lithograph)     (5^x2^) 60 

420.  The  Strong  Arm    (lithograph)    (7H^9%) 25 

Jones,  March    29,    1921. 

248.  The    Lime    Burner    (etching),    F.     Meder 725 

249.  Nocturne:     Palaces     (etching),     F.     Keppel 1,900 

250.  Weary    (etching),   J.    F.    Drake 2,450 

Walpole,  April   13,    1921. 

269.  The    Lime-Burner    (etching,    1859) 190 

270.  La  Marchande  de  Moutarde   (etching,  about  1858)  Keppel 32 

276.     Longshoremen   (etching,  Thames  set),   Busse 50 

280.     Soupe  a  Trois  Sous    (etching) ,  Kovach 55 

283.     Black  Lion  Wharf  (etching,  Thames  set),   Keppel 205 

Yoshiiku,  Ikkeisai;   XVIII    Century,   Japanese. 

Walpole,   March   2,    1921. 

120.      Memorial    Portrait   of    Kuniycshi 85 

Zorn,   Anders;   1860-1920,   Swedish. 

Hall,   March   10,    1921. 

425.  Rosita     Mauri     (etching)      (85^x5^) 240 

426.  John  Hay    (etching)    (7 %x6) 120 

427.  Portrait    of    the    Artist     (etching)     (7x5) 50 

428.  Miss    Emma    Rasmussen    (etching)     (7%x5%) 625 

429.  Dance  at  Gopsmor    (etching)    (11^x734) 65 

430.  The  Three  Sisters   (etching)    (934x7) 70 

431.  Crown   Princess  of  Sweden    (etching)    (9^x7) 210 

432.  Bersak   (etching)    (9^x7) 110 

433.  Frida   (etching)    (734x534) 90 

434.  Self-Portrait  with  a  Fur  Cap   (etching)    (7x4%) 375 

436.  Bust   (etching)    (9)4x7) 60 

437.  Dance   at   Gopsmor    (etching)    (11^x7^) 85 

438.  My   Two   Models   (etching)    (73,4x5^) 95 

439.  Pa  Hamso   (etching)    (7%x5t4).... 90 

441.  Dalecarlian    Peasants    (etching)    (6^x4-%) 85 

442.  Pilot    (etching)     (6%x4/,) 100 

443.  Balance    (etching)    (614x4^4) 80 

444.  Against  the   Current   (etching)    (4^x6^) 95 


320  PRINTS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Zorn — Continued. 

Jones,   March    29,   1921. 

■»    251.  Axel  Herman  Haig  (etching^  Knoedler  &  Co $300 

252.  Buskage   (1911)    (etching),  Kncedler  &  Co 95 

254.  Zorn  and  His  Wife  (etching),  H.   M.  Dunbar 2,100 

253.  Berseck   (1914),  J.  U.  Lyne 65 

255.  Byst    (etching)    (1916) 80 

256.  Saint  Ives   (1991)    (etching),  H.   M.  Dunbar 1,500 

257.  Cercles   d'Eau    (etching) ,   Knoedler   &  Co 325 

258.  Dal  River   (1919)    (etching),  T.  Hetzler 235 

259.  Dans   I'Atelier    (etching),   Knoedler   &   Co 175 

260.  Wet    (1911)    (etching),   Keppel 350 

261.  Delcarlian   Peasants    (etching),    H.   A.    Schubert 135 

262.  Early   (1914)    (etching),  T.  Hetzler 160 

263.  Edo    (1907)    (etching),    Knoedler  &   Co 525 

264.  Vicki    (1918)    (etching),    F.    Keppel 375 

265.  Eka   (1913)    (etching),  J.   C.  Willever 85 

266.  En   Omnibus    (1891)    (etching),   A.   H.  Harlow 2,000 

267.  Gulli,  No.  2   (1917)    (etching),  A.   K.   Salamon 230 

268.  La  Guitare  ou   Souvenir    (1898)    (etching),   Knoedler  &   Co 850 

269.  Vallakulla    (1912)    (etching),   T.    Hetzler 425 

270.  Ernest   Renan    (1892)    (etching),   T.    Hetzler 1,600 

271.  Ee   Matin    (etching),   Knoedler  &  Co ■.  875 

272.  La  Petite  Brasserie    (1890)    (etching),   Knoedler  &  Co 225 

273.  L'Orage   (Zorn  in  a  Storm)    (1891)    (etching),   Knoedler  &  Co 900 

274.  Mary   Olsson    (etching),   W.   E.   Meyers 180 

275.  Mona   (1911)    (etching),  Keppel 675 

276.  Dagmar   (1912)    (etching),   Knoedler  &  Co 450 

277.  Shallow    (1913)     (etching),    T.    Hetzler 300 

278.  The  Toast   (1892)    (etching) ,  J.  F.  Drake 2,200 

279.  The   Precipice    (1909)     (etching),    Keppel 375 

280.  The  Swan    (1915)    (etching),  H.   M.   Dunbar 400 

281.  The  Three  Sisters   (1913),   A.    Pincus 160 

282.  Sappho   (1917)    (etching),  T.  Hetzler 335 

Walpole,    April    13,    1921. 

298.  Alder    (etched,    1919),    Steiner 100 

299.  Frida    (etched,    1914),    Hetzler 80 

300.  The  Pilot    (etched,   1919).  Thompson 65 

301.  Auguste   Strindberg   (etching,   1910)    Cowen 165 

302.  The  Two  Bathers    (etched,   1910),   Keppel 90 

303.  The  Three  Sisters  (etched,   1913),   Hetzler 120 

304.  Bersek   (etched,   1914).   Cowen 55 

305.  The  Two   (etched,   1916) 100 

306.  The  Dance   at  Gopsmoor   (etched,   1917) 100 

307.  Against  the  Current  (etched,  1919),  Keppel 60 

308.  The  Balance    (etched,    1919),    Keppel 70 


Sculpture  Sold  at  Auction 

African,    Congo. 

A.   G.,   May   12,    1921. 

99.     Female    Nude    (wood)     (height    10) 50 

African;    XVII   Century. 
A.   G.,   May   12,   1921. 

100.  African   Warrior   with   Shield   and   Club    (copper   statue)     (height   9)...  52 

101.  African  Warrior  with  Lance  and  Shield   (copper  statue)    (height  9)...  50 
Alexandrian   School;   III  and  II  Century  B.  C. 

A.   G.,  Jan.  29,  1921. 

790.     Marble  Statue  of  a    Muse    (height   45),    Agent 750 

793.     Marble  Torso  of  Venus    (height    14^^ ) ,  Agent 380 

795.     Marble  Torso    of  Venus    (height  28J^),    Hearst 2,000 

Aigardi;    XVII   Century,   Roman. 

Orselli,   Feb.   6,   1921. 

219.      Muse  of  History    (terra-cotta)    (height   28),   S.    Schepps 80 

Assyrian;  VIII-VII  Century  B.   C. 

A.  G.,   May   14,   1921. 

501.     Head  of  a  Bull   (bronze)    (length  4) ■. 1,500 


SCULPTURE  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  321 

Bandinelli,    Baccio;    1487-1559,  Italian. 
Cattadori,  April  16,  1921. 

614.     Madonna  and  Child    (marble   bas-relief,  22x15),   L.    Periera $1,875 

Byzantine    Period. 

Ruiz,   May   17,   1921. 

378.      Virgin    (sculpture),    J.    Moran..,. 52 

Byzantine   School;   XII  Century. 
Lawrence,   Jan.   28,    1921. 

300.     Christ    (painted   wood)    (35x17^4),    C.    Stephens 1,900 

Byzantine  School;   XIV  Century. 
Lawrence,   Jan.   28,    1921. 

328.     Madonna  and  Child   (gold  and  red  stucco)    (12x10),  Wm.  G.   Pinchot.  .  90 

Cellini,    Benvenuto;    1500-1571,  Italian. 
Cattadori,  April   16,   1921. 

613.     Venus  Discovered    (marble  bas-relief,   19x25),   Mrs.   F.   Raineri 950 

Chinese   School;    Ming. 
A.   G.,   May   13,   1921. 

393.     Seated  Figure  of  a  Lohan   (cast   iron)    (height  30) 120 

Chinese   School;   Wei. 

Yamanaka,   Feb,    5,    1921. 

576.  Head  and  Bust  of  Statue    (black  marble,  traces  of  polychrome)  '(height 

23^),    W.    R.    Hearst    210 

Chinese  School;   T'ang. 

Yamanaka,   Feb,    5,    1921. 

568.     Head  of  Buddha   (creamy  patina)    (height  18),  Goldsmith 120 

571.  Kuan-yin   (stone  painted  in  polychrome)    (height  AZYz),  C.  H.  Walton.  .         425 

572.  Head   of    Buddha   (black   marble  painted)    (23x46^),   E.   I.   Farmer 200 

573.  Kuan-yin    (stone  traces   of  polychrome)    (height  48^),   W.   R.   Hearst  280 

574.  Kuan-yin   (black   marble,    traces    of   polychrome)     (height    67^),    W.    R. 

Hearst     2,100 

575.  Kuan-yin  Holding  a  Vase   (black  marble,   trace  of  polychrome)    (height 

Zi),   W.   R.    Hearst    270 

577.  Kuan-yin    (stone   traces   of    polychrome)    (height   39),   W.    R.    Hearst...  150 
Chinese  School;    Ch'ien-lung. 

Yamanaka,   Feb,    5,    1921. 

622.     Buddhist   Shrine  with  Image    (teakwocd  shrine  with  jade  panel,  figure 
of    lapis    lazuli)     (height    of    image    8J4.    shrine    l^}i),    E.    I. 

Farmer     225 

Chinese    School;    Sung. 

Yamanaka,   Feb,    5,    1921. 

632.     Fugen    (height   36J4)    (wood,   polychrome),    W.    R,    Hearst 260 

634.      Monju,    Goddess    of    Wisdom    (wood,    polychrome)     (height    Zl),    W.    R. 

Hearst     275 

637.      Kuan-yin    (wood,  polychrome)    (height  56^),   C.  H.  Walton 650 

Chinese   School;    Ming. 

Yamanaka,    Feb,    5,    1921. 

578.  Buddha    Seated    (lacquered    cast    iron)     (height    11^),    H.    Schefifield 50 

484.     Image  of  the  Buddha   (47^^x25^).  J-  L.   Gilchrist 65 

Delia    Robbia,    Luca;   1400-1482,  Italian. 

A.    G.,   Feb.    18,   1921. 

99.     Virgin  and   Child   (bas-relief),   Mrs.   F.   M.   Brand 625 

Donatello   (Donato  di   Niccoio  di   Betto);  1383-1466,  Italian   (School  of). 

Weissberger,   April   28,    1921. 

612.  Virgin  and   Child    (stucco   bas-relief)    (34>4x24) 200 

Dresden   School;   XVIII  Century. 

Weissberger,   April   28,    1921. 

611.     Three    Children    and    a    Singerie     Figure     (terra-cotta)     (height    313/^), 

Ehrich     Galleries     120 

Egyptian;    XVIII   Dynasty. 
A.   G.,   May    14,    1921. 

520.     Profile  and  Shoulder  of  a  Man   (limestone  with  polychrome)    (10^x13).  60 

English    School;    XIV  Century. 
A.  G.,  Jan.  27,   1921. 

241.     Bust  of  the  Saviour   (height    165^),   Le   Roy 60 

Fiesole,    Mino   Da;   1400-1485,  Florentine. 
A.   G.,  Jan.  28,   1921. 

668.     Head   of   St.  John   the   Baptist    (height   lOJ'l)    (marble),    Muller 400 

Weissberger,   April   28,    1921. 

613.  Virgin  and  Child  with  St.  John  Baptist   (stucco  bas-relief)    (26^x18^), 

F.    W.   French   &   Co 725 

Flemish    School;    XV  Century. 
Lawrence,   Jan.    28,    1921. 

322.     Crucifixion    (painted  wood)    (32x25^4),  J.   W.    Mettler 375 


322  SCULPTURE  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Flemish   School;   XVI  Century. 
Lawrence,   Jan.   28,    1921. 

287.     Saint   (painted  wood)    (height  12),  D.  D.  'Sicher $60 

292.  Virgin  Kneeling  at  the  Foot  of  the  Cross   (painted  wood)    (height   17), 

C.    D.    Quaw    450 

325.     Virgin '(painted  wood)    (height  36),  W.  R.  Hearst 150 

Flemish   School;   XVII  Century. 
Lawrence,   Jan.    28,    1921. 

313.  St.    Catherine    (painted  wood)    (height  24^/^),   Wm.   Rothschild 250 

314.  Saint   (painted  wood)    (height  37^),  W.   R.   Hearst 100 

315.  St.   John   (painted  wood)    (height  Z7),  W.   R.   Hearst 100 

317.     St.   Hubert   (painted   wood)    (height  415^),   W.   R.   Hearst 130 

Florentine   School;   XV  Century. 
Lawrence,   Jan.   28,    1921. 

329.  Virgin  and  Child   (painted  stucco  bas-relief)    (19^xlU4),  W.   Seville..      1,100 

330.  Virgin  and  Child   (painted  stucco  bas-relief)    (20^^x16),   W.   R.   Hearst        550 
334.     Virgin  and   Child    (painted  stucco  bas-relief)    (height    19),    C.    D.    Quaw     1,200 

OrselH,  Feb.  16,  1921. 

198.  Wisdom   (painted  wood)    (height  39^),  W.  R.  Hearst 400 

214.  Virgin   and    Child    (colored   stucco   bas-relief)    (18x12),    S.    Schepps 200 

218.  Virgin   and   Child    (colored   stucco   bas-relief)    (30x24),    S.    Schepps 450 

Florentine  School;   XVI  Century. 
Cattadori,   April   16,    1921. 

615.     Virgin  and  Child   (circular  terra  cotta  bas-relief,  diameter  45,  frame  by 

Delia    Robbia),    L.    J.    O'Reilly 1,500 

Lawrence,  Jan.  28,   1921. 

296.  Ecclesiastical   Dignitary    (painted  wood)    (height   15),    R.    Pitcairn 1,800 

333.     Charity   (painted  terra-cotta)    (height   11^),  R.   Glendenning 125 

Orselli,  Feb.  16,  1921. 

200.     Angels   (painted  wood)    (height  23),    E.    H.    Bondley 60 

207.  Angels   (painted  wood)    (height  28),    W.    R.    Hearst 60 

208.  Ceres   and    Abundantia    (painted    wood)    (height   65),    W.    R.    Hearst..  240 

211.  Angels    (painted  wood)    (height   55),    McCarthy 400 

216.     Virgin  and   Child    (colored  stucco   bas-relief)    (29x19),    S.    Schepps 300 

Florentine  School;   XVII  Century. 
Orselli,  Feb.  16,   1921. 

206.     Two  Nymphs    (painted  wood)    (height  59),  W.   R.   Hearst 550 

212.  Figures    (painted  wood)    (height   27),   G.   S.   Duty 60 

232.     Sleeping    Cupid    (marble)    (12x23),    Henriques 60 

Fremiet;   French. 

Bell,  April  21,   1921. 

667.     Joan  of  Arc   (bronze  statuette,  height  29^),  F.  A.  Lawlor 135 

French    School. 

Lawrence,    Jan.    28,    1921. 

282.     St.   Clothilde    (boxwood)    (height  11^) 130 

French    School;   XIV  Century. 
Lawrence,    Jan.    28,    1921. 

324.     Five  Virgins    (oak)    (18^x17),  C.   D.   Quaw 725 

French    School-;   XV  Century. 
Lawrence,    Jan.    28,    1921. 

295.     Figure  of  St.  Ursula   (painted  wood)    (height  20^),  R.  Gilchrist 120 

298.  Episode  in  the  Life  of   Christ   (painted  wood)    (16x9i^),  French  &  Co.         375 

305.  Angels    (painted  wood)    (height    15),   L.   Robert 260 

309.  St.  Bartholomew   (wood)    (height  24),  A.  A.   Healy 500 

310.  St.    Lawrence    in    Monk's    Robes    (gilt    wood)     (height    25),    Wm.    O. 

Hubbard    400 

320.     Episode  in  the  Life  of  a  Saint  (wood  group)    (21^x125^),  French  &  Co.         750 
323.     Saint  in   Monk's  Robes    (wood)    (height   33^),  W.   R.   Hearst 220 

French    School;    XV  Century. 

Weissberger,   April   28,    1921. 

559.     St.   Ursula    (painted  wood)    (height   38),    Ehrich    Galleries 80 

French   School;   XVI  Century. 

Lawrence,    Jan.    28,    1921. 

285.  Virgin    (gilt   wood   statuette)    (height    12),    R.    Ederheimer 270 

286,  Saint   (wood)    (height   11^),   R-    Glendenning 55 

293.  Saint   (painted  wood)    (height   19^),   D.   Kelekian 120 

294.  'Saint  Jerome    (painted  wood)    (height   15),   Mcllheney 650 

297.  Female    Saint    (painted    wood)     (height    29),    C.    Stephens 2,000 

299.  Adoration    (painted   wooden   group)     (20x13),    W.    O.    Hubbard 3,500 

301.     Virgin    (12i/2xl6)    (gilt   wooden   group),    S.    Bourgeois 700 

306.  Female  Saint   (painted  wood)    (height  22^^),   French  &   Co 2,300 

308.     St.  Florian   (painted  wood)    (height   17) 400 


SCULPTURE  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  323 

French  School;  XVI  Century — Continued. 

311.  Saint  in  Ecclesiastical  Robes   (wood)    (height   ISlA),  D.   Kelekian $300 

312.  Christ  and  the   Twelve  Apostles    (painted   wood)    (height   13^) 1,450 

316.     Virgin  in  the   Manger    (wood  bas-relief)    (21x22^),  W.   R.   Hearst 1,000 

318.     Deposition  in  the  Tomb    (bas-relief  in  wood)    (25x34),  W.   R.   Hearst..  350 

326.     Dedication  of  a  Nun  (painted  wood  bas-relief)   (42x315^),  W.  R.  Hearit  750 

French   School;   XVI  Century. 
Weissberger,   April   28,    1921. 

561.     St.    Martin    of    Tours    (carved    and    painted    wood)     (height    30),    Mr«. 

Colby    100 

French   School;   XVII  Century. 
Lawrence,    Jan.    28,    1921. 

302.     Virgin   (wood)    (height  16H),  Wm.   McDonald 325 

French    School;    XIX  Century. 
Bell,  April  21,   1921. 

668.     Two  Amorini   (bronze  and  ormolu  statuettes,  height  26 J/^),  Van  Brink.  95 

Gaganino   of  Messina;   XV  Century,  Italian   (Attributed  to). 
A.  G.,  Jan.  28,   1921. 

670.     Christ  on  the  Cross  (wood)    (height  4  ft.  5),  Cox 1.500 

Gambreili,   Antonio    (Called    Rossellino);    1427-1490,   Italian. 
Lawrence,   Jan.   28,    1921. 

332.     Virgin  and  Child   (painted  stucco  bas-relief)    (height  25J4),  M.cllhcney.      1,050 
German  School;  late  XV  Century. 
A.  G.,  Jan.  28,   1921. 

676.     Small   Reliquary   Shrine    (8x13),   Muller 800 

Gothic. 

A.  G.,  Jan.  28,   1921. 

240.     Virgin  and   Child   (height    16^),   Mrs.   B.    Martin 135 

Gothic    School;    XV  Century. 
Ruiz,  April   14,   1921. 

1291.     Two   Limestone  Columns  with   Decorative  Figure   (height  5   yds.    2  ft. 

each),  W.   R.  Hearst 2,200 

Greco- Egyptian. 

Khayat,   May  20,  1921. 

150.     Hathor   (bronze  statuette)    (height  28),   W.   R.   Hearst 430 

Greco- Roman    Period. 
A.    G.,   Jan.   29,    1921. 

798.     Large   Marble   Statue  of   Paris   (height   6  ft.   3),   Baer 8,400 

Greek   School. 

A.  G.,  Jan.   26,   1921. 

145.     Marble   Torso    (Apollon?)    (height    18),    Brummer 50 

Greek   School;   III  and  II  Century  B.  C. 
A.    G.,   Jan.   29,    1921. 

797.     Marble  Torso  of  a   Young  Man    (height  49),   Order 3,000 

Greek    School;    XIV  Century. 
A.  G.,  Jan.   26,   1921. 

150.  Female    Head    (height    135^),    Brummer 270 

Greek   School;   XV  and  XVI  Century. 

A.   G.,   Jan.   28,    1921. 

679.     Ikon:    St.   Michael  and  St.  Gabriel    (22^x17),    Muller 1,300 

Greek   School;   2nd  Century  B.  C. 
Khayat,   May  20,   1921. 

425..     Cyrian  Venus   (bronze)    (height  8i^),  W.  R.  Hearst 260 

Hellenistic  School;  Alexandria  III  and  II  Century  B.  C. 
A.  G.,  Jan.  26,   1921. 

151.  Male   Torso    (18^),    Cruzat 75 

Hellenistic   School;   III  and  II   Century  B.  C. 

A.    G.,   Jan.   27,    1921. 

416.     Small   Marble   Head  of  a  Satyr   (height  5),   Baer 55 

419.      Marble  Torso  of   Venus    (height  42),   Collins 425 

Hellenistic   School. 

A.   G.,   Jan.   27,   1921. 

421.     Marble  Head  of  a  Youth    (height  9),   Dr.  W.   S.   Russell 175 

784.      Marble    Head    of    a    Female    Divinity     (height    20),    Agent 500 

Hispano- Moresque;  Late  XII  Century. 
Ruiz,  April  9,    1921. 

1183.     Carved  Marble  Column   (6   ft.  9  in.  height),  W.   R.  Hearst 225 

Hispano- Moresque;    Late  XIV  Century. 
Ruiz,  April  9,   1921. 

1181.     Carved  Marble  Column  (7  ft.  4  in.  x  6  ft.),  W.  R.  Hearst 250 


324  SCULPTURE  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Indian   School;   II   Century  B.   C. 
A.    G.,   May   14,    1921. 

513.  Head   of  a   Buddha    (limestone)    (height   6J/2) $80 

Indian    School;      Gandhara  Period   (I-IV  Century  A.  D.). 
A.    G.,   May    14,   1921. 

506.  Niche   with   Buddha    (stone)    (height    19^) 250 

Indian   School;   IV-VI   Century. 
A.   G.,   May    14,    1921. 

507.  Female    Divinity    (stone)     (height    15^^) 100 

511.     Two    Kings   and   Female  Figure    (stone)    (height    11) 185 

Indian  School;  XI-XII  Century. 
A.    G.,    May   14,    1921. 

504.  Male   Divinity    (limestone)    (height   195^) 50 

Indian   School;   XIII-XIV  Century. 
A.   G.,   May   13,   1921. 

505.  Bodies  of   Two  Lions  and  one  Head    (stone)    (height  8>^) 625 

Indian   School;   XV-XVI  Century. 
A.   G.,   May   13,   1921. 

509.     Brahma  and  Figures   (carved  stone  stela)    (height  9) 60 

Indian   School;   XVII-XVIII   Century. 
A.   G.,   May   13,   1921. 

445.     The   Goddess  of   Destruction    (brass   figure)    (height    13)...,.. 55 

Indian   School;   IX-XI  Century. 
A.   G.,   May   13,   1921. 

515.  Indra  and   His   Wife    (probably)    (stone)    (height   11^) 55 

Indian   School;   XI-XIII  Centt;ry. 
A.  G.,  May  13,   1921. 

516.  Divinity  and  Apsara  Angels  under  a  Canopy   (stone)    (height  25) 320 

Indian   School;  XIII-XIV  Century. 
A.   G.,  May   13,   1921. 

514.  Demon  with  the  Head  of   a  Boar    (slate)    (height   16^) SO 

Italian    Renaissance. 

Ruiz,   May  21,   1921. 

867.     The  Descent  from  the  Cross  (carved  and  polychromed  group),  J.  Allison         310 

Italian   School;   XV  Century. 
A.   G.,   Jan.    27,    1921. 

669.     Bust  of  Amorino    (height   14),   Jaxon 650 

Italian   School;   Late  XV  Century. 
Ruiz,  April  9,   1921. 

1146.     A  Virgin  (gilt  copper  bust)    (height  1  ft.  6  in.),  Spanish  Antique  Shop     1,800 

Italian    School;   Early  XVI   Century. 
Ruiz,  April  9,    1921. 

1049.     Virgin  and   Child    (2  ft.    10   in.   height)    (marble),  J.   Turnbull 140 

Italian    School;    XVI   Century. 
Cattadori.  April   16,   1921. 

612.      Christ   Risen   from  the   Tomb    (gilded  bronze   bas-relief,    4^x12^) 150 

Lawrence,   Jan.    28,    1921. 

281.      Kneeling  Woman    (painted   wooden  statue)    (height   14) 130 

327.     Virgin    (stucco    painted    bas-relief)     (12J^xll),    R.    Ederheimer 200 

331.     The    Virgin    and    St.    Joseph     (painted    bas-relief)     (20^x15^),     Mrs. 

H.    W.    Sibley    300 

Orselli,  Feb.    16,   1921. 

209.  Angels   (painted  wood)    (height  35),  W.   R.  Hearst 150 

210.  St.    Catherine    (painted   wood)    (height  43),   W.   R.    Hearst 180 

234.     Philip   II  of    Spain   (marble  bust)    (height  26),  W.   R.    Hearst 250 

Weissberger,   April   28,    1921. 

557.      St.    Zeno,    Bishop    of    Verona     (painted    and    gilt    wood)     (height    44), 

York    and    Sawyer    105 

Italian    School;    XVII  Century. 
A.   G.,   Jan.   27,'  1921. 

236.      Marble   Fountain   (statue  of  a  little  boy)    (height  33),  Hearst 110 

Lawrence,   Jan.    28,    1921. 

319.      Lion    (painted  wood  panel)    (12x21),   D.   Kelekian 120 

Italian    School;   X-XI  Century. 
A.   G.,   Jan.   27,    1921. 

243.  Relief  Frieze   (11^x331/^),   Metropolitan   Museum   of  Art 145 

244.  Relief  Frieze   (Ui/^x38).   Metropolitan   Museum  of  Art 150 


SCULPTURE  SOLD  AT  AUCTION  325 

Japanese   School;   Ashikaga  Period. 
Yamanaka,  Feb.   5,   1921. 

625.      Kwanncn     Seated      (wood,     traces     of     lacquer     gilding)      (height     with 

pedestal    16^),   W.    James $55 

635.  Dainichi    Nyorai    (lacquered   and    painted    wood)     (height    49 1^),    W.    R. 

Hearst    175 

Japanese;    Kamakura   Period. 
Yamanaka,  Feb.    5,   1921. 

631.     Seated  Figure  of  Buddha   (36^)    (wood),   P.   J.   Higgs 160 

636.  Jikoku-ten      (wood,     traces     of     poly,chrcme)      (height     SG]/^),     W.      S. 

Simpkins,    Agent     275 

Juni,    Juan    de;    P-1614,  Spanish. 
Weissberger,   April    28,    1921. 

560.      St.   John    (painted   and   gilt   wood)    (height   iZ^^) 50 

562.      Madonna    (painted   wood)    (height  iZY^) 125 

Korean;    XIII  Century. 

Yamanaka,  Feb.   5,   1921. 

627.     A   Deity   (wood   traces   of   polychrome)    (height   25^^),   S.   H.    Krees.  .  .  .  60 

Korean    School;    XIV  Century. 
Yamanaka,  Feb.   5,   1921. 

623.     Two    Standing   Figures   of   Buddhistic   Attendants    (wood)    (height    13^ 

and    133/4),    S.    H.    Krees 70 

633.      Buddha  Seated    (geld   lacquered   wood)    (height   36^),   W.    R.   Hearst..         150 
Li    Fu;    Sung,   Chinese. 

Yamanaka,  Feb.   5,   1921. 

569.      Lohan   and   Lion    (marble)    (height   36) 725 

Malano,    Bendetto    da;    1442-1498,  Italian. 
A.  G.,   Feb.    18,   1921. 

97.     Virgin   and   Child    (Polychrome   Terra   Cotta   Group)    (height    18),    Mrs. 

J.    C.    M.    Bartel 500 

101.     Virgin     and     Child     (Polychromed     stucco     bas-relief)      (50x28),     J.     F'. 

Drake,     Inc 850 

Lawrence,  Jan.   28,   1921. 

336.     Virgin  and  Child    (painted  stucco  bas-relief)    (37x25i/^),   S.  Bourgeois..      2,600 
Mesopotamian ;    Sassanian    period    or   later. 
A.   G.,   May   12,    1921. 

114.      Man   Seated   on   a  Hippogryph    (bronze)    (4^) 77 

Montanes,    Martinez;    ?-1649,  Spanish. 
Weissberger,   April  28,   1921. 

571.     Head   of    Christ    (painted   wood)    (height    17),   Ehrich   Galleries 275 

Paduan  School;  XV  Century. 
Orselli,   Feb.   16,   1921. 

202.     Angels    (painted   wood)    (height   36),    W.    R.   Hearst 140 

Renaissance  Period;  XVI  Century. 
Ruiz,   May   17,   1921. 

379.      Roman   Warrier    (sculpture),   J.   Thomson 130 

887.     A    Courier    (marble),    W.    R.    Hearst 900 

Rodin,    Auguste;    1840-1917,   French. 
Harrison,  April   19,   1921. 

52.     Le   Baiser    (marble,  height   15,   width   15^^,   length   265^) 3,000 

Roman   School;  Circa  125  A.   D. 
Orselli,   Feb.   16,   1921. 

231.      Emperor  Hadrian   (marble)    (height  20),   W.  R.   Hearst 55 

Roman  School;  XVII  Century. 
Orselli,    Feb.    16,    1921. 

233.     Figure  of  a  Woman   (marble)    (height  25),  S.   Schepps 70 

240.     Abundantia    (marble)    (height   60),    W.    R.    Hearst 230 

Roman    School;    Early   Imperial   Period. 
A.    G.,   Jan.   29,    1921. 

143.  Marble    Head,    Female    (height    7^),    Lithander 75 

144.  Marble  Bust  of  a  Lady    (height   15i^),   I.   Brummer .  95 

146.     Two    Fragments   of    Friezes    (length    about   20-15),    Stevens 55 

148.  Marble  Slab    (11   square),   Baer 170 

149.  Marble  Torso  of  a   Youth    (14i^),   Agent 100 

412.  Marble  Head   of  Paris   (height   22),   A.   K.   Kuhn 750 

418.  Marble  Group    (height    15),    Kouchakji    Freres 190 

785.  Marble   Head   of   Silenus    (height    20),   Lithander 350 

786.  Marble    Candelabrum    (5    ft.    2),    Hearst 575 

787.  Head  of  a  Roman   Emperor   (height   17),   Jaxon 400 

788.  Hermes    (marble)    (height    21),    Hearst 550 

789.  Hermes    (marble)     (height    21),    Hearst 525 

791.  Statue  of  a   Young  Woman    (5   ft.   9),  Guest 2,200 

792.  Statue  of   a   Ram,    Pope 2.700 

793.  Marble  Torso  of   a  Young   Man    (height   20^),  Jaxon 300 


326  SCULPTURE  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 

Roman    School;    Early  Imperial  Period. 
A.   G.,    May   14,    1921. 

517.     Roman    Lady    (marble   bust)    (height    15) $145 

519.     An  Amorino    (stone)    (height   18) 95 

527.     Head  of  a  Young  Woman    (marble)    (height  6^^) SO 

Roman    School;    I  and  II  Century  A.  D. 
A.   G.,   Jan.   29,   1921. 

415.      Marble  Bust  of   a  Roman   Emperor    (height    16),    Bassett 60 

417.     Marble  Bust  of  a  Woman  (height  16),  Pope 60 

Roman    School;    IV  and  V  Centuries  A.  D. 
A.    G.,  Jan.   29,   1921. 

796.     Marble  Sarcophagus   (height  24,  length  47,  depth   34),  Hearst 3,880 

Roman,    Period    of  the   Antonines. 

A.   G.,  Jan.   29,   1921. 

Statue  of  a  Young  Woman   (white  marble)    (6   ft.   6),  Guest 3,200 

Rossellino;   1427-1490,  Italian. 
A.  G.,  Jan.  28,  1921. 

671.     Marble  Relief  Placque   of  Virgin  and   Child    (26^x19),  Agent 3,000 

Rossellino,    Bernardo;    1409-1464,  Italian. 
A.   G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

102.     Virgin  and   Child    (marble  relief)    (23^x175^),  J.   F.   Drake,   Inc 4,000 

Settignano,    Desiderio    Da;    1457-1485,   Italian. 
Lawrence,   Jan.    28,    1921. 

335.      Virgin  and   Child   (painted  stucco  bas-relief)    (33x21i^).   Mcllheney 800 

Siamese  School;   XVII-XVIII  Century. 
A.   G.,   May   13,   1921. 

293.      Buddha   (bronze  studded  with  precious  stones)    (height   13J/2) ...         105 

Sienese   School;   XV  Century. 
A.   G.,   Feb.    18,    1921. 

100.     Virgin     and     Child     (Polychromed     stucco     bas-relief)      (36x19),     J.     F. 

Drake,    Inc 575 

Spanish    Gothic   Style. 

Medina,   April   5,   1921. 

20.     The   Madonna  and   Child    (ivory   statuette)    (height   11),   R.   E.    Biazat..  65 

32.      Madonna  and    Child    (polychrome   wood)    (height   19J^),   R.    E.   Biazat..  75 

Spanish    School. 

Lawrence,   Jan.    28,    1921. 

290.     St.   Luke   (painted  wood)    (height   16),   D.   Kelekian 100 

Spanish    School;    Early  XV  Century. 
Ruiz,   April  9,   1921. 

1162.     The  Adoration  of  Child  Jesus  (round  carved  limestone),  H.  H.  Plate.  .         180 

Spanish   School;   XV  Century. 
Lawrence,   Jan.    28,    1921. 

304.     Virgin   (painted  wood)    (height   22^),   French  &  Co 800 

Medina,   April   5,   1921. 

31.     Madonna  and  Child   (sculptured  walnut)    (height  29),  R.  H.  Tannahill.  50 

Ruiz,   May   17,   1921. 

180.      Sculpture.      A.    Smith     60 

Spanish    School;    Late  XV  Century. 
Weissberger,  April  28,   1921. 

563.     Virgin  and   Child    (painted  wood)    (height  43),   E.   Staab 110 

Spanish    School;    XVI  Century. 
Lawrence,   Jan.    28,    1921. 

283.      Saint  in  Monk's   Robes    (painted  wood)    (height    10),   Mrs.   Leyht 55 

Medina,   April   5,   1921.  . 

24.     The    Meeting    of    St.    Anne    and    the    Virgin     (polychrome    bas-relief) 

(20x21),  J.   Masind    75 

34.      St.  Jerome    (walnut)    (height  40^/^),   R.   E.   Biazat 200 

Orselli,   Feb.    16,    1921. 

191.     Virgin  and   Child    (painted   wood)    (height    l5i^),    S.    Schepps 100 

193.     Angels    (painted  wood)    (height   16),   W.   R.   Hearst 80 

195.     Young  Saint    (painted  wood)    (height   18^^),   W.    R.   Hearst 280 

Ruiz,  April   14,   1921.  ^    ^  . 

1994.      St.  John    (carved   limestone  figure)    (height   31   in),   C.   Fair 150 

Weissberger,  April  28,   1921. 

542.      Christ   (walnut)    (12x11),  Mrs.   T.  A.  Ferguson 50 

544.     Figure  of   Christ    (walnut)    (8^x7),    Mrs.   J.   A.   Ferguson 55 

558.     Virgin  and   Child    (painted   and   gilt  wood)    (height  40) 50 

Spanish    School;   XVII  Century. 

Lawrence,   Jan.   28,   1921.  ,     „    ^ 

303.     St.  John    (painted  wood)    (height   16),  French  &  Co 225 


SCULPTURE  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 


327 


Spanish    School;    XVII   Century— Continued. 
Weissberger,  April  28,   1921. 

546.     Female   Saint   (painted  plaster)    (height   17),   Mrs.    M.   Ferry $90 

464.     Christ    (carved   walnut   panels)    (ll>^xlO>l),   E.   T.    Hargrove 55 

568.     Two   Figures  of    Kneeling  Angels    (painted   and   gilt   wood)    (height   12)  70 

Spanish    School;    XII    Century,    Byzantine. 
Weissberger,  April   28,    1921. 

573.     God    the    Father    and    Apostles    (retablo   of    four    carved    panels,    40x68 

each) ,    Geo.    Gray    Barnard 500 

Spanish    Renaissance   Style. 
Medina,  April   5,    1921. 

37.     St.  John   (polychrome  wood)    (54J4),   Klein 50 

Suslnl;    XVI    CenUiry,   Florentine. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

94.  Bronze   Figure   of  Atlas    (height    16) 75 

Syrian   School;   IV-V  Century. 

A.  G.,   May  14,   1921. 

523.     Frieze  of  Acanthus  Leaves    (marble)    (height   8) 50 

Syrian    School;   VI-VII  Century. 
A.  G.,  May   14,   1921. 

521.     Acanthus   Leaves    (marble)    (height    10) 50 

Torrigiano,   Piero;   1472-1522,  Italian. 
A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

96.     Martyrdom  of  St.  Sebastian   (Polychromed  Terra  Cotta  statue)    (height 

26),   Dr.    G.    F.    Muller 95 

Unknown;    XVIII  Century. 
Ruiz,  April  9,   1921. 

1159.     Limestone  Column   (3  ft.  height),  H.  H.  Plate 160 

Venetian  School;  XVI  Century. 
Orselli,  Feb.  16,  1921. 

187.  Angels    (painted  wood)    (height  9J^),  Mae  Murray 55 

188.  Angels   (painted  wood)    (height   9^/2),  VV.   R.   Hearst 70 

190.     Angels   (painted   wood)    (height   14^),   Ruth   Teschner 130 

196.     Virgin  and   St.  Joseph    (painted   wood)    (height   17),   S.   F.   Canavan.  .  .         300 

Venetian   School;  XVII  Century. 

Orselli,  Feb.   16,  1921. 

217.     Virgin   and    Child    (colored   terra-cotta)    (height    28),    S.    Schepps 100 

Volterra,    Zaccaria    da;    XVI  Century,  Italian. 

A.  G.,  Feb.   18,   1921. 

95.  The  Calvary   (Group  in  Bronze)    (height  31^),  T.  F.   Casey 110 


Edward  W.  Redfield,  N.A.    By  Wayman  Adams 


LoRADO  Taft,  N.A.    By  Ralph  Clarkson 


WHO'S    WHO 
IN  ART 


ELEVENTH  ISSUE  OF  THE  DIRECTORY 
SECTION  OF  THE  AMERICAN  ART  ANNUAL 
CONTAINING  NAMES,  ADDRESSES, 
AND  BIOGRAPHICAL  NOTES  OF 
5,459  PAINTERS,  SCULPTORS  AND  ILLUS- 
TRATORS 


1921 


Who's  Who  in  Art 

Publisher's  Note 

"Who's  Who  in  Art"  is  the  directory  section  of  the  ''American 
Art  Annual."  As  heretofore,  the  directory  has  been  compiled  chiefly 
from  the  membership  lists  of  the  leading  art  societies  in  the  United 
States  and  exhibitors  at  same.  Data  blanks  were  sent  out  in  the 
early  spring  and  the  information  thus  received,  with  that  sent  by 
the  artists  for  previous  volumes,  has  formed  the  basis  of  the  bio- 
graphical notes. 

This  volume  contains  5,459  names  and  addresses  of  painters, 
sculptors  and  illustrators ;  the  last  issue  of  this  directory,  that  in 
Volume  XVI,  1919,  contained  5,043  names.  Twelve  hundred  and 
one  (1,201)  names  appear  here  for  the  first  time;  these  are  new  ex- 
hibitors who  have  been  represented  in  the  current  exhibitions  during 
the  past  two  years.  Seven  hundred  and  eighty-five  (785)  names  have 
been  dropped  because  no  answer  has  been  received  to  our  request 
for  present  address,  the  artist  has  not  exhibited  since  1919;  is  not  a 
member  of  a  recognized  art  society,  or  has  died  during  the  two-year 
period. 

When  two  addresses  are  given  and  the  second  one  is  preceded 
by  "h,"  it  indicates  that  the  first  address  is  the  studio,  the  second 
is  the  home.  The  artist's  medium,  whether  painter,  sculptor,  illus- 
trator, or  craftsman,  is  indicated  by  letters  at  the  beginning  of  the 
biographical  note ;  when  no  biographical  information  was  obtainable, 
the  letters  are  used  in  parentheses  after  the  address.  The  date 
after  the  abbreviation  of  a  society  of  which  an  artist  is  a  member, 
refers  to  the  time  of  election. 

The  lists  of  ''Work"  under  the  names  are  limited  to  paintings 
in  public  galleries,  monumental  sculpture,  and  published  illustra- 
tions. 

The  names  of  married  women  include  the  maiden  name ;  they 
are  preceded  by  "Mrs."  or  followed  by  the  husband's  name  in 
parentheses.  The  maiden  name  is  also  entered  in  alphabetical  order, 
with  a  cross  reference.  All  names  of  women  without  title  are 
"Miss." 

The  Publishers. 
330 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 

Abbreviations 

p.— painter;  S.— sculptor;  L— illustrator  ;  E.— etcher  ;  Engr.— engraver ;  C— 
craftsman ;  D.— designer ;  L.— lecturer ;  Ldscp.  P.— landscape  painter ; 
Min.  P. — miniature  painter;  Mural  P.— mural  painter;  Port.  P.— portrait 
painter;  Arch.— architect ;  T.— teacher;  W.— writer. 

SOCIETIES 
Alliance — Art  Alliance  of  America. 
Allied  AA. — Allied  Artists  of  America. 

Am.  Acad.  A.  L. — American  Academy  of  Arts  and  Letters. 
AAS. — American  Art  Society,  Philadelphia. 
A.  Aid  S. — Artists'  Aid  Society  of  New  York. 
AFAS — American  Fine  Arts  Society,  New  York. 
A.  Fund  S. — Artists'  Fund  Society,  New  York. 
AIA — American  Institute  of  Architects. 
AIC— Art  Institute  of  Chicago. 

AI  Graphic  A — American  Institute  of  Graphic  Arts. 
ANA — Associate  National  Academy  of  Design,  New  York. 
Am.  PS — American  Painters  and  Sculptors,  New  York. 
A.  S.  Min.  P. — American  Society  of  Miniature  Painters,  New  York. 
ASL  of  N.  Y.— Art  Students'  League  of  New  York. 
AWCS — American  Water  Color  Society,  New  York. 
Boston  AC — Boston  Art  Club. 
Boston  GA. — Guild  of  Boston  Artists. 
Boston  WCC — Boston  Water  Color  Club. 
Boston  SA — Boston  Society  of  Architects   (Chapter  AIA). 
Boston  SWCP — Boston  Society  of  Water  Color  Painters. 
Boston  SAC — Boston  Society  of  Arts  and  Crafts. 
Brooklyn  AC— Brooklyn  Art  Club. 
Buffalo  SA — Buffalo  Society  of  Artists. 
Calif.  AC. — California  Art  Club. 
Calif.  PM. — Print  Makers'  Society  of  California. 
Calif.  SE. — California  Society  of  Etchers. 
C.  I.  Pittsburgh — Carnegie  Institute,  Pittsburgh. 
Century  Assoc. — Century  Association,  New  York. 
Char.C. — Charcoal  Club,  Baltimore. 
Chicago  AC. — Arts  Club  of  Chicago, 
Chicago  AD. — Chicago  Academy  of  Design, 
Chicago  AG. — Artists'  Guild  of  Chicago. 
Chicago  SA — Chicago  Society  of  Artists. 
Chicago  SAC— Chicago  Society  of  Arts  and  Crafts. 

331 


332  ABBREVIATIONS 


Chicago  SE — Chicago  Society  of  Etchers. 

Chicago  S.  Min.P. — Chicago  Society  of  Miniature  Painters. 

Chicago  WCC. — Chicago  Water  Color  Club. 

Cincinnati  AC — Cincinnati  Art  Club. 

Cleveland  Arch.  C— Cleveland  Architectural  Club. 

College  AA. — College  Art  Association. 

Conn.  AFA — Connecticut  Academy  of  Fine  Arts,  Hartford. 

Contemporary — Contemporary  Group. 

Copley  S. — Copley  Society  of  Boston. 

Corcoran  AG — Corcoran   Art  Gallery,   Washington,   D.   C. 

Denver  AA. — Denver  Art  Association. 

E.A.  and  M.T.  Teacher — Eastern  Art  and  Manual  Training  Teachers'  Asso- 
ciation. 

Fellowship  PAFA — Fellowship  of  the  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts. 

Hartford  ACC— Hartford  Arts  and  Crafts  Club. 

Inter.  Soc.  A.  L. — International  Society  of  Arts  and  Letters  (also  given  as 
Soc.    Inter,    des    Beaux   Arts   et    des    Lettres). 

Int.  Soc.  SPG — International  Society  of  Sculptors,  Painters  and  Gravers, 
London. 

Lg.  of  N.Y.A. — League  of  New  York  Artists. 

MacD.  C— MacDowell  Club,  New  York. 

Minneapolis  AL. — Minneapolis  Artists'  League. 

Municipal  AS — Municipal  Art  Society  (preceded  by  name  of  city). 

Mural  P. — National  Society  of  Mural  Painters,  New  York. 

Nat.  Inst.  A.  L. — National  Institute  of  Arts  and  Letters. 

NA — National  Academy  of  Design,  New  York  (Academicians). 

NAC— National  Arts  Club,  New  York. 

NAD — National  Academy  of  Design,  New  York   (used  chiefly  for  school). 

Nat.  Gal. — National  Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C. 

N.  A.  Women  PS. — National  Association  of  Women  Painters  and  Sculptors, 

New  York. 
NYSC — New  York  Society  of  Craftsmen 
NSS — National    Sculpture    Society,    New    York. 
New  Haven  PCC — New  Haven  Paint  and  Clay  Club. 
NOAA — Art  Association  of  New  Orleans. 
N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg. — Architectural  League  of  New  York. 
N.  Y.  SE— New  York  Society  of  Etchers. 
NYWCC— New  York  Water  Color  Club. 
Newport  AA — Art  Association  of  Newport. 
PBC— Pen  and  Brush  Club  of  New  York. 
P-G. — Painter-Gravers  of  America. 

PAFA — Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia. 
Pa.  S.  Min.  P. — Pennsylvania  Society  of  Miniature  Painters. 
Paris  AAA — American  Art  Association  of  Paris. 
Paris  Women's  AAA — Paris  American  Women's  Art  Association. 
Paris  SAP — Paris  Society  of  American  Painters. 
Pastelists — Society  of  Pastelists,  New  York. 


ABBREVIATIONS  333 


Phila.  A  A — Associated  Artists  of  Pliiladelphia. 

Phila.  Alliance — Art   Alliance   of    Philadelphia. 

Phila.  AC— Philadelphia  Art  Club   (also  AC  Phila.). 

Phila.  SA — Philadelphia  Society  of  Artists. 

Phila.  Soc.  AL. — Philadelphia  Society  of  Arts  and   Letters. 

Phila.   Sketch  C— Philadelphia  Sketch  Club. 

Phila.  WCC— Philadelphia  Water  Color  Club. 

Photo.  Sec. — Photo-Secession,  New  York. 

Pittsburgh  AA— Associated  Artists  of  Pittsburgh. 

Pittsburgh  AS— Pittsburgh  Art  Society. 

Plastic   C— Plastic  Club  of    Philadelphia. 

Port.  P. — National  Association  of  Portrait  Painters,  New  York. 

Providence  AC — Providence  Art  Club. 

Providence  HC — Providence  Handicraft  Club. 

Provincetown  AA — Provincetown  Art  Association. 

Rome  Acad.   Alumni. — Alumni  Association   American   Academy  in   Rome. 

SAA — Society   of  American  Artists,    New  York. 

SI — Society  of  Illustrators,  New  York. 

Salma.  C. — Salmagundi  Club,  New  York. 

San  F.  AA. — San  Francisco  Art  Association. 

SMPF  West— Society  of  Men  who  Paint  the  Far  West. 

S.  Indp.  A. — Society  of  Independent  Artists. 

SPNY. — Society  of  Painters  of  New  York. 

SW  Sc. — Society  of  Western  Sculptors. 

St.  Louis  AG — St.  Louis  Artists'  Guild. 

Ten  Am.  P. — Ten  American  Painters. 

Wash.  AC — Washington  Arts  Club. 

Wash.  WCC-^Washington   (D.  C.)   Water  Color  Club. 

Wash.  SA.— Society  of  Washington  (D.  C.)  Artists   (also  S.  Wash.  A.). 

Wilmington  SFA — Wilmington  Society  of  Fine  Arts. 

Wis.  PS. — Wisconsin  Painters  and  Sculptors. 

Woman's  AC — Woman's  Art  Club  (preceded  by  name  of  city). 

2x4  Soc. — Two  by  Four  Society,  St.  Louis. 

YS — American  League  of  Young  Sculptors. 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 

AMERICAN  PAINTERS,  SCULPTORS  AND  ILLUSTRATORS 


ABBATTE,  Paolo  S.,  131  Broadway,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Pittsfield,  Mass. 
S.,  W.,  L. — Born  Villarosa,  Italy,  April 
12,    1884. 

ABBOTT,  Anne  Fuller,  McLean  Bldg., 
1517  H  St.,  N.W.;  h.  1828  I  St.,  N.W., 
Washington,    D.    C. 

P. — Born  Brandon,  Vt.  Pupil  of  Chase 
and  NAD.      Member:    AVash.   AC. 

ABBOTT,  Elenore  Plaisted  (Mrs.  C.  Yar- 
nall  Abbott),  The  Gladstone,  11th  and 
Pine  Sts.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  and  Rose 
Valley,   Moylan,   Pa. 

P., I.— Born  Lincoln,  Me.,  1875.  Pupil 
of  PAFA;  Phila.  School  of  Design; 
Simon  and  Cottet  in  Paris.  M  e  m  b  e  x . 
Phil.WCC;  Plastic  C;  Fellowship  PAFA. 

ABBOTT,  Francis  R.,  514  Walnut  St.; 
and  the  Art  Club,  220  S.  Broad  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of  PAFA; 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA;  ACPhila;  Phila. 
Sketch    C. 

ABBOTT,    S.    N.,    725   Lexington   Ave.;    h. 
140  Claremont  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I. — Born    1874.      Pupil    of    Laurens    and 
Constant.     Member:   SI  1913. 

ABBOTT,  W.  H.,  46  Greenwich  Ave.,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (S.) 

ABBOTT,  Yarnall,  1711  Chestnut  St.;  h. 
The  Gladstone,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  sum- 
mer, Rockport,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Sept.  23, 
1870.  Pupil  of  Thomas  Anschutz  in 
Philadelphia;  Collin  and  Courtois  in 
Paris.  Member:  Phila.  Sketch  C. ; 
Salma.C;   Fellowship  PAFA. 

ABDY,  Mrs.  Rowena  Meeks,  1050  Lom- 
bard St.,  Russian  Hill,  San  Francisco, 
Calif. 

P.,  I. — Born  Vienna,  Austria,  April  24, 
1887;  of  American  parents.  Pupil  of 
Arthur  F.  Mathews  in  San  Francisco. 
Member  :  San  F.  AA;  S.  Monterey  A, 
Award  :  Silver  medal,  California 
Museum  of  Art,  San  Francisco,  1920. 
Illustrated   "On   the   Ohio." 

ABEL,    Louise,    North    Bend    Road,    Box 
106,  R.  F.   D.   15,  Mt.  Healthy,   O. 
S.— Born    Sept.   7,   1894.     Pupil   of  Barn- 
horn,  Meakin,  Wessel.     Member:  Cin- 
cinnati Woman's  AC. 

ABRAHAMSEN,  Christian,  Tree  Studio 
Bldg.,  State  and  Ohio  Sts.,  Chicago,  111. 
I. — Born  Bergen,  Norway,  July  20,  1887. 
Pupil  of  Koren  K.  Wilberg  and  Asor 
Hanson  in  Norway;  AIC.  Member: 
ASL  of  Chicago;  Artists  Guild. 
Work:    "Winter,"    Chicago    Art    Inst. 

ABRAMOVITZ,    ALBERT,    336    East   17th 
St.,  New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 


ABRAMS,    Eleanor,  10  East  9th  St.,  New 
York,   N.    Y.,   h.    Butler,    Pa. 
P.— Born     Karns     City,     Pa.      Pupil     of 
Elliott  Daingerfield  and  Henry  B.  Snell. 

ABRAMS,   Lucian,  Lyme,   Conn. 

P. — Born  Lawrence,  Kan.  Pupil  of 
Laurens,  Constant,  Collin  and  Whistler 
in  Paris.  Member:  Lyme  Art 
Assoc;  Society  du  Salon  d'Automne; 
Society  des  Artists  Independants;  S. 
Indp.A.  Work:  "Sandy  Bay,"  Dallas 
Art   Assoc. 

ACHERT,  Fred,  8-10  East  3d  St.,  Cincin- 
nati,  O. 
P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  AC. 

ACKER,      Herbert     V(an      Blarcom),     138 

West  65th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer, 2205  West  6th  St.,  Los  Angeles, 
Calif. 

P.— Born  Pasadena,  Calif.,  Oct.  4,  1895. 
Pupil  of  Cecilia  Beaux,  Frank  V.  Du 
Mond.     M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

ACKERSON,  F(loyd)  G(arrison),  731  Re- 
becca St.,  Wilkinsburg,  Pa. 
P. — ^Born  Portage,  Kalamazoo  Co., 
Mich.,  Jan.  1,  1883.  Pupil  Carnegie 
Tech.  Art  School.  Member:  Pitts- 
burg AA.  Award  :  2nd  prize  Pitts- 
burgh AA.,   1920. 

ADAM,  David  Livingston,  1012  North 
Dearborn  St.,  Chicago,  111. 
Port.  P. — Born  Glasgow,  Scotland,  No- 
vember, 1883.  Pupil  of  Jean  Delville; 
Maurice  Greiffenhagen;  Glasgow  School 
of  Art;  AIC;  Royal  Academy  of  Brus- 
sels. Member:  Palette  and  Chisel 
C;  Chicago  SA;  Alumni  AIC.  Award  : 
Gold  medal,  Palette  and  Chisel  C,  1920. 

ADAM,  Wilbur,  3033  Highland  Ave.,  Cin- 
cinnati, O.   (P.) 

ADAM,  William,  450  Central  Ave.,  Pacific 
Grove,    Cal. 

P.,  L.,  T. — Born  Tweedmouth,  Eng- 
land, Aug.  29,  1846.     Pupil  of  Delecluee, 

Paris;  Greenlees  and  Robert  Brydall  in 
Glasgow.  Member:  Boston  AC.  and 
Glasgow  AC.  Award  :  Gold  medal, 
Sacramento  State  Fair.  Work:  "Sundry 
Old  California  Gardens,"  Del  Monte 
(Cal.)   Gallery. 

ADAMS,  Cliarles  Partridge,  3935  Dalton 
Ave.,  Los  Angeles,  Calif.;  summer, 
"The  Sketch  Box,"  Estes  Park,  Colo. 
Ldscp.P.,T. — Born  Franklin,  Mass.,  Jan. 
12,  1858,  Self-taught.  Member: 
Denver  AC.  Awards:  Gold  medal. 
National  Mining  and  Industrial  Exp., 
Denver;  hon.  mention,  Pan-Am.  Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901.  Work:  In  State  Uni- 
versity, Boulder,  Colo.;  Normal  School, 
Greeley,  Colo.;  Kansas  City,  Mo.;  San 
Diego,  Cal.;  Woman's  Club,  and  Denver 
Art  Association,  Denver,  Colo. 


334 


ADAMS 


WHO*S   WHO  IN  ART 


AHL 


ADAMS,  Herbert,  131  West  11th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Cornish, 
N.  H. 

S.— Born  Concord,  Vt.,  Jan.  2d,  1858. 
Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art  School; 
MerciS  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA 
1898,  NA  1899  (pres.  1917);  SAA  1891; 
NSS  1893  (ex-pres.);  N.Y.Arch.Lg.l896; 
N.Y.Municipal  AS;  NAC;  Century  As- 
soc. ;  A.Acad.AL. ;  Salma.  C.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Salon,  1888  and  1889; 
medal,  ACPhila.,  1892;  Columbian  Exp., 
Chicag-o,  1893;  gold  medal,  Charleston 
Exp.,  1902;  gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  medal  of  honor,  P.-P.  Exp..  San  F., 
1915;  Watrous  gold  mpdnl.  NAD.  1916. 
Work:  Fountain,  Fitchburg,  Mass.; 
bronze  doors  and  several  statues  for 
liibrary  of  Congress,  Washington,  D.  C; 
bronze  doors  of  St.  Bartholomew's 
Church,  New  York;  "Bust  of  a  Young 
Woman,"  Metropolitan  Museum.  New 
York;  McMillan  Fountain,  Washington, 
D.  C;  William  Cullen  Bryant,  Bryant 
Park,  New  York  City;  Chief  Justice 
Marshall,  Cleveland,  O.  "Infant  Bur- 
bank,"    Newark   Museum. 

ADAMS,    J.     Howard,    1217    Turks    Head 
Bldg.,   Providence,   R.   I. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence   AC. 

ADAMS,  John  Ottis,  The  Hermitage, 
Brookville,  Ind.;  summer,  Leland,  Mich. 
Ldscp.P.,T.— Born  Amity,  Ind.,  July  8, 
1851.  Pupil  of  John  Parker  in  London; 
Benczur  and  LoefCtz  in  Munich. 
Member:  Indianapolis  Art  Assoc. 
(hon.).  Award:  Bronze  medal.  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Fine  Arts  Bldg. 
prize,  Chicago,  1907;  hon.  mention,  Bue- 
nos Aires  Exp.,  1910.  Work  :  "A 
Summer  Afternoon,"  Richmond,  Ind., 
Art  Assoc;  "Late  Autumn,"  Her- 
ron  Art  Institute,  Indianapolis;  "Win- 
ter Morning"  and  "Road  to  Town,"  Art 
Assoc,  Muncie,  Ind.;  "The  Pool,"  Art 
Assoc,  Cedar  Rapids,  Iowa;  "Irides- 
cence," Public  Library,  Terre  Haute, 
Ind.;  and  pictures  in  public  libraries  of 
Anderson,  Brookville,  Bluffton,  Evans- 
ville.  Fort  Wayne,  and  Marion,  Ind., 
and  in  Bay  City,  Mich.;  decorations  in 
City   Hospital,    Indianapolis. 

ADAMS,      Katharine      Langhorne      (Mrs. 

Benjamin  P.  Adams),  354  Fourth  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Sneden's 
Landing,  Palisades,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Plainfield,  N.  J.  Pupil  of  ASL 
of  N.Y.  and  DuMond.  Member: 
N.A.   Women  PS. 

ADAMS.  Philip,  1310  Massachusetts  Ave., 
N.  W. ;  University  Club,  Washington, 
D.  C;  h.  care  of  Mrs.  Ellen  Adams, 
Warp  Hall.  Cambridge.  Mass. 
P. — Born  Honolulu,  T.  H.,  June  26,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Bridgman,  Paxton,  Hale,  Ben- 
son and  Woodbury  in  Boston.  Mem- 
ber:  Copley   S. 

ADAMS,  Wayman,  Sherwood  Studios,  58 
West  57th  St.;  h.  51  West  87th  St., 
New  York.   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Muncie,  Ind.,  Sept.  23,  1883, 
Pupil  of  Chase  and  Henri.  Mem- 
ber: Port.  P.;  Phila.  Sketch  C; 
Phila.  AC;  Ind.  AC;  Allied  AA. 
Award:    Proctor    prize,    NAD,    1914; 


Foulke  prize,  Richmond  (Ind.)  AA, 
1915;  Holcomb  prize,  Herron  Art  Inst., 
1916;  Logan  medal  and  $1,500,  AIC, 
1918;  Newport  AA  prize,  1918.  Work  : 
"Charles  Dennis,"  Herron  Art  Institute, 
Indianapolis;  "Joseph  Pennell,"  Chicago 
Art  Institute;  "Samuel  M.  Ralston"  and 
"Thomas  R.  Marshall,"  State  Library, 
Indianapolis. 

ADAMS,  Mrs.  Winifred  Brady,  The  Her- 
mitage, Brookville,  Ind.;  summer,  Le- 
land,  Mich. 

P. — Born  Muncie,  Ind.,  May  8,  1871. 
Pupil  of  Drexel  Inst.,  Phila.;  ASL  of 
N.  Y.  Member:  Cincinnati  Wom- 
an's AC.  Work:  "Marigolds," 
Herron  Art  Institute,  Indianapolis; 
"Still  Life,"  Richmond  (Ind.)  Art  As- 
soc; "Still  Life,"  Muncie  (Ind.)  Art 
Assoc. 

ADAMS,   Woodhuii,   Lyme,    Conn. 
P. — M  ember:    Salma   C 

ADAMSON,  Penrhyn  Stanley.  See  Stan- 
laws. 

ADDAMS,  Clifford,  Two  Gables,  8  Med- 
way,  Hendon,  London,  England. 
P., Etcher. — M  ember:  Chicago  SE, 
Award:  Bronze  Medal,  P.-P.  Exp., 
San.  F..  1915;  Logan  prize  ($25),  Chi- 
cago SE,  1917.  Work:  "Portrait  of 
the  Artist's  Wife"  and  "Decoration." 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts, 
Philadelphia;  represented  in  the  Chicago 
Art  Institute. 

ADDAMS,  Inez  (Mrs.  Clifford  Addams),  8 
Medway,  Hendon,  London,  England. 
P. — A  ward:  Silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp., 
San  F.,   1915. 

ADOLPHE,  Albert  J(ean),  2616  Mont- 
gomery Ave.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.,  C,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Feb. 
17,  1865.  Pupil  of  Gerome  and  Whistler 
in  Paris;  De  Vriendt,  Antwerp; 
Eakins,  Phila.  School  of  Ind.  A. 
Member:  Alumni  Asso.  School  of  Ind. 
A.,  Phila.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention, 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1894;  Hon. 
mention,  Paris  Salon,  1899;  gold 
medal,  Phila.  AC.  1904;  Stotesbury 
Prize.  Phila.,  1916,  "Americanization 
Through  Art"  Exhibition.  Work:  Dec- 
orations in  Marlborough -Blenheim  Ho- 
tel, Atlantic  City,  N.  J.,  and  for  steam- 
ships "St.  Louis"  and  "St.  Paul";  scen- 
ic artist  for  the  Phila.  Academy  of 
Music. 

ADRIANCE,    Minnie   H.,  51  East  53rd   St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

AHL,  Henry  Hammond,  12  Harcourt  St., 
Boston,  Mass.;  h.  Newburyport,  Mass. 
P. — Born  East  Hartford,  Conn.,  Dec. 
20,  1869.  Pupil  of  Alexander  Wagner, 
Gerome  and  Franz  Stiick.  Member: 
Boston  AC;  Copley  S.;  Conn.  AFA; 
Salma.  C  Awards:  Hon.  mention, 
Munich  Royal  Academy.  Work:  "In 
the  Shadow  of  the  Cross,"  Washington; 
"Sunset  Glow."  Art  Museum,  Spring- 
field, Mass.;  "The  Sunset  Hour."  Port- 
land CMe.)  Society  of  Art;  "The  An- 
cient Oak,"  Boston  Art  Club;  "Sunset," 
TVorcester  Art  Museum;  mural,  "The 
Crucifixion,"       and       fourteen       panels, 


335 


AHL 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


ALBRIGHT 


Church  of  Blessed  Sacrament,  Jamaica 
Plain,  Boston;  fourteen  panels,  "The 
Way  of  the  Cross,"  'St.  Michael's 
Church,    Providence,    R.    I. 

AHL,  Mrs.  Henry  Hammond,  12  Harcourt 
St.,    Boston,   Mass.    (P.) 

AHRENS,  Ellen  Wetherald,  Lansdowne, 
Pa. 

P.,  I. — Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  June  6, 
1859.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School 
under  Grundmann;  PAPA  under  Eak- 
1ns;  Drexel  Inst,  under  Pyle.  Mem- 
ber: Plastic  C;  Phila.WCC.  Pa.S. 
Min.P.  Awards  :  Silver  medal  and 
prize,  C. 1.1901;  bronze  medals  for  oil 
painting  and  miniatures,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904. 

AID,  George  C(harles),  3660  Blaine  Ave., 
St.   Louis,   Mo. 

I.,  P.,  Engr. — Born  Quincy,  111.,  Aug.  26, 
1872.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine 
Arts;  Julian  Academy  under  Laurens 
and  Benjamin-Constant,  and  with  Si- 
mon and  Cottet  in  Paris.  Member: 
Chicago  SE;  St.  Louis  AG;  Paris 
AAA;  Soc.des  Peintres-Graveurs  Fran- 
cals.  Award:  Silver  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904.  Work  in:  Library  of  Con- 
gress, Washington,  D.  C;  New  York 
Public  Library;  Luxembourg,  Paris; 
Royal   Gallery,   Dresden,    Germany. 

AIKEN,  Charles  A.,  28  West  63rd  St., 
New    York,    N.    Y. ;    h.   Wellesley    Hills. 

Mural  P. — Born  Georgia,  Vt.,  Sept. 
29,  1872.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum 
School.  Member:  Boston  AC;  Cop- 
ley S.;  Salma.C;  New  Haven  PCC; 
Wash.  AC;  NAC.  Work:  Chancel  dec- 
oration Church  of  the  Good  Shepherd, 
Waban,  Mass.;  Steinert  Hall,  Boston; 
"Head  of  a  Girl,"  Boston  Art  Club; 
"Battle  of  Dogger  Bank,"  National 
Gallery  War  Memorial   Collection. 

AIKMAN,  Walter  M(ontelth),  133  Macon 
St.,  Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Wood  Engr., P.— Born  New  York,  1857. 
Studied  engraving  under  Frank  French 
and  J.  G.  Smlthwick  in  New  York: 
drawing  and  painting  under  Boulanger 
and  Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Awards  : 
Bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1889;  medal, 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  silver 
medal,  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901. 
Work:  Wood  and  copper  engravings 
at  Carnegie  Inst.,  Pittsburgh;  Public 
Library,  New  York  City;  Brooklyn  In- 
stitute of  Arts  and  Sciences. 

A I  MAN,  Pearl,  East  Willow  Grove,  Chest- 
nut Hill,    Philadelphia,   Pa.    (P.) 

AITKEN,  Robert  Kngersoll),  154  West 
55th  St.;  h.  162  West  11th  Ct.,  New 
York.  N.  Y. 

S. — Born  San  Francisco,  Calif.,  May  8, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Mark  Hopkins  Inst., 
under  Arthur  F.  Mathews  and  Douglas 
Tilden  in  San  Francisco.  Member: 
ANA  1909,  NA  1914;  NSS  1902;  N.Y. 
Arch. I^s:. 1909.  Awards:  Barnett  prize, 
NAD  1908;  medal  of  honor,  N.Y. Arch. 
Lg.  1915;  silver  medal,  P. -P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915.     Work:  McKinley  monument, 


Golden  Gate  Park,  San  Francisco;  Mon- 
ument to  the  American  Navy  in  Com- 
memoration of  Admiral  Dewey's  Vic- 
tory at  Manila  Bay,  San  Francisco; 
"The  Flame,"  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York;  commemorative  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  commemorative  $50 
coin  for  U.S.A.,  1915;  Elihu  Burritt 
Memorial,    New    Britain,    Conn. 

AKELEY,  Carl  E.,  American  Museum  of 
Natural  History,  West  77th  St.;  h.  1 
West  89th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.,  C,  W.,  L. — Born  Clarenden,  Orleans 
Co.,  N.  Y.,  May  19,  1864.  Member: 
NSS  1914.  Work:  Two  animal  stud- 
ies in  Brooklyn  Institute  Museum;  nu- 
merous groups  in  American  Museum  of 
Natural    History,    New    York. 

AKERS,  v.,  Norway,  Oxford  Co.,  Me. 
(P.) 

ALBEE,  Percy  F.,  235  Benefit  St.,  Provi- 
dence, R.  I. 

P. — Born  Bridgeport,  Conn.,  1883.  Pu- 
pil of  PAFA  and  R.L  School  of  Design. 
Member:  Providence  AC;  Provi- 
dence WCC;  NAC.  Work:  Decora- 
tion in  Memorial  Hall,  and  altar  curtain 
in   St.   Paul's  Chapel,  Providence. 

ALBERT,  Ernest,  New  Canaan,  Conn. 
P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  15,  1857. 
Pupil  of  Brooklyn  Art  School.  Mem- 
ber: Allied  AA  (pres.);  SalmaC; 
Players';    Conn.    AFA;    AWCS. 

ALBERT,      Ernest,     Jr.,     New     Canaan, 

Conn. 

P. — M  ember:  Allied  AA.;   Salma.C. 
ALBERTS,   J(ohn)    Bernhard,  416   So.   1st 

St.;  h.  129  North  Gait  Ave.,  Louisville, 
Ky. 

P. — Born  Louisville,  Ky.,  July  9,  1886. 
Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Academy  under  Du- 
veneck  and  Meakin;  Tarbell  and  Ben- 
son in  Boston.  Member:  Louisville 
Artists'  Lg. 

ALBRECHT,  C.  J.,  State  Museum,  Uni- 
versity of  Washington,  Seattle,  Wash. 
(S.) 

ALBRIGHT,  Adam  Emory,  Hubbard 
Woods,    111. 

P.— Born  Monroe,  Wis.,  Aug.  15,  1862. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  PAFA;  studied  in  Munich 
and  Paris.  Member:  AWCS;  Chi- 
cago SA  (pres.,  1915);  Chicago  WCC 
(ex-pres.);  Fellowship  PAFA;  AIC 
Alumnae;  Chicago  AD;  Chicago  AC; 
Salma.C;  NYWCC  (life).  Awards: 
Grower  prize  ($100),  AIC  1907  and  1914; 
Cahn  prize,  AIC  1908.  Work  in:  City 
Art  Museum,  St.  Louis;  Museum  of  Art, 
Toledo;  Municipal  A.  Lg.,  Chicago; 
Laguna  Beach  AA. ;  Public  Library 
Cedar  Rapids,  la. ;  Library,  Topeka, 
Kan.;  public  schools,  clubs,  etc.  Spe- 
cialty,  child   life. 

ALBRIGHT,     Mrs.     Gertrude     Partington, 

737  Buena  Vista  Ave.,  San  Francisco, 
Calif. 

P.,  E.,  T.— Born  Heysham,  England. 
Pupil  of  J.  H.  E.  Partington  and  G. 
X.  Prinet.  Member:  San  F.  AA; 
Calif.  SE.  Award:  Bronze  medal, 
P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work: 
"Portrait  of  an  Actress,"  owned  by 
the    City    of    San    Francisco. 


336 


ALBRIGHT 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


ALLEN 


ALBRIGHT,  Henry  James,  Glenmont,  Al- 
bany Co.,  N.  Y. 

P.,C.,S.— Born  Albany,  N.  Y.,  July  16. 
1887.  Pupil  of  S.  L.  Huntley,  William 
St.  John  Harper,  Charles  L.  Hinton, 
John  F.  Carlson  and  C.  W.  Hawthorne. 
Director  Troy  Art  Institute.  Member: 
S.Indp.A. 

ALBRIGHT,  H.  O (liver),  737  Buena  Vista 
Ave.,  San  Francisco,  Calif. 
P. — Born  Mannheim,  Germany,  Jan.  29, 
1876.  Member:  San  Francisco  AA. 
Award  :  Bronze  Medal,  San  F.  AA., 
1920. 

ALDRICH,  Mrs.  Cornelia  Ward,  "Blad- 
ensfield,"    Richmond   Co.,    Va.    (P.,    I.) 

ALDRICH,  G(eorge)  Ames,  155  East 
Ohio  St.,  Chicago,  111.;  h.  Montreuil  sur 
mer,   France. 

P.,  E. — Born  Worcester,  Mass.,  June  3, 
1872.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Mass. 
Inst,  of  Technology.  Pupil  of  Julian 
and  Colarossi  Academies,  Aman-Jean, 
Whistler,  Collin  and  Thaulow.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r:  Chicago  SA;  Palette  and  Chisel 
C;  'Societe  des  Artistes  Francais. 
Work:  In  Elks  Club,  Sioux  City;  and 
Sioux  City  Art  Society,  Musee  de 
Rouen,  France. 

ALDRICH,  Talbot  Bailey,  34  Fairfield  St., 
.Boston,   Mass. 
P. — M  ember:  Boston  AC. 

ALEXANDER,  Clifford  Grear,  6  Upland 
Rd.,  Faneuil  Station,  Brighton,  Mass. 
P.,I.,C.,T. — Born  Springfield,  Mass., 
Aug.  15,  1870.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum 
School.  Member  :  Boston  AC; 
S.Indp.A. 

ALEXANDER,    Jacques,    500    West    171st 
St.,    New   York,    N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:    Soc.    of    Deaf    Artists 
(sec);   S.Indp.A. 

ALEXANDER,    Julia    Standish,    976    An- 
derson Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.,    C,    W..    T.— Born    Springfield,    Mass. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Victor  Brenner. 
Member:     Alliance;   PBC. 

ALEXANDER,   Mrs.   Mary    L.,   28   Alexan- 
der Bldg.,  Cincinnati.   O. 
P. — M  ember:     Cincinnati     Woman's 
AC. 

ALGER,    John,    210    East    17th    St.,    New 

York,   N.  Y. 

P.— Born    Boston,    Mass.,    Feb.    25,    1879. 

Pupil  of  Massachusetts  Inst,  of  Tech- 
nology.   Member:    S.  Indp.  A. ;  Lg.  of 

N.  Y.  A. 
ALKE,   Mrs.    Elizabeth    Heil,  R.   F.  D.  No. 

2.    New   Richmond,    O. 

P. — M  ember:     Cincinnati     Woman's 

AC. 
ALLAN,    Mrs.    Charles    Beach,    542    Park 

Ave.,   Kansas   City,   Mo.;   summer.   Long 

Beach.   Calif. 

P.— Born    Detroit.    Mich..    Oct.     9,    1874. 

Pupil  of  AIC  and  Birger  Sandzen;  Sout- 

ter      in      Paris.      Member:      Laguna 

Beach  Art  Association. 

ALLEN,  Anne  Huntington   (Mrs.  Thomas 
Woodruff    Allen),     230     Southern    Ave., 
Mt.    Auburn,    Cincinnati,    O. 
P.— Born    New    York,     1858.      Pupil    of 
Cooper  Institute  and   of  Wyatt   Eaton, 


New  York;  Frank  Duveneck,  Cincin- 
nati; Carolus  Duran,  Henner,  and  Acad- 
emy Colarossi,  Paris.  Member:  Cin- 
cinnati Woman's  AC    (treas.). 

ALLEN,  Charles  Curtis,  454  Wolcott  St., 
Auburn  dale,   Mass. 

P..  T.— Born  Dec.  13,  1886.  Pupil  of 
Worcester  Art  Museum  School,  Philip 
Hale,  H.  D.  Murphy,  and  Henry  W. 
Rice.  Instructor  in  water  color  at  the 
Art  Students'  League,  Worcester,  Mass. 
Work:  "Black  Mountain,"  Worcester 
Art  Museum;  "Tuckerman's  Ravine," 
Leominster  Public  Library;  "Mt.  Mo- 
nadnock,"  Woman's  College,  Brown 
University,   Providence,   R.   I. 

ALLEN,  Frank,  220A  Willoughby  Ave., 
Brooklyn,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

ALLEN,  Frederick  Warren,  1126  Boyl- 
ston  St.,  Fenway  Bldg.,  Boston;  h.  Co- 
lumbia Terrace,  Brookline,  Mass.;  sum- 
mer, Bartlett's  Harbor,  North  Haven, 
Me. 

S.,  T. — Born  North  Attleboro,  Mass., 
May  5,  1888.  Pupil  of  Bela  Pratt; 
Landuski;  Paul  Bartlett.  Member: 
Boston  GA.  Instructor,  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts  School,  Boston.  Work:  In  Bos- 
ton Museum  of  Fine  Arts  and  Boston 
City  Hospital;  Boston  AC;  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  "Memorial  to  Sol- 
diers of  Revolution,"  Attleboro  Chap- 
ter D.  A.  R. 

ALLEN,      Gregory      S(eymour),      Harriet 
Ave.,    Morsemere,    N.   J. 
S.— Born    Orange,     N.    J.,     July     8,     1884. 
Pupil  of  Gutzon  Borglum,   H.   K.   Bush- 
Brown,   Philip   Martini. 

ALLEN,  Greta,  755  Boylston  St.;  h.  34 
Wales  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  summer. 
Provincetown,  Mass. 

Port.  P.— Born  Boston.  Pupil  of  De 
Camp,    Benson.      Member:    Copley    S. 

ALLEN,   J.    E.,   Interlaken,    N.    J.    (I.) 

ALLEN,  Louise  (Mrs.  Louise  Allen 
Hobbs),  Trinity  Court,  Boston,  Mass.; 
summer.  East  Gloucester,  Mass. 
S. — Born  Lowell,  Mass.  Pupil  of  R.  I. 
School  of  Design  in  Providence;  School 
of  the  Boston  Museum  of  Fine  Arts. 
Member:  N.A.  Women  PS.;  Copley 
S.  Work  in  Cleveland  Museum;  war 
memorial  at  East  Greenwich,  R.  I. 

ALLEN,    Marion    Boyd    (Mrs.   William   A. 

Allen).  Fenway  Studios;  h.  477  Com- 
monwealth Ave.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Boston,  Oct.  23,  1862.  Pupil 
of  Tarbell  and  Benson  at  School  of 
Boston  Museum  of  Fine  Arts.  Mem- 
ber: Copley  S.;  Conn.AFA;  NAC;. 
Wash.  A. C;  N.  A.  Women  PS,  PBC; 
Buffalo  SA;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention  Conn.  AFA,  1915  and 
1921;  People's  prize,  Newport  AA.  1919; 
Hudson  prize.  Conn.  AFA,  1920;  Fellow- 
ship prize,  Buffalo  SAC,  1920;  prize 
French  Inst.,  New  York,  1920.  Work 
in  Public  Library,  Barre,  Mass. ;  College 
Tjibrary,  Brunswick,  Me. ;  Harvard 
Club,    Boston.      Specialty:      Portraits. 

ALLEN,  Mary  Coleman,  125  East  10th  St., 
New  York.    N.   Y. 
Min.  P.— M  ember:  A.  S.  MIn.  P. 


337 


ALLEN 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


ANDERSON 


ALLEN,    Orville    S.,    452   West   153rd    St., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

ALLEN,  Thomas,  12  Commonwealth  Ave., 
Boston,  Mass.;  summer,  Princeton, 
Worcester  Co.,  Mass. 
P.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  Oct.  19,  1849. 
Pupil  of  Royal  Academy,  Diisseldorf. 
Member:  ANA  1884;  SAA  1880; 
Boston  AC;  Paint  and  Clay  Club  of 
Boston  (pres.);  Boston  SWCP  (pres.); 
Copley  S.  1892  (v.-pres.).  Trustee  Bos- 
ton Museum  of  Fine  Arts;  Chairman  of 
Council  and  Faculty.  Boston  Museum 
School  of  Drawing  and  Painting-;  Pres. 
International  Jury  of  Award,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  chairman,  since  1910,  Art 
Commission  of  the  City  of  Boston.  Rep- 
resented in  Museum  of  Fine  Arts.  Bos- 
ton; City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis;  Berk- 
shire Athenaeum  and  Museum. 

ALLEN,    Willard.    Woodstock,    N.    Y. 

P.^   T. — Born  Oberlin,   O.,   Aug.   15,   1860. 

Pupil    of   Chase,    Carlsen,    Ahrens. 
ALLENDER,    Mrs.    Nina    E.,   1315    Clifton 

St.,    Washington,    D.    C. 

P.,  L,  T. — Born  Auburn,  Kan.     Pupil  of 

PAFA   under   Chase   and   Henri;    Bran- 

gwyn    in   London.      Member:    Wash. 

SA. 
ALLIS,   C.    Harry,   24  West   8th   St.,    New 

York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 
ALLISON,   F.   D.,  214  West  70th  St.,  New 

York,  N.  Y.    (P.) 
ALLISON,   Merle,  118  East  28th  St.,  New 

York,    N.    Y. 

I. — M  ember:     SI. 

ALLMOND,  Katherine.     See  Mrs.  Charles 

A.   Hulbert. 
ALTEN,    Mathias   J.,   1593   E.   Fulton   St., 

Grand  Rapids,  Mich. 

P.,T. — Born   Gusenburg,   Germany,   Feb. 

13,    1871.      Pupil   of   Constant,    Laurens, 

Prinet,       Girrardo       and      Whistler       in 

Paris.     Member:     Grand  Rapids  AA. 

Awards  :     Detroit   A.I.    second   prize, 

1919;    Scarab    Club    gold    medal,    1920. 

Work:   In   collection   of  Grand   Rapids 

Art    Association;    Syracuse    Museum    of 

Fine  Arts. 
ALTEN  BURG,  Alexander,  75  Washington 

Place,   New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

ALTMANN,   Aaron,   2298   Green   St.,    San 
Francisco,  Calif. 

P.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  San  Francisco, 
Calif.,  Oct.  28,  1872.  Pupil  of  A.  F. 
Matthews,  San  Francisco;  Constant, 
Laurens  and  Gerome,  Paris.  M  e  ra  - 
•      b  e  r  :  San  F.  AA. 

ALVAREZ,     Mabel,    2180    West    25th    St., 
Los  Angeles.    Calif. 

P. — Born  Waiahua,  Oahu,  Hawaii. 
Pupil  W.  V.  Cahill.  Member:  Calif. 
AC,  Laguna  Beach  Asso.  Awards  : 
Silver  Medal,  Panama-Calif.  Exp.,  San 
Diego,  1916;  3rd  Black  prize,  Calif.  AC, 
1918,    1919. 

AMATEIS,   Edmond   R.,  126  East  75th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

S.— Born  Rome,  Italy,  Feb.  7.  1897. 
Pupil     Beaux-Arts      Inst,      of      Design. 


Award  :  Honorable  Mention-Prix  de 
Rome,  1921. 
AMENT,  R(obert)  S(elfe),  2380  Grand 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  E.,  C,  W.,  T.— Born  Brooklyn.  Oct. 
3,  1879.  Pupil  of  Ward,  Chase  and 
Henri.      Me  m  b  e  r  :    Penguins. 

AMES,  Frances  (Mrs.  Linwood  P.  Ames), 
"The  Twinpike,"  Fort  Plain,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Massina,  N.  Y.,  1868.  Pupil 
of  Chase  in  New  York;  Collin.  Cour- 
tois  and  Renvir  in  Paris.  Work: 
Portrait  of  C  K.  Gaines  in  St.  Law- 
rence University;  President,  Wisconsin 
University;  J.  A.  Blan chard,  Republi- 
can  Club,   New   York  City. 

AMES,  May,  9315  Miles  Ave.,  Cleveland, 
Ohio. 

P.,  L.,  T.— Born  Cleveland,  Ohio.  Pupil 
Cleveland  School  of  Art;  R.  I.  School  of 
Design.  Member:  Women's  Art 
Club  of  Cleveland;  N.A.  Women  PS. 
Award  :  $25  by  Independent  Society 
of  N.   Y. 

AMICK,    Robert   Wesley,    63    Washington 

Sq.,  New  York,   N.  Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Canon  City,  Colo.,  Oct.  15, 
1879.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber:   SI  1913. 

ANDERSEN,  Hendrik  Christian,  3  Piaz- 
za del  Popolo,  Roine,  Italy. 
S. — Born  Bergen,  Norway,  Apr.  17,  1872; 
brought  to  the  United  States  in  Infancy 
and  settled  at  Newport  1873.  Studied 
in  Boston,  Paris,  Naples,  Rome. 
Work:  "Fountain  of  Life";  "Jacob 
Wrestling  with  the  Angel";  "Study  of 
an  Athlete,"  "Fountain  of  Immortality." 
etc.  Author  of  "Creation  of  a  World 
Centre  of  Communication";  "Legal  and 
Economic  Advantages  of  a  World  Cen- 
tre of  Communication";  "League  of 
Nations." 

ANDERSEN,  Martinus,  135  West  44th 
St.;  402  West  22nd  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P..  I.— Born  Peru,  Ind.,  Aug.  13,  1878. 
Pupil  of  Herron  Art  Inst.,  Indian- 
apolis, under  J.  O.  Adams  and  Forsyth. 
Member:  S.Indp.A.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Richmond,  Ind.,  1913, 
1914  and  1915.'  Work:  Mural  decora- 
tions.   City   Hospital,    Indianapolis. 

ANDERSON,     A(bram)      A(rchlbald),     80 

West  40th  St.;  h.  6  East  38th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

Port.P.— Born  New  York,  1847.  Pupil 
of  Bonnat,  Cabanel,  Cormon  and  Collin 
in  Paris.  Member:  AWCS;  founder 
and  hon.   pres.   Paris  AAA. 

ANDERSON,  Dorothy  VIsJu,  3130  Palmer 
Sq.,    Chicago,    111. 

P.,  T. — Born  Christiania,  Norway. 
Pupil  of  AIC,  ^V.  M.  Chase.  Member: 
AIC  Alumni:  Chicago  AG;  Chicago  AC; 
S.  Indp.A.  Award  :  Fine  Arts  Build- 
ing Prize,   Chicago  AG,   1918. 

ANDERSON.   E(llen)   Graham,  39  Charles 
St.,    New    York,    N.    Y. 
P.,   I.,   E. — Born  Lexington,   Va.     Pupil 

of  Charles  Guerin,  "Academic  Moderne" 
and  E.  A.  Taylor  in  Paris. 

ANDERSON.  Elmer  G.,  2545  North  Chad- 
wick  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.   (P.) 


338 


ANDERSON 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


APPEL 


ANDERSON,    Frederic    A.,    Baker    Bldg., 
1520  Chestnut  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa,   (I.) 

ANDERSON,  G.  Adolph,  522  Franklin 
Ave.,  Ridgewood,  N.  J. 
P. — Born  Rochester,  Minn.,  Ms,"  21, 
1877.  Pupil  of  Jonas  Lie  and  John 
Johansen,  Robert  Henri.  Member: 
NAC. 

ANDERSON,  Harold,  57  Lawton  St.,  New 
Rochelle,   N.   Y.    (I.) 

ANDERSON,  Helge,  152  Huntington  Ave., 
Boston,    Mass.     (P.) 

ANDERSON,  Karl,  Westport,  Conn. 
P.,I.— Born  Oxford,  O.,  Jan.  13,  1874. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  Colarossi  Academy  in 
Paris;  studied  in  Holland,  Italy,  and 
Madrid.  Member:  Am.  PS;  SI; 
Salma.  C;  ANA  1913;  NAC;  Contem- 
porary. Awards  :  Silver  medal,  C.  I. 
Pittsburgh,  1910;  Lippincott  prize, 
PAFA,  1916;  Altman  prize  ($500),  NAD, 
1917;  French  gold  medal,  AIC,  1919; 
gold  medal  NAC,  1920.  Work:  "The 
Idlers,"  Art  Institute  of  Chicago; 
"Sisters,"  City  Museum,  St.  Louis, 
Mo.;  "Apple  Gatherers,"  Cleveland  Mu- 
seum; "The  Heirloom,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy,  Philadelphia. 

ANDERSON,  Oscar,  78  Rocky  Neck  Ave.; 
h.  7  Davis  St.,  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Gotland,  Sweden,  July  31, 
1873.  Pupil  of  Charles  Noel  Flagg  in 
Hartford.  Member:  Conn.AFA; 
S.Indp.A.;  Arts  and  Crafts  C,  Hart- 
ford. Award  :  Hon.  mention  and 
popular  prize,   Conn.AFA  1917. 

ANDERSON,   Percy   E.,  58  East  56th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
I. — M  ember:    Salma.C. 

ANDERSON,  Raymond   H.,  3304  Iowa  St., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa, 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

ANDERSON,  Ronald,  54  West  37th  St., 
New   York,   N.    Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Lynn,  Mass.,  Nov.  1,  1886. 
Pupil  Chicago  Art  Institute;  Eric  Pape; 
George  Lawlor.  Member:  Guild  of 
Free  Lance  Artists.  Cover  designs  for: 
Woman's  Home  Companion,  Delinea- 
tor, Saturday  Evening  Post,  Colliers' 
Weekly,  McCall's,   and  Literary  Digest. 

ANDERSON,  Ruth  A.  (Mrs.  Samuel 
Temple),  53  Charles  St.,  Boston,  Mass 
P.— Born  Carlisle,  Pa.  Pupil  of  An- 
shutz,  Breckenridge,  Cecilia  Beaux, 
Chase  and  Jonas  Lie.  Member: 
N.A.  Women  PS;  Fellowship  PAFA. 
Award  :  European  traveling  scholar- 
ship, PAFA  1912.  Represented  in  the 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts. 

ANDRADE,  Mary  Fratz  (Mrs.  C.  P.  An- 
drade),  710  Pembrook  Ave.,  East  Lans- 
downe.    Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

ANDREASEN-LINDBORG,  Mrs.  Inge- 
borg,  Katarinaviigen,  15  BII,  'Stock- 
holm,   SVeden. 

P.,  E. — Born  Hjorlunde,  Denmark,  Aug. 
10,  1876.  Pupil  of  AIC,  and  Royal  Acad- 
emy of  Denmark.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SE;  Danish  and  Swedish  Graphical 
Societies.  Awards  :  Gold  medal. 
Royal    Academy    of    Denmark;     bronze 


medal,  Baltic  Exhibition.  Etchings  in 
National  Museum,  Stockholm;  Royal 
Library,   Copenhagen. 

ANDREW,    Richard,   Fenway   Studios,    30 
Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  173  Strat- 
ford  St.,   West   Roxbury,   Mass. 
P.,  E.,  T. — Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Gerome. 
Member:     Boston  GA. 

ANDREWS,  Bernice.  See  Mrs.  B.  P.  A. 
Ferhow. 

ANDREWS,  Helen  F(ranclt),  Westover 
School,  Middlebury,  Conn.;  h.  Farm- 
ington.  Conn. 

P. — Born  Farmington,  Conn.,  Dec.  22, 
1872.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Laurens 
and  Constant  in  Paris.  Member: 
Conn.  AFA;  S.  Indp.  A.  Award: 
Hudson   prize.    Conn.    AFA,    1914. 

ANQAROLA,  Anthony,  1318  Rosedale 
Ave..    Chicago,   111. 

P.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Feb.  4,  1893. 
Pupil  of  Harry  M.  Walcott.  Member: 
Chicago  Indp.  Art  Soc;  ASL  of  Chi- 
cago; Chicago  SA.  Award:  First 
prize  in  ASL  exhibition.  Work:  "In 
the  Ghetto,"  John  Vanderpoel  School. 

ANGELA,    Emillo,   558   Broome   St.,   New 
York,    N.   Y. 
S.— M  ember:   YS. 

ANGELL,  Louise  M.,  88  School  St.,  Fall 
River,    Mass. 

Min.P. — M  ember:  Providence  AC; 
Providence    WCC. 

ANKENEY,  John  S(ltes),  906  Conley 
Ave.,  Columbia,  Mo. 
P.,  T.— Born  Xenia,  O..  April  21,  1870. 
Pupil  of  Twachtman,  Chase,  Du  Mond, 
Saint  Gaudens  and  Ross  In  United 
States;  Lefebvre,  Robert-Fleury,  Aman- 
Jean,  Collin,  Tudor  Hart.  Menard  and 
Simon  in  Europe.  Mem'ber:  Amer- 
ican Art  Asso.,  Paris;  Wash.  AC; 
Western  Arts  Asso.;  St.  Louis  AG; 
NAC;  Salma.  C;  Col.  A. A.  Work: 
Portrait  of  Pres.  R.  H.  Jesse  and  a 
landscape  in  University  of  Missouri; 
landscape  in  Lindenwood  College,  St. 
Charles,  Mo. 

ANNAN,  Abel  H.,  Carnegie  Studios,  West 
57th  St.,  New  York.  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:  Chicago  WCC. 

ANNAN,  Alice  H.,  Carnegie  Studios,  152 
West  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  ASL  of 
N.  Y.,  Henry  B.  Snell  and  Ben  Foster. 
Member:  Chicago  WCC;  N.Y.Pen 
and  Brush  C.  Work:  "Old  Quebec," 
Poland   Spring  Gallery. 

ANSBACHER,  Jessie,  Holbein  Studio,  152 
West  55th  St.;  h.  West  81st  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  E.— Born  Wilkes-Barre,  Pa.  Pupil 
William  Chase.  Member:  N.A. 
Women  PS;  Art  Workers  C;  N.Y.  Guild 
of  Artists. 

APEL.  Mrs.  Marie,  3  Washington  Sq., 
New   York.    N.    Y. 

S.— Member:  N.A.  W^omen  PS;  Ec- 
lectics. 

APPEL.  Charles  P.,  57  Ely  Place,  East 
Orange,   N.   J. 

P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  July  11,  1857. 
Pupil  of  Chase  and  Mora  in  New  York. 
Member:     Salma.C,    1906. 


339 


APP  LEGATE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


ARTHURS 


APPLEGATE,  Frank  G.,  School  of  Indus- 
trial Art,  West  State  and  Willow  Sts., 
Trenton,  N.  J.;  h.  Edgehill  Rd.,  Morris- 
ville,    Pa. 

S.,  T.— Born  Atlanta,  111.,  Feb.  9,  1882. 
Pupil  of  Univ.  of  111.  under  F.  F.  Fred- 
erick; PAFA  under  Grafly;  Verlet  in 
Paris.  Instructor  in  modeling,  Trenton 
Industrial  Art   School. 

APPLETON,  Eliza  Bridgham  (Mrs.  Ever- 

ard  Appleton),  42  Pleasant  St.,  Rum- 
ford.   R.   I. 

S.— Born  Nov.  9,  1882.  Studied  with 
M.  Ezekiel  in  Rome.  Member: 
Providence  AC. 

ARCHAMBAULT,  A.  Margaretta,  1710 
Chestnut  St.;  h.  426  South  40th  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Port,  and  Min.P.,T. — Born  Philadelphia. 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris.  Member:  Pa.S.Min.P.  (sect.). 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Plastic  C;  Phila. 
AC. ;  Phila.  Alliance.  Work:  "Mi- 
chael Hilleg-as."  IndeDendence  Hall, 
Philadelphia;  "Judge  William  Maclay 
Hall,"  Law  Court,  Chambersburg,  Pa.; 
"Rev.  Charles  D.  Cooper,"  Church  of 
the    Holy    Apostles,    Philadelphia. 

ARGYROPEDON,  Emanuel,  135  East  59th 
St.,  New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

ARLENT-EDWARDS,  8.,  care  of  Robert 
Fridenberg,  22  West  56th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 
Mezzotint  Engr. — M  ember:  Salma.C. 

ARMBRUSTER,  A.  E.,  3102  No.  High  St., 
Columbus,   O. 

Scenic  P. — M  ember:  Pen  and  Pencil 
Club,  Columbus,  1914;  League  of  Co- 
lumbus Artists. 

ARMFIELD,    Maxwell,  104  West  40th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.,   I.,   C,   W.,   L.,   T.— Born   Ringwood, 

England.  Studied  Birmingham,  Paris, 
Italy.  Member:  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg, 
MacD.C;  Mural  P.  Work:  "Faus- 
tine,"  Luxembourg  Gallery.  Illustrates 
for  "Century,"  "Asia,"  "Pall  Mall,"  etc. 

ARMINGTON,  Mrs.  Caroline  H(elena),  70 
Blvd.  du  Montparnasse,  Paris,  France. 
P.,  E. — Born  Brampton,  Ontario,  Can- 
ada, Sept.  11,  1875.  Pupil  of  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  Chicago 
SE;  Calif.  SE;  Societe  Nationale  des 
Beaux  Arts.  Etchings  in  the  New 
York  Public  Library;  Luxembourg  and 
Petit  Palais,  Paris;  British  Museum 
and  South  Kensington  Museum,  Lon- 
don; National  Gallery,  Ottawa,  Canada; 
Bibliographie  de  Belgique,   Brussels. 

ARMINGTON,  Frank  M(ilton),  70  Blvd. 
du  Montparnasse,  Paris,  France. 
P.,  E. — Born  Fordwich,  Ontario,  Can- 
ada, July  28,  1876.  Pupil  of  Jean  Paul 
Laurens  and  Henri  Royer  at  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  Paris 
AAA.  Work:  "Portrait  of  Yetta 
Rianza"  and  "Pont  Louis  Philippe, 
Paris,"  Luxembourg  Gallery,  Paris. 
Etchings  in  Congressional  Library, 
Washington;  New  York  Public  Li- 
brary; Luxembourg  Gallery  and  Petit 
Palais,  Paris;  British  Museum  and 
South     Kensington     Museum,     London; 


Bibliographie  de  Belgique,  Brussels; 
National    Gallery,    Ottawa,    Canada. 

ARMS,   Jessie.     See   Mrs.   Botke. 

ARMS,  John  Taylor,  R.F.D.  No.  9,  Green- 
field Hill,  Fairfield,  Conn. 
I.,  E.,  A. — Born  Washington,  D.  C, 
April  19,  1887.  Pupil  of  Ross  Turner, 
D.  A.  Gregg,  Felton  Brown  and  Des- 
pradelle.  Member:  Calif.  P.M.; 
Calif.  SE.;  Soc.  Canadian  Painters; 
Print  Makers  of  America;  Salma.C; 
Chicago  SE.,  Brooklyn  SE.,  P.-G. 
Work  in  Ellington  (Conn.)  Memorial 
Church,  Congressional  Library;  Mu- 
seum of  History,  Science  and  Art,  Los 
Angeles;   and  N.   Y.   Public  Library. 

ARMSTRONG,  Barbara,  Fishing  Village 
Studio,  Ogunquit,  Me.;  h.  1009  West 
12th  St.,  Canton,  O.;  summer,  Ogunquit, 
Me. 

P.— Born  Bellaire,  O.,  Sept.  26,  1896. 
Pupil   of  Hamilton   E.    Field. 

ARMSTRONG,    C.    D.,    1409    Union    Bank 
Bldg.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  A.A. 

ARMSTRONG,  Sam(uel  (John),  Inter- 
laaken  Drive,  Steilacoorn  Lake,  Pierce 
Co.,  Wash.  P.  O.  address:  News  Trib- 
une, Tacoma,  Wash. 

P.,  I. — Born  Denver,  Colo.,  Nov.  7, 
1893.  Pupil  School  of  Industrial  Art, 
Phila.;  Mechanics  Art  Inst.,  Rochester; 
J.  L.  Gerome;  Ferris.  Member: 
Fine  Arts  Asso.,  Tacoma,  Wash. 
Works  in  "Strand"  and  "Victoria"  The- 
atres, Rochester;  "Liberty  Theatre," 
Cleveland.  Illustrations  and  cover  de- 
signs for   "Sunset"   Magazine. 

ARMSTRONG,  Voyle  Neville,  717  North 
I  St.,   Bedford,   Ind. 

P.,  I.,  W.— Born  Dobbin,  West  Va., 
Nov.  26,  1891.  Pupil  of  James  R.  Hop- 
kins, H.  H.  Wessel;  Meakin,  Eschen- 
bach,  Barnhorn  and  Duveneck  at  Cin- 
cinnati Art  Academy.  Member: 
Cincinnati  AC.  Illustrated  "Saul  of 
Tarsus  and  Other  Poems,"  and  numer- 
ous short  stories.  Writes  for  news- 
papers and  magazines.  Work  in  Cin- 
cinnati Art  Club. 

ARNOLD,  Mrs.  Clara  Maxffeld,  22  Higli- 
land  Ave.,  East  Providence,  R.  I. 
P. — Born  East  Providence,  R.  I.,  Nov. 
5,  1879.  Member:  Providence  AC; 
Providence  WCC.  Specialty,  fruit  and 
flowers. 

ARNOLD,  F.  Mcintosh,  510  Anderson  St., 
Orlando,  Fla. 
I. — M  ember:   Salma.C. 

ARNOLD,  Harry,  208  Gillette  Ave., 
Waukegan,   111. 

P.,  T. — Born  Penzance,  Cornwall,  Eng- 
land. Studied  at  Colarossi  Academy  in 
Paris  and  in  England.  Member:  S. 
Indp.    A. 

ARNOLD,     Lucetta,     630     Negley     Ave., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA   1916. 

ARTHURS,  Stanley  (Massey),  1305  Frank- 
lin St.;  h.  2108  Boulevard,  Wilmington, 
Del. 

Mural  P.,  I.— Born  Kenton,  Del.,  Nov. 
27,  1877.     Pupil  of  Howard  Pyle.   M  e  m  - 


340 


ASANGER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


BABCOCK 


ber:    Salma.C;   SI  1905;   N.Y.Arch.Lg. 

1912  (assoc);  Mural  P.  Work:  "Oc- 
cupation of  Little  Rock,  Ark.,  by  Fed- 
eral Troops,"  Governor's  Room.  State 
Capitol,  St.  Paul,  Minn.;  "Landing 
of  De  Vries  at  Swanendale,  1831," 
Delaware  College,  Newark,  Del.;  "The 
Crusaders,"  State  Capitol,  Dover,  Del.; 
illustrated,  "The  War  of  1812,"  by  Capt. 
A.  T.  Mahan;  "The  Bigelow  Papers"; 
"The  Children's  Longfellow,"  etc. 
Author,  "On  the  Old  Boston  Post  Road," 
"Early   Steamboat  Days,"    etc. 

ASANGER,  Jacob,  12  East  15th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer.  Browning,  Mont. 
P.,  E.,  C— Born  Altoetting,  Bavaria, 
Jan.  20,  1887.  Pupil  of  Munich  Art 
schools.     Member:     S.  Indp.  A. 

ASH  BROOK,  Paul,  2  Hedgerow  Lane, 
Clifton,    Cincinnati,    O.    (P.) 

ASHE,   Edmund   M.,  Westport,  Conn. 
P.,    I.,     T.~Member:       NYWCC;     SI, 
1901;  Pittsburgh  AA. 

ASHFORD,  F.  C,  678  West  End  Ave., 
New   York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

ASHLEY,  Clifford  W(arpen),  31  Eighth 
St.,  New  Bedford,  Mass. 
P.— Born  New  Bedford,  Mass.,  Dec.  18, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Howard  Pyle,  George  L. 
Noyes.  Member:  Phila.  AC;  Salma. 
C;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.;  Wilmington  SFA; 
New  Bedford  SFA.  Work:  "The 
Whaling  Industry,"  Public  Library, 
New    Bedford,    Mass.;     "Outfitting    the 

■  Whaler,"  Brooklyn  Museum.  Author 
and  illustrator  of  "A  Corner  in  Four 
Posters"    and    "The   Blubber    Hunters." 

ASHTON,  Mrs.  May  Malone.  McKinley 
High  School;  2430  Upton  St.,  N.  W., 
Washington,  D.  C. 

P.— M  ember:  S.  Wash.  A. ;  Wash. 
WCC. 

ASPELL,    S.    B.,    132    East   19th   'St.,    New 
York,  N.   Y. 
I. — M  ember:   SI. 

ATHEY,  Ruth  C,  Abbott  Press,  114-116 
East  13th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  34 
Butler  Place,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T. — Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  March  26, 
1892.  Pupil  Pratt  Institute.  Mem- 
ber:    Brooklyn   WCC. 

ATKINS,    A(lbert)     H(enry),    45    Charles 
St.,     Boston     Mass. ;     summer.     Eastern 
Point,    Gloucester,    Mass. 
S.,  T. — Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.     Pupil  of 
Cowles    Art    School    in    Boston;    Julian 
and     Colarossi     Academies     in     Paris 
Member:  NSS  1911;  Providence  AC 
Arch.     Lg.     of     N.Y.;     Boston     Arch.C. 
Salma.C;   Calif.   P.M.     Since   1909  mem- 
ber of   faculty,    R.    I.    School  of  Design. 
Award  :      Silver      medal,      Milwaukee 
Art   Institute,    1917.     ^W  o  r  k  :     "Copen- 
hagen    Memorial     Fountain,"      Boston; 
"Lapham  Memorial,"  Milwaukee;  World 
War  Memorial,  Roslindale,  Mass. 

ATKINS,   Florence  E(lizabeth),  1040  Bush 

St.,    San  Francisco,   Calif. 

P.,    S. — Born   in   Louisiana.     Pupil  of  H. 

Sophie    Newcomb    Art    School. 
ATKINSON,    E. 

Hull. 


Marie.     See   Mrs.    M.   A. 


ATWATER,     Jean     Howe,     321     Whitney 

Ave.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

P. — M  ember:  New  Haven  Paint  and 

Clay  Club. 
ATWOOD,  Clara  E.     See  Mrs.  F.  N.  Fitts. 
ATWOOD,    William    E(dwin),    Gallery-on- 

the-Moors;  h.  The  House-on-the-Moors, 

East  Gloucester,   Mass. 

P. — Born   Killinoly,    Conn.     Member: 

Salma.  C. ;  Boston  AC;  NAC ;  Copley  S. 
AUDIGIER,   E.   D.   (Mrs.  L.  D.  Audigier). 

care  Thomas  Cook  &  Son,  Rome,  Italy. 

(P.) 
AULT,    George    C,    11    Charles    St.,    New 

York,  N.  Y.;  h.  1023  Broad  St.,  Newark, 

N.   J.;   summer,   Provincetown,   Mass. 

P. — Born    Cleveland,    Ohio,    October    11, 

1891.  Pupil  of  St.  John's  Wood  Art 
School  and  Slade  Art  School  in  London. 
Member  :     S. Indp. A. 

AUSTIN,  Charles  P.,  San  Juan  Capis- 
trano,    Calif. 

P.— Born  Denver,  Colo.,  March  23,  1883. 
Pupil  of  Twachtman  in  New  York,  and 
Castellucho,   Paris. 

AVERY.     Hope,    35    East    62nd    St.,    New 

York,    N.    Y. 

P.,   S. — M  ember:  N.  A,  Women  PS. 
AVINOFF,  A(ndrew  N.),  Napanoch,  N.  Y. 

P.,    E.— Born    in    Russia,    Feb.    1,    1884. 

Sudied    in   Russia.      Member:     N.Y.- 

WCC 

AVER,  J.  C,  39  West  67th  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 

AYLWARD,  W(illiam)  J(ames),  Salma- 
gundi Club,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

I.— Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  Sept.  5,  1875. 
Pupil  of  Howard  Pyle.  Member: 
AWCS;  NYWCC;  Phila.WCC;  Salma.C; 
A.Pund  S.  Awards:  Shaw  purchase 
prize,  Salma.C.  1911;  Beck  prize,  Phila. 
WCC  1912;  Illus.  prize,   Salma.   C,   1914. 

AZADIGIAN,  Manuel,  1854  North  Darien 
St.,    Philadelphia,   Pa.    (P.) 

AZ2I,  Marius  A.,  120  West  11th  'St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  West  Hoboken,  N.  J.,  Aug.  19. 

1892.  Pupil  of  Carl  Bitter  and  A.  S. 
Calder;  Royal  Academy  of  Fine  Arts, 
Milan,   Italy.     Member:     Y.   S. 

BABCOCK,    Dean.  Long's  Peak,   Colo. 
P.— Born   in   Canton,    111.,    Jan.    14.    1888. 
Pupil      of      John      Vanderpoel,      Robert 
Henri    and    Helen    Hyde.      Member: 
Denver  AA. 

BABCOCK,  E(lizabeth)  J  (ones),  (Mrs.  J. 
W.  Babcock,  II.),  571  Park  Ave.,  New 
York,   N.  Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Keokuk,  la.,  July  19,  1887. 
Pupil  of  Duveneck  and  Chase.  Mem- 
ber: N.A.  Women  PS;  Guild  of  Free 
Lance  Artists.  Illustrates  for  "Scrib- 
ner's   "Harper's,"   etc. 

BABCOCK,  R(ichard),  Woodland  Road, 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 

Mural  P.,  I. — Born  Denmark,  la.,  June 
4,  1887.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Weinhold  and 
Eisengraber  School  of  Painting  and 
Stiitische    Gewerbe    Schule    in    Munich, 


341 


BACH 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BAKER 


Germany.  Member:  ASL  of  Chi- 
cago; Chicago  WCC.  "Work:  "Rus- 
sians Outside  Port  Arthur,"  U.  S.  Grant 
Hotel,  San  Diego,  Calif. 

BACH,  Florence  Julia,  1110  Elmwood 
Ave.;  h.  557  Bird  Ave.,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 
P.,  S.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  June  24, 
1887.  Pupil  of  Art  School  of  Albright 
Art  Gallery,  Buffalo;  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
under  Chase  and  Du  Mond.  Mem- 
ber: Buffalo  SA.  Award  :  Hon. 
mention,  Buffalo  SA,  1915:  Fellowship 
prize,  Buffalo  SA,  1917;  hon.  mention, 
Buffalo  SA,  1918,  1919  and  1921.  Repre- 
sented  in   Buffalo  Fine  Arts   Academy. 

BACKUS,  Mary  G.,  Santa  Fe.,  N.  M.  (P.) 

BACON,    Irving   R.,  R.   F.   D.   4,   Redford, 
Mich. 
P.— Born    Fitchburg,    Mass.,    Nov.     29, 

1875.  Pupil  of  Chase  in  New  York; 
Carl  von  Marr  and  Heinrich  von  Zugel 
in  Munich.  Work:  "Village  Street 
Scene."  Louisville  Assoc;  "The  Lit- 
tle Old  Man  of  the  Woods,"  D.  &  C. 
Steamer,  Detroit;  Fellowcraft  Club, 
Detroit. 

BACON,  Kate  L.    See  Mrs.  Kate  B.  Bond. 

BACON.  Peggy,  152  West  55th  St.;  162 
East  46th  St..  New  York.  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer, Rogers  Rock.  Lake  George,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Ridgefield,  Conn.,  May  2,  1895. 
Pupil  of  Jonas  Lie.  Member:  S. 
Indp.A. 

BAER,  Herbert  M.,  655  Fifth  Ave.;  h. 
601  Madison  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
summer,  Westport,  Conn. 

P.,  Engr.,  Arch. — Born  New  York,  N. 
Y.,  Nov.  13,  1879.  Pupil  of  Ware  at 
Columbia        University.  Member: 

SBAA;  Arch.  Lg.  of  N.  Y. ;  'S.  Indp.  A. 
Award:  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1905.  Decorations  in  Park  and  Tilford's, 
New  York   City. 

BAER,  William  J(acob),  226  West  59th 
St.,  New  York.  N.  Y. ;  h.  174  Walnut  St., 
Fast   Or?) nge,   N.   .J. 

Min.P. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Jan.  29, 
1860.  Pupil  of  McMicken  School  of  De- 
sign, Cincinnati;  Royal  Academy,  Mu- 
nich. Member:  Am. S. Min.P.  (treas.), 
ANA.;  Calif.  S.  Min.  P.  (hon.). 
Awards:  Bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp., 
1900;  bronze  medal.  Pan.  Am.  Exp., 
Buffalo  1^01:  silver  mednl,  Charl-^ston 
Exp.,  1902;  hors  concours,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904  (Jury  of  Awsrds't:  gold 
medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work: 
"Aurora"  and  "Nvmph,"  Walters  Gal- 
lery, Baltimore;  "Ladv  in  Pink,"  Jaffe 
Collection.  Hamburg:  "Daphne,"  and 
portrait  in  oils,  Brooklyn  Institute  Mu- 
seum. 

BAILEY,  Henrietta  D(avldson),  Newcomb 
Pottery.  Audubon  PI.  and  Plum  St.;  h. 
^?A5  De  S'oto  «t..  New  Orlenns.  La. 
P.,  C,  T. — Born  New  Orleans,  La. 
Pupil  of  Newcomb  Art  Schools,  New 
Orleans;  Arthur  W.  Dow  in  New  York. 
Member:  NOAA;  Baltimore  Handi- 
craft C.  Ronresented  in  Delgado  Mu- 
seum, New  Orleans,  La.;  City  Art  Mu- 
seum, 'St.   Louis. 


BAILEY,     Henry     Lewis,     414     Mortgage 
Guarantee  Bldg.,   Los  Angeles,   Calif. 
E.— Member:    Calif.   AC;    Calif.    P.M. 

BAILEY,  Henry  T(urner),  Cleveland 
School  of  Art,  Magnolia  Drive  and 
Juniper  Road,  Cleveland,  O. 
L,C.,T.,W.,L.— Born  North  Scituate, 
Mass.,  Dec.  9,  1865.  Pupil  of  Mass.Nor- 
mal  Art  School  in  Boston.  Member: 
Cleveland  AA;  College  AA;  Cleveland 
SA;  Cleveland  A. LA.;  director,  Chau- 
tauqua Summer  School  of  Arts  and 
Crafts.  1906-1916;  dean,  Cleveland 
School  of  Art,  1917;  director,  Cleveland 
School  of  Art  and  the  John  Huntington 
Polytechnic  Institute,   Cleveland,  1919. 

BAILEY,  Minnie  Moly,  3908  Swiss  Ave., 
Dallas,  Tex.;  summer,  Southbridge, 
Mass. 

P.,  L— Born  Oberlin,  Kan.,  Oct.  29,  1890. 
Pupil  of  Hawthorne,  Connah  and  Pape. 

BAILEY.   Robert   IVI.,  15  Beacon  St.,  Bos- 
ton,  Mass. 
P. — M  ember:    Boston   AC. 

BAILEY,  Vernon   Howe,  14  East  60th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
I. — M  ember:     SI. 

BAINS,  Ethel  Franklin  Betts,  104  Harvey 
St.,    Germantown,    Philadelphia,    Pa. 
I.— M  ember:  Fellowship  PAPA,  Phila. 
WCC.      Award:    Bronze    medal,    P. -P. 
Exp.,    San   F.,   1915. 

BAIRD,  Eugene  Q.,  293  Magnolia  Ave., 
Jersey  City,   N.   J.    (P.) 

BAIRNSFATHER,  A.  L.,  53  West  37th 
St.,   New  York,  N.   Y.      (P.) 

BAKER,  Bryant,  1026  Vermont  Ave., 
Wash.,  D.  C. 

S.  —  Born  London.  July  S,  1881. 
Pupil  of  London  Royal  Academy  of 
Arts.  Member:  Fellow,  Royal  So- 
ciety of  British  Sculptors.  Work: 
Statue  of  King  Edward  VII  at  Hudders- 
field,  Yorkshire,  England;  "Prince 
Olav,"  owned  by  the  Queen  of  Norway; 
"Snowden  Andrews  Memorial."  at  Win- 
chester. Va.;  "Edward  B.  Wright  Me- 
morial," Austin,  Texas;  busts  of  Presi- 
dent Wilson  and  Senator  H.  C.  Lodge, 
Gen.  P.  C.  March,  Gen.  J.  J.  Pershing, 
Hon.  Herbert  Hoover. 

BAKER,  Conn,  44  East  Norwich  Ave., 
Columbus,   O. 

P. — M  ember:  Columbus  Pen  and 
Pencil    Club. 

BAKER,    Donald,  Westerville,    O. 

P. — M  ember:     Columbus     Pen     and 

Pencil  Club;   S. Indp. A. 
BAKER,    Mrs.    Elizabeth   Gowdy,   24  Gra- 

mercy  Park,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 

<^repnwich.    Conn. 

P. — Born    Xenia.    O.      Pupil    of    ASL.. 

Cooper    Union    and    N.    Y.     School    of 

Art   in   New   York;    PAFA;    Cowles   Art 

School     in     Boston;     studied     in     Rome, 

Florence     and     Paris:     PAFA.      Mem- 

1)  e  r  :       NAC.      Specialty,    Portraits    in 

pure  aquarelle  and  in  oil. 
BAKER,    F.    A.    Fuller,    189    Fulton    Ave., 

Hempstead,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

P. — M  ember:     S. Indp. A, 


342 


BAKER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


BALL 


BAKER,  Frederic  Van  Vliet,  39  West 
67th  iSt.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P., T.— Born  New  York,  Nov.  6,  1876. 
Pupil  of  Pratt  Inst.,  Brooklyn;  Courtois 
in  Paris.  Member:  Salma.C;  Assoc. 
Soc.Nat.des  Beaux-Arts,  1901.  Instruct- 
or,  Pratt  Institute. 

BAKER,  George  H(erbert),  605i/^  Main 
St.;  h.  22i  South  Fifth  St.,  Richmond, 
Ind. 

P.— Born  Muncie,  Ind.,  Feb.  14,  1878. 
Studied  at  Cin.A.A.  Member:  Rich- 
mond Art  Assoc;  Indiana  Artists'  C;  S. 
Indp.  A.;  Wayne  County  S.  Indp.  A. 
Awards:  First  prize,  Muncie,  Ind., 
1910;  second  hon.  mention,  Richmond, 
Ind.,  1910;  firsc  prize,  Richmond,  Ind., 
1913  and  1915. 

BAKER,  Geo.  O.,  care  of  Charles  Everett 
Johnson;  h.  941  Glengyle  Place,  Chi- 
cago, 111. 

P.,  I.— Born  Mexico,  Mo.,  Jan.  2,  1882. 
Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Richard  Miller, 
Paris.     Member:    SI. 

BAKER,  Jesse,  135  Zara  St.,  Pittsburgh, 
Pa. 
P.— M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA  1916. 

BAKER,  Mary  F(rances),  2263  Caron- 
delet  St.,  New  Orleans,  La. 
P.— Born  New  Orleans,  Oct.  28,  1879. 
Pupil  of  Newcomb  Art  School;  PAFA. 
Member:  New  Orleans  Art  Assoc. 
Award  :  Silver  medal.  New  Orleans 
Art  Assoc. 

BAKER,  IVI(aria)  May,  408  Raleigh 
Ave.,  Norfolk,  Va. ;  summer,  Wytheville, 
Va. 

P.,  T.— Born  Norfolk,  Va.,  Sept.  25,  1890. 
Pupil  of  PAFA,  Corcoran  Art  School, 
Charles  Hawthorne,  C.  C.  Critcher, 
Webster.  Member:  Norfolk  SA; 
Wash.  AC.  Award  :  Irene  Leache 
prize,   Norfolk   Society  of  Arts,    1920. 

BAKER,  S(amuel)  B(urtis),  care  of  Cor- 
coran Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.— Born  Boston,  Sept,  29,  1882.  Pupil 
of  Major,  De  Camp  and  Edward  H. 
Barnard.  Work:  Portraits  in  the 
Massachusetts  State  House  and  Girls' 
High  School,  Boston;  Harvard  Law 
School,  Cambridge,  Mass.;  Pinkerton 
Academy,  Derry,  N.  H.  Instructor  at 
Corcoran  Gallery. 

BAKOS,  Joseph  G.,  Old  Palace,  Santa 
Fe,  N.  M.;  h.  52  Bissell  Ave.,  Buffalo, 
N.  Y. 

P.,  S.,  T.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Sept.  23, 
1891.  Pupil  of  J.  E.  Thompson.  Mem- 
ber:     Santa  Fe   SA. 

BALANO,  Paula  Himmelsbach  (Mrs. 
Cosme  Balano),  54  Linden  Ave.,  Lans- 
downe.    Pa. 

P.,  I. — Born  Leipsic,  Germany,  May  10, 
1878.  Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Chase,  Ce- 
cilia Beaux  and  Walter  Appleton  Clark; 
Mucha  in  Paris.  Member:  Phila. 
WCC;  Fellowship  PAFA;  NYWCC;  N. 
A.  Women  PS;  Phila.  Alliance.  Award: 
Shillard  gold  medal  for  water  colors. 
Plastic  C,  1916.  Work  in  Fellowship 
PAFA  collection.  Member  of  faculty 
of  the  Philadelphia  School  of  Design 
for  Women. 


BALCOM,  Lowell  L(eroy),  136  West  65th 
St.,  New  York,   N.    Y. 

P.,  I.,  E.— Born  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  Oct. 
22,  1887.  Pupil  of  J.  D.  Patrick. 
Member:  Guild  of  Free  Lance  A 
Represented  in  Kansas  City  Public 
Library. 

BALDRIDGE,  C(yrus)  Leroy,  Harmon- 
on-Hudson,    N.    )^. 

I.,  W.— Born  Alton,  N.  Y.,  May  27,  1889. 
Pupil  of  Frank  Holme.  Member: 
Guild   of  Free   Lance  Artists. 

BALDWIN,  Burton  Clarke,  805  Junior 
Terrace,    Chicago,   111. 

I.— Born  Danville,  111.,  1891.  Pupil  of 
Chicago  Academy  of  Fine  Arts.  Mem- 
ber:    Palette  and   Chisel   C. 

BALFOUR,    Mrs.    Helen,    310    Mt.    Wash- 
ington Drive,  Los  Angeles,  Calif. 
P.,  L— Born  London,  Eng.,  July  11,  1857. 
Pupil   of  AIC.      Member:     Calif.   AC. 
Illustrated  "Sunset  Highways." 

BALINK,  Hendricus  C(ornelius),  Taos, 
N.    M. 

P.,  E. — Born  Amsterdam,  Holland,  June 
10,  1882.  Pupil  of  National  State  Acad- 
emy of  Amsterdam;  C.  L.  Dake,  V.  der 
Waay,  Derkinderen;  etching  under  du 
Pont  and  Arst.  Member:  Chicago 
SA. 

BALL,  Alice  Worthington,  213  West 
Monument  St.,  Baltimore,  Md. 
P. — Born  in  Boston.  Pupil  of  Collin, 
Courtois  and  Hitchcock  in  Paris. 
Member:  N.A.  Women  PS. ;  Conn. 
AFA.;  NAC;  Balto.WCC;  S. Indp.  A.; 
Wash.  AC. ;  Phila.  AC.  Award:  Hud- 
son prize.   Conn.  AFA,   1915. 

BALL,  Caroline  Peddle  (Mrs.  Bertrand 
E.  Ball),  Westfield,  N.  J. 
S.— Born  Terre  Haute,  Ind.,  Nov.  11, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Augustus  Saint  Gaudena 
and  Cox  in  New  York.  Member: 
Ind.  'SS.  Award:  Hon.  mention, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900.  Work:  "Victory," 
in  quadriga  in  U.  'S.  building  at  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  memorial  corbels,  Grace 
Church,  Brooklyn;  memorial  fountains 
at  Flushing,  L.  I.,  and  Auburn,  N.  Y. 

BALL,  Linn  (B.),  163  West  23rd  St.;  h. 
181  West  75th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
summer,  Hotel  Bon  Air,  Landing,  N.  J. 
P.,  I.,  C— Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  Sept. 
25,  1891. 

BALL,  Mary  Roberts.  See  Mrs.  Joseph 
Price. 

BALL,  Robert,  9  West  47th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

P.,  I. — Born  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  Sept.  7, 
1890.  Pupil  of  Richard  Miller  in  Paris 
and  Brittany.  Member:  Phila.  AC; 
Salma.  C.  A  w  a  r  d  :  O.  H.  Dean  prize. 
Artists  of  Kansas  City  and  vicinity, 
1915. 

BALL,  Rutli  N(orton),  Indian  Arts  Build- 
ing, Balboa  Park;  h.  4141  Normal  St., 
San  Diego,  Calif. 

S. — Born  Madison,  Wis.  Pupil  of 
J.  Liberty  Tadd  in  Philadelphia;  St. 
Louis  School  FA;  Cincinnati  Art  Acad- 
emy. Member:  Cincinnati  Women's 
AC;  Three  Arts  C.  and  Crafters  Com- 
pany, Cincinnati;  San  Diego  AG.     Rep- 


343 


BALL 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


BARNARD 


resented  in  City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis; 
Cincinnati  Art  Museum;  San  Diego  Art 
Museurn,  Marine  Base,  San  Diego,  Calif. 

BALL,  Thomas  Watson,  Old  Lyme,  Conn. 
P.,  C. — Born  New  York  City,  July  7, 
1863.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under 
Beckwith,  Mowbray  and  Du  Mond. 
Member:  NAC;  Salma  C. ;  Municipal 
AS  of  N.  Y.;  American  Inst.  Graphic  A.; 
NSC;  Alliance;  MacD.  C;  Work: 
Ceiling  decoration  in  Chapel  of  the 
Intercession,  New  York  City;  ceiling 
decoration  in  Trinity  Chapel,  Buffalo; 
figure  panels  in  font,  St.  Thomas' 
Church,  New  York  City;  figure  panels 
in  reredos.  Chapel  of  Newman  School, 
Hackensack,  N.  J. 

BALLANTINE,  Edward  James,  36  Grove 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Edinburgh,  Scotland,  Dec.  3, 
1885.     Member:     S.  Indp.  A. 

BALLIN,   Florence.     See  Mrs,  Cramer. 

BALLIN,  Hugo,  662  Lexington  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Saugatuck,  Conn. 
Mural  P. — Born  New  York,  N.  Y., 
March  7,  1879.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.; 
studied  in  Rome  and  Florence.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1906;  Mural  P;  N.  Y. 
Arch.Lg.  1904;  Lotos  C;  Nat.Inst.A.L.; 
Union  Inter,  des  Beaux-Arts,  Paris; 
Arts  Club,  Rome,  Italy.  Awards  : 
Shaw  purchase,  SAA  1905;  President's 
prize,  N,Y.Arch,Lg,  1906;  Clarke  prize, 
NAD  1906;  second  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD  1907;  Isidor  medal,  NAD  1907; 
N,Y, Arch.Lg.  1908;  bronze  medal,  Bue- 
nos Aires  Exp,,  1910.  Work:  "The 
European  Sybil'!  and  "The  Lesson"  in 
National  Gallery,  Washington;  "Under 
the  Pergola,"  Municipal  Gallery,  Mont- 
clair,  N.  J.;  18  paintings  on  ceiling 
and  walls  of  Governor's  Room,  Capitol, 
Madison,  Wis.;  "The  Lute  Player," 
Annmary  Brown  Memorial  Museum, 
Providence,  R.  I. 

BALLINGER,  H(arry)  R(ussell),  1947 
Broadway;  h.  15  West  67th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

I. — Born  Port  Townsend,  Wash.,  Sept. 
4,  1892.  Pupil  Maurice  Braun,  ASL  of 
N.  Y.,  and  Harvey  Dunn.  Mem- 
ber: Salma.  C. ;  SI.  Illustrations  for 
"Cosmopolitan,"  "Good  Housekeeping," 
"Saturday  Evening  Post,"  "McClures," 
etc. 

BALSEIRO,  Ernesto,  Arecileo,  Porto  Rico, 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

BANCROFT,  Milton  Herbert,  Salmagundi 
Club,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P,,I.,T, — Born  Newton,  Mass,,  Jan.  1, 
1867,  Pupil  of  Mass,  Normal  Art  School 
in  Boston;  PAFA  in  Philadelphia; 
Courtois,  Callot,  Delance  and  Girardot 
in  Paris,  Member:  Salma.C.  1904; 
Phila.  Sketch,  C;  N.Y,Arch,Lg,1907.  Prof, 
of  Art,  Swarthmore  Col,,  1886-92;  Supt. 
of  Schools,  PAFA,  1892-94,  Work: 
Portraits  in  Park  Bank,  New  York 
City,  etc;  mural  decoration,  Panama- 
Pacific   Exp.,    1915. 

BAN  HAM,     Louis,    18    Jones    St.,    Jersey 
City,    N.   J. 
P. — M  ember:  Guild  of  Free  Lance  A, 


BANKSON,  G(len)  P(eyton),  5222  Lacey 
St.,  Spokane,  Wash.;  h.  Valley,  Wash. 
P.,  C. — Born  Mount  Hope,  Wash.,  Sept. 
7,   1890.      Self-taught. 

BANNISTER,  Eleanor  C(unnlngham), 
Ovington  Bldg.,  246  Fulton  St,;  h.  109 
Cambridge  Place,  Brooklyn,  New  York, 
N.    Y, 

P. — Born  New  York,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
Whittaker  in  Brooklyn;  Constant  and 
Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Member:  Brook- 
lyn SA.  Work:  "Portrait  of  Rev. 
R,   S.   Storrs,"  Brooklyn  Museum. 

BARBER,  Alice.  See  Mrs.  Charles  H, 
Stephens. 

BARCLAY,  McClelland,  918  Wrigley  Bldg.; 
h.  5058  Sheridan  Road,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  I.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  May  9,  1891. 
Pupil  of  H.  C.  Ives,  George  R.  Bridg- 
man,  Thomas  Fogarty.  Member:  ASL 
of  N.  Y.;  Chicago  AC;  Art  Service 
League,  Chicago.  Awards:  Navy  pos- 
ter nrize  ($250),  Committee  on  National 
Preparedness,  1917;  first  prize  U.  S.  M. 
C.  recruiting  poster;  first  prize  for  alle- 
gorical painting  of  Commerce  of  Chi- 
cago from  Chicago  Association  of  Com- 
merce. 

BARHYDT,  Jean  K.  (Mrs.  George  Weed 
Barhydt),  The  Belnord,  548  Orange  St., 
New  Haven,  Conn.;  summer,  Center 
Harbor,    N.    H. 

P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  July  14,  1868. 
Pupil  of  G.  A.  Thompson.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS.;  Conn.  AFA;  New 
Haven  PCC, 

BARILE,  Xavier  J.,  7  West  14th  St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  I.,  E. — Born  in  Italy,  March  18, 
1891.  Pupil  of  Chapman;  Mora;  Sloan 
and  Dodge.  Member:  ASL  of  N. 
Y.;   S.  Indp.  A. 

BARKER,  Katherine,  The  Avondale,  39th 
and  Locust  Sts.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  sum- 
mer, Cliffdale  Farm,  Croton-on-Hudson, 
N,  Y, 

P.,  T.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Dec.  2, 
1891.  Pupil  of  Breckenridge,  Anshutz, 
Carlson,  Hale,  Beaux  and  Vonnoh. 
Member  :   Fellowship  PAFA. 

BARKSDALE,     Ethel     duPont,     Jr.,     Mt. 

Salem   Lane,   Wilmington,   Del, 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

BARLOW,  Myron,  114  Theodore  St.,  De- 
troit, Mich.;  and  Trepied,  Etaples 
(Pas-de-Calais'>.  France, 
P.— Born  Ionia,  Mich,,  1873,  Pupil  of 
AIC;  Gerome  and  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts 
in  Paris,  Member:  Paris  AAA; 
Paris  SAP;  Soc.Nat,BA,  Paris;  Phila, 
AC,  Awards  :  Gold  medal,  St,  Louis 
Exp,,  1904;  gold  medal,  P,-P,Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915,  Work:  "Mother  Love," 
Pennsylvania  Academy,  Philadelphia; 
"Liseuse,"  Palais  des  Beaux  Arts, 
Douai,  France;  "Pecheuse,"  Detroit 
Museum   of  Art, 

BARNARD,  Elinor  M.  (Mrs,  Komroff), 
601  Madison  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y, 
P. — Born  Kensington,  London,  England, 
Aug.  29,  1872.  Member:  NYWCC;  N. 
A.  Women  PS.  Specialty,  portraits  in 
water  color. 


344 


BARNARD 


WHO*S   WHO  IN  ART 


BARRATT 


BARNARD,  George  Grey,  454  Fort  Wash- 
ington Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Bellefonte,  Pa.,  May  24,  1863. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  earlier  at  the  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts  in  Paris.  Member: 
Assoc.  Soc.  Nationale  des  Beaux-Arts, 
France;  Nat.  Inst.  A.  L,.;  Ind.  SS. 
Awards  :  Gold  medal.  Paris  Exp., 
1900;  gold  medal,  Pan. -Am.  Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904.  Work:  "Two  Natures,"  Metro- 
politan Museum;  "Pan,"  Central  Park, 
New  York;  "I  Feel  Two  Natures,"  Art 
Institute  of  Chicago;  "Labor,"  State 
Capitol,    Harrisburg,    Pa. 

BARNARD,  Josephine  W.,  117  Waverly 
PL,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  April  22, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Dow,  Snell  and  Carlson 
in  United  States;  Stanhope  Forbes  in 
England.  Member  :  N.A.  Women 
PS. 

BARNES,  E(rnest)  H(arrison),  1308 
Geddes  Ave.,  Ann  Arbor,  Mich. 
P. — Born  Portland,  Chautauqua  Co., 
N.Y.,  May  10,  1873.  Pupil  of  Will  Howe 
Foote  and  Henry  R.  Poore;  AIC  and 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  S.Indp.A. 
Teacher  freehand  drawing  and  painting, 
Univ.    of   Mich. 

BARNES,  Gertrude  J(ameson)  (Mrs. 
Henry  A.  Barnes),  1812  Emerson  Ave., 
South,  Minneapolis,  Minn. 
P. — Born  Tyngsboro,  Mass.,  Oct.  23, 
1865.  Pupil  of  Minneapolis  School  of 
Fine  Arts  under  Douglas  Volk;  Cowles 
Art  School  in  Boston  under  Dennis  M. 
Bunker;  Snell  and  Lathrop  in  New 
York;  C.  H.  Woodbury.  Member: 
Artists  League  of  Minneapolis; 
Awards  :  First  prize  for  landscape, 
Minnesota  State  Art  Soc,  1904;  hon. 
mention,  Minnesota  State  Art  Soc, 
1908,  1910  and  1914;  hon.  mention  Min- 
neapolis AI  1915;  bronze  medal  for  oils, 
St.  Paul  Inst.,  1916.  Work:  "In  the 
Orchard,"  Minnesota  State  Art  Society, 
St.  Paul;  "Trees  by  the  Sea,"  Wom- 
an's  Club,   Minneapolis. 

BARNES,  Matthew,  1456  Jones  St.,  San 
Francisco,   Calif.    (P.) 

BARNETT,  Bion,  care  of  Mrs.  C.  W. 
Camp,  122  East  82nd  'St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y.    (P.) 

BARNETT,  Tom  P.,  3832  Lindell  Boule- 
vard,   St.    Louis   ,Mo. 

P.,  A.— Born  St.  Louis,  Feb.  11,  1870. 
Studied  architecture  under  George  I. 
Barnett  and  painting  under  Paul  Cor- 
noyer.  Member:  Chicago  AG;  NAC; 
St.  Louis  AG;  Salma.C.  1920.  Awards: 
Gold  medal  for  architecture.  La.  Pur- 
chase Exp.,  St.  Louis,  1904;  bronze 
medal  for  architecture  and  painting', 
Portland  Exp.,  1905;  first  Ives  lans- 
scape  prize  ($100),  St.  Louis  Artists' 
Guild,  1914,  1915,  1917  and  1919;  Scott 
Memorial  prize  ($100),  St.  Louis  AG, 
1918;  first  Architectural  prize.  Cook 
County.  Court  House,  Chicago,  Paint- 
ing: "Winter  Snow,"  St.  Louis  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts. 

BARNEY,  Mrs.  Walter.  See  Stevens, 
Esther. 


345 


BARNEY,  J.  Stewart,  h.  31  West  37th  St., 
New    York,    N.   Y. 

P.,  A.,  W.— Born  Richmond,  Va.,  Oct., 
1869. 

BARNHORN,  Clement  J(ohn),  Art  Mu- 
seum; h.  578  East  Fourth  St.,  Cincin- 
nati,  O. 

S.— Born  Cincinnati,  1857.  Pupil  of 
Rebisso  in  Cincinnati;  Bouguereau, 
Peuch,  Mercie,  Ferrier  and  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  NSS 
1899;  Cincinnati  AC.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1895;  bronze 
medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  hon.  mention, 
Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work: 
"Theodore  Thomas,"  Cincinnati  Music 
Hall;  "Fountain,"  Shortridge  High 
School,  Indianapolis;  fountain  figure. 
Prince  George  Hotel,  New  York; 
"Fountain,"  Hugh  High  School,  Cin- 
cinnati; "Magdalen,"  Cincinnati  Art 
Museum;  "Portrait  Bust,"  Public  Libra- 
ry, Cincinnati;  "Madonna  and  Child," 
Cathedral  fagade,  Covington,  Ky.; 
"Fountain,"  Conservatory  of  Music,  Cin- 
cinnati; eleven  panels  in  Cincinnati 
Court  House;  "Portrait  of  Major  C.  R. 
Holmes,"  Cincinnati  General  Hospital; 
Dr.  P.  S.  Connor,  relief.  Good  Samaritan 
Hospital,   Cincinnati. 

BARNS,  Cornelia  (Mrs.  C.  Garbett),  Mor- 
gan Hill,   Calif. 

P.,  I.— Born  New  York,  Sept.  25,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Twachtman  and  Chase.  Illus- 
trates  for  the    "Liberator." 

BARNUM,  Emily  Keene,  Champs  des 
Tisons,  La  Sallaz  sur  Lausanne,  Swit- 
zerland. 

P., T.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  March  29, 
1874.  Pupil  of  Vibert  in  Paris;  Irving 
R.  Wiles  in  New  York  and  ASL  of 
N.Y.  Member:  Pen  and  Brush  Club. 
Specialty,  water  color. 

BARON E,  Antonio,  771  Lexing-fon  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  E.,  T.— Born  Valle  Dolmo,  Sicily, 
May  20,  1889.  Pupil  of  Du  Mond,  Chase 
and  Mora.  Member  :  Chicago  SE; 
PortP.  Award  :  Bronze  medal  for 
etching,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  gold 
medal,   Phila.  AC,  1917. 

BARR,  Paul  E.,  Goldsmith,  Ind.;  h.  Tip- 
ton, Ind. 

P.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  near  Goldsmith, 
Ind.,  Nov.  25,  1892.  Pupil  of  AIC. 
Member:  Tipton  AA;  S.  Indp.  A.; 
Chicago  AC;  Indiana  AC.  Work  in 
Goldsmith  Public  Schools. 

BARR,  William,  311  Lyon  St.,  San  Fran- 
cisco,   Calif. 

P.,  I. — Born  Glasgow,  Scotland,  Apr. 
26,  1867.  Studied  in  Glasgow.  Mem- 
ber: Glasg-ow  Art  Inst. ;  Paisley  Art 
Inst.  Work:  "Paisley  Cross,  1910," 
and  "Portrait  of  Provost  Peter  Eadie," 
owned  by  the  town  of  Paisley;  "Por- 
trait of  Thomas  Boyle,"  City  Hall,  San 
Francisco. 

BARRATT,    Watson,    330    West    39th    St.; 
h.    168   Waverly   PI.,    New   York,    N.    Y.; 
summer.   Highlands,  N.   C 
I.— Born  Salt  Lakei  City,  Utah,  June  29, 
1884.      Pupil    of    Howard    Pyle,    Henri, 


BARTLETT 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


BARTLETT 


Silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  hon. 
mention,  C.I.Pittsburgh,  1908;  Cahn 
prize,  AIC  1910;  silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp,, 
San  F.,  1915.  Work:  Mural  paintings 
and  windows,  Chicago  University  Club; 
mural  paintings,  University  of  Chicago; 
Second  and  Fourth  Presbyterian  Church; 
Council  Chamber,  City  Hall,  Chicago; 
landscape,  "Roman  Afternoon,"  Car- 
negie Institute,  Pittsburgh;  "Blue 
Blinds,"  Friends  of  American  Art,  Chi- 
cago; "Evening  White,"  Chicago  Mu- 
nicipal purchase.  "Canton  Street,"  Cor- 
coran Gallery;  mural  paintings.  Burn- 
ham  Library,  Art  Inst.,  Chicago. 
BARTLETT,  Madeleine  A(delaide),  755 
Boylston  St.;  h.  652  Huntington  Ave., 
Boston,    Mass. 

S. — Born  Woburn,  Mass.  Pupil  of 
Cowles  Art  School  and  Henry  H.  Kit- 
son.     Member:  Conn.  AFA. 

BARTLETT,  Minnie  E.,  30  The  Knick- 
erbocker, 611  East  12th  St.,  Indianap- 
olis,   Ind. 

P., I. — Born  Seymour,  Ind.,  June  29, 
1890.  Pupil  of  Wheeler,  Stark  and 
Forsyth.  Member:  Indiana  Artists 
Assoc. 

BARTLETT,  Paul  W(ayland),  7  West 
43rd  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  Third  and 
Randolph  Sts.,  N.  E.,  Washington,  D.  C, 
and  16  Rue  du  Commandeur,  Paris, 
France. 

S.— Born  New  Haven,  Conn.,  1865. 
Son  of  T.  H.  Bartlett.  Pupil  of 
Cavelier,  Fr^miet  and  Rodin  in  Paris. 
Member:  NSS  1893;  Nat.  Inst.  AL; 
Am.  Acad  AL.  Paris  AAA  (acting 
pres.)  Royal  Acad,  of  Belgium  (As- 
soc); Institute  of  France  (Cor.); 
ANA  1916;  NA  1917;  S.  Wash.  A. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1887;  gold  medal.  Pan- Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  grand  prize,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
first  medal,  Li6ge  Exp.,  1905;  Che- 
valier of  the  Legion  of  Honor,  1895. 
Officer,  1908.  Work:  "Bear  Tamer," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York; 
monument  to  Joseph  Warren,  Boston; 
"Puritans,"  Capitol  at  Hartford,  Conn.; 
decorative  figures.  New  York  Public 
Library;  equestrian  "Lafayette,"  Square 
of  the  Louvre,  Paris;  "Reading  Figure" 
and  "Erect  Figure,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia; 
plaster,  "Boy  with  Garlands,"  Art  In- 
stitute of  Chicago;  "Columbus"  and 
"Michelangelo,"  Library  of  Congress, 
Washington,  D.  C;  pediment.  House  of 
Representatives,  Washington,  D.  C. ; 
"Patriotism,"  Duluth,  Minn.;  "Frank- 
lin," Waterbury,  Conn.  "Lafayette," 
Metz;  "Alexander  Agassiz,"  Boston; 
"Robert  Morris,"   Philadelphia. 

BARTLETT,  Truman   H.,  17  Parley  Vale, 

Jamaica  Plain,  Mass. 
S.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Dorset,  Vt.,  Oct. 
25,  1835.  Pupil  of  Fremiet  in  Paris. 
Work:  "Wells"  bronze  statue,  Hart- 
ford, Conn.;  "Benedict"  cemetery  mon- 
ument, Waterbury,  Conn.;  "Clark" 
cemetery  monument,  Hartford,  Conn.; 
many  busts  and  statuettes.  Writings: 
"Life  of  Dr.  William  RImmer,"  "Phy- 
siognomy of  Abraham  Lincoln,"   "Epo- 


Chase  and  Penfield.  Member:  SI. 
Specialty,  stage  designing.  Designed 
entire  productions  of  "Sinbad,"  "Bom- 
bo,"  "The  Last  Waltz,"  "Blossomtime," 
Shubert  Winter  Garden  Shows  of  1918, 
1919,  "The  Lonely  Heart,"  "Silver  Fox," 
"Florodora,"  "Monte  Christo,  Jr." 

BARRET,   Laura  A.,  National  Arts  Club, 
15  Gramercy  Park,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

BARRETT,     Elizabeth     Hunt    (Mrs.    Ed- 
ward N.  Barrett),  Amherst,  Va. 
P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  9,  1863. 
Pupil  of  NAD. 

BARRIE,  Erwin  (S.),  1188  Asbury  Ave., 
Hubbard  Woods,  111. 

P.— Born  Canton,  O.,  June  3,  1886. 
Pupil  AIC.  Member:  Chicago  AC; 
Business  Men's  AC  of  Chicago. 

BARRINGTON,  Amy  L.,  3089  Broadway, 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:  N.  A.  Women  PS. 

BARRY,  Edith  C(leaves),  83  South  Ful- 
ler ton  Ave..  Montclair,  N.  J. 
P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.  Studied  In 
New  York  and  France.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS;  Conn.  AFA;  S.  Indp. 
A.;  ASL  of  N.Y. 

BARRY,  John  J(oseph),  Burton  Arms 
Apts.,  680  Witmer  St.,  Los  Angeles, 
Calif. ;  summer,  Carmel,  Calif. 
E. — Born  Hamilton,  Ontario,  Canada, 
June  21,  1885.  Pupil  of  Ernest  Haskell. 
Member:  Calif.  SE;  Calif.  Print 
Makers. 

BARRY,  Marietta,  2555  Fifth  Ave.,  West, 
Seattle,    Wash.    (P.) 

BARSE,  George  R(andolph),  Jr.,  Kato- 
nah,  Westchester  Co.,  N,  Y.;  and  Cen- 
tury Assoc,  7  West  43d  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Detroit,  Mich.,  July  31,  1861. 
Pupil  of  Cabanel,  Boulanger  and  Le- 
febvre  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA 
1898,  NA  1899;  SAA  1899;  Century  As- 
soc. Awards  :  First  Hallgarten 
prize,  NAD  1895;  Shaw  Fund  purchase, 
SAA  1898;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901.  Work:  Eight  panels  in 
Library  of  Congress,  Washington,  D.  C. 

BARTLE,  Sara  N(orwood),  2300  18th  St., 
^Vashington,  D.  C. 

Min.  P. — Born  Washington,  D.  C.  Pu- 
pil of  Carroll  Beckwith;  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
ASL  of  Washington. 

BARTLETT,  Dana,  231  South  Spring  St., 
Los  Angeles,  Calif. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Ionia.  Mich.,  Nov. 
19,  1878.  Pupil  ASL  of  N.  Y.  and  Wil- 
liam M.  Chase.  Member:  Calif.  AC; 
Calif.  WCC;  N.  Y.  WCC;  Print  Makers 
of   Calif.;   Laguna  Beach  AA. 

BARTLETT,  Elizabeth  M.  P.,  136  Hemen- 
way   St.,    Boston,    Mass. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

BARTLETT,  Frederic  Clay,  Fort  Lauder- 
dale, Fla. ;  summer,  Lake  Geneva,  Wis. 
P.— Born  Chicago,  June  1,  1873.  Pupil 
of  Gysis  in  Munich;  Collin,  Aman-Jean 
and  Whistler  in  Paris.  Member:  Al- 
lied AA;  Chicago  SA;  Mural  P; 
Royal  Academy,  Munich.        Awards: 


346 


BARTON 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BAY LOS 


cal  Portraits  of  Abraham  Lincoln," 
essays  on  Fremiet,  Rodin,  Aube  and 
Millet,  etc.  Instructor  in  modeling  at 
Mass.  Inst,  of  Technology  for  twenty- 
three  years. 
BARTON,  Loren  (Roberta),  993  South 
Wiiton  Place,  Los  Angeles,  Calif. 
P.,  K. — Born  Oxford,  Mass.  M  em- 
ber: Calif.  AC;  Calif.  PM;  Calif.  SE. 
Award  :  1st  prize,  Arizona  Art  Ex- 
hibition. 

BARTON,  Ralph,  47  West  68th  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  I.,  C,  W.— Born  Kansas  City,  Mo., 
Aug.  14,  1891.  Member:  SI;  Guild 
of  Free  Lance  A.  Illustrates  for  maga- 
zines. 

BARTOO,  Catherine  R.,  102  Oak  St., 
Binghamton,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Williamsport,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
Chase;  Henri;  Mora.  Member:  N. 
Y.  Soc.  Painters. 

BASING,  Charles,  163  Clymer  St.,  Brook- 
lyn; h.  Salmagundi  Club,  45  Fifth  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Province- 
town,   Mass. 

P.— ±iom  in  Australia,  July  23,  1865. 
Pupil  of  Bouguereau  and  Ferrier.  M  e  m- 
ber-  NYWCC;  Salma.  C. ;  AWCS;  Al- 
lied AA;  Chicago  WCC.  Work:  Mu- 
ral decorations  in  Columbia  Univer- 
sity Club,  New  York;  Carnegie  Insti- 
tute of  Technology,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.; 
ceiling  in  N.  Y.  C.  R.  R.  Station. 

BATCH  ELDER,  Mrs.  E.  B.  L.  See  Evelyn 
Longman. 

BATCHELOR,  C.  D.,  226  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 
I. — M  ember:    SI. 

BATEMAN,  John,  230  Park  Ave.,  East, 
Haddonfield,     N.    J. 

S.— Born  Cedarville,  N.  J.,  Feb.  14, 
1877.  Pupil  of  School  of  Industrial  Arts, 
Philadelphia;  PAFA;  Charles  Grafiy; 
studied  in  Paris.  Member:  NSS 
1912;  Fellowship  PAFA.  Awards: 
Cresson  European  Scholarship,  1905; 
Cresson  Two  Year  Scholarship,  1906-1907; 
hon.   mention,   P,-P.Exp.,    San  F.,   1915. 

BATES,   Bertha  Corson   Day   (Mrs.  D.  M. 

Bates),     "Crossways,"     Lewiston,     Me.; 
summer,    MacMahan    Island,    Me. 
P., I.— Born   Philadelphia,    Pa.,    Aug.    20, 
1875.     Pupil   of  Howard   Pyle.     Mem- 
ber: Plastic  C. 

BATES,  (Earl)  Kenneth,  27  Converse  PI., 
New  London,   Conn. 

P.— Born  Haverhill,  Mass.,  Oct.  28, 
1895.  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA.  Award  :  Cresson 
Traveling    Scholarship,    PAFA,    1920. 

BATHURST,  Clyde  C,  S.  E.  corner  20th 
and  Cherry  Sts.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
S. — Born  Mount  Union,  Pa.,  June  8, 
1883.  Pupil  of  Grafly  in  Philadel- 
phia. Member:  Fellowship  PAFA. 
Awards  :  Cresson  traveling  scholar- 
ships, PAFA,  1908  and  1910;  hon.  men- 
tion,  P.-P.   Exp.,   San  F.,   1915. 

BATTEN,  McLeod,  Mill  Valley,  Calif.  (P.) 


347 


BAUGHMAN,     Mary     Barney,     521    West 

Gra(;e    St.,    Richmond,    Va. 
S.,   L.,   T.— Pupil  of  Michel  de  Tarnov- 
sky    and    Colarossi    Academy.      Mem- 
ber:   Richmond    AC. 

BAUM,     Walter     E(merBon),    Sellersvllle, 
Bucks   Co.,    Pa. 

P., L— Born  Sellersville,  Dec.  14,  1884. 
Pupil  of  William  T.  Trego  and  PAFA. 
Member:  Fellowship  PAFA.  Rep- 
resented in  the  Hazelton  High  School, 
Hazelton,  Pa.;  Irene  Leach  Art  Asso- 
ciation, Norfolk,  Va.;  PAFA  Fellow- 
ship Collection;  Pennsylvania  State  Col- 
lege;   Tuskegee    (Ala.)    Institute. 

BAUMANN,    Gustave,    140    Canyon    Road. 
Santa  Fe,  N.  M. 

Engr.,  P.,  I. — Born  Magdeburg,  Ger- 
many, June  27,  1881.  Pupil  of  Maxi- 
milian Dasio  in  Munich.  Member: 
Chicago  SA;  P-G.;  Cliffdwellers,  Calif. 
P.M.  Award  :  Gold  medal  for  en- 
graving, P.-P.  Exp.,  San.  F.,  1915. 
W  o  r  k  :  "Granny's  Garden,"  Chicago 
Art  Commission  purchase. 

BAUS,  S(imon)  P(aui).  Union  Trust 
Bldg.,  116  East  Market  'St.;  h.  26  De 
Quincy  St.,  Indianapolis,  Ind. 
P. — Born  in  Indianapolis,  Sept.  4,  1882, 
Pupil  of  Adams,  Forsyth  and  Stark. 
Member:  Ind.  SS.  Award  :  Hol- 
comb  prize  ($100),  Indianapolis  Art 
Assoc,  1919,  1921.  Represented  in  John 
Herron  Art  Inst. 

BAUSMAN,   Marian   D.     See  Mrs.  Otis  L. 
Walker. 

BAXTER,   Bertha   E.,   47  Gramercy  Park, 
New  York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

BAXTER,     Elijah,    228    Spring    St.,    New- 
port,  R.   I. 

P.— Work  in  R.L  School  of  Design, 
Providence,    R.    L 

BAXTER,  Martha  Wheeler,  Brackett 
Apartments,  Santa  Barbara,  Calif. 
P. — Born  Castleton,  Vt.  Pupil  of 
PAFA;  ASL  of  ^.  Y.;  Beaux-Arts  Inst, 
of  N.  Y. ;  Delecluse,  Colarossi  and  Ju- 
lian Academies,  Paris;  min.  painting 
under  Mme.  de  Billemont-Chardon  and 
Mile.  Schmitt  in  Paris,  and  Mme.  Be- 
henna  in  London;  tempera  under  'Sar- 
torelli  in  Venice.  Member  :  ASL  of 
N.  Y.  (life);  Fellowship  PAFA;  Art 
Workers  C:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Pa.  S. 
Min.  P.  Awards:  Hon.  mention,  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  Min.  prize,  Wolfe  AC,  1907. 
Work  :  "Lieut.  L.  E.  Bray,  U.  S.  N.," 
National  Gallery,  Washington. 

BAYARD,  C.  A.,  Carnegie  Institute,  Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 

P.— Member:    Pitts.  AA. 
BAYHA,   Edwin   F.,  Glenside,  Pa. 

I. — M  ember:   Fellowship   PAFA. 
BAYLINSON,    A.    S.,    1947    Broadway;    h. 

1227  Wheeler  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born   Moscow,    Russia,   Jan.   6,   1882. 

Pupil  of  Robert  Henri  and  Homer  Boss. 

Member:     S.Indp.A. 

BAYLOS,   Z(elma),   Sherwood   Studios,   58 

West  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer. Lake  Mahopac,  Putnam  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P.,  S.,  W. — Born  in  Hungary.  Pupil  of 
Will     Low;     C.     Y.     Turner;     Courtois, 


BAYMAN 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BEAUX 


Prinet  and  Girardot  in  Paris.  Por- 
trait of  Gen.  Georg-e  R.  Dyer  in  the 
12th  Regiment  Armory,  and  in  the  71st 
Regiment  Armory,  New  York  City; 
"Spirit  of  Democracy"  property  of 
American  Red  Cross. 

BAYMAN,  Leo,  10  East  14th  St.,  New 
Yorl<:,    N.   Y.    (S.) 

BEACH,  Chester,  207  East  17th  St.,  New 
Yorlc,    N.    Y. 

S. — Born  San  Francisco,  Calif.,  Mav  23, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Verlet  and  Roland  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1908;  NSS 
1908;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.l909;  Nat.  Inst.  A.  L. 
Award  :  Barnett  prize,  NAD  1909;  sil- 
ver medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Represented  in  Chicago  Art  Institute 
and  the   Cleveland  Museum  of  Art. 

BEAL,  Gifford,  230  West  59th  St.;  27  West 
67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  New  York  City,  1879.  Pupil 
of  Chase,  Du  Mond  and  Ranger.  Mem- 
ber: ANA1908;  NA1914;  AWCS;  NAC; 
Salma.C.1900.  Lotos  C;  Century  Assoc. 
Phila.AC;  Fellowship  PAFA  (assoc); 
NYWCC;  Mural  P.;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.l911. 
Award:  Third  prize  ($100),  Worces- 
ter, Mass.,  1903;  bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  Shaw  Fund,  Salma.C,  1909; 
first  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1910;  Clarke 
prize,  NAD  1913;  silver  medal,  NAC 
1913;  3rd  medal  ($500),  CI  Pittsburgh, 
1913;  hon.  mention  AIC  1913;  3rd  medal 
($1,000),  Corcoran,  Washington,  1914; 
gold  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915; 
Stuart  Duncan  prize,  Newport  A.  A., 
1917;  Phila.  WCC  prize,  1917;  NAC  gold 
medal  and  $1,000  prize,  1918;  hon.  men- 
tion, Phila.  AC,  1919;  Altman  prize 
($500)  NAD,  1919.  Work:  "May- 
fair"  and  "The  Albany  Boat,"  Metro- 
politan Museum,  New  York;  "A  Puff  of 
Smoke,"  Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  also 
Syracuse  Museum  and  San  Francisco 
Art  Inst. ;  six  water  colors,  Detroit 
Museum. 

BEAL,  Reynolds,  R.  P.  D.  No.  2,  New- 
burgh,    N.    Y. 

P.— Born  New  York  City,  1867.  Pupil 
of  Chase.  Member:  NYWCC;  ANA 
1909;  Salma.C.1898;  NAC;  Lotos  C; 
AWCS;  Century  Assoc;  S.  Indp.  A. 
Awards  :  Hurley  W.  C.  prize,  Salma. 
C,  1902. 

BEAL,   Thaddeus   R.,  Newburgh,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

BEALES,  Isaac  B.,  356  Harrison  Ave., 
Hasbrouck  Heights,  N.  J. ;  summer,  Mil- 
ford,  Conn. 

P.,  C,  L.,  T.— Born  Great  Yarmouth, 
Eng-land,  Aug.  14,  1866.  Pupil  of  E.  J. 
Poynter,  Woodhouse  Stubbs. 

BEALL,     C.     C,    2487    Grand    Ave.,     New 
York,    N.    Y. 
I. — M  ember:     SI. 

BEALS,  Gertrude.  See  Mrs.  Frank 
A.   Bourne. 

BEAN,  Caroline  Van  Hook,  140  West  57th 
St.,   New  York,   N.  Y. 

P.,  W.,  T.— Born  Washington,  D.  C. 
Pupil  of  Harry  Thompson,  Paris;  Chase, 
New  York.  Member:  N.  A.  Women 
PS;  New  Haven  PCC;  S.  Indp.  A. 


BEARD,  Alice,  246  Fulton  St.,  Brooklyn, 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P., I. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS.;  S.  Indp.  A. 

BEARD,  Daniel  Carter  ("Dan  Beard"), 
87  Bowne  Ave.,  Pushing,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  June  21, 
1850;  son  of  James  Henry  Beard,  NA. 
Pupil  of  Sartain  and  Beckwith  at  ASL 
of  N.Y.  Member:  SI  (ex-pres.;  hon. 
1915).  Specialty,  animals  and  illustrat- 
ing books  on  outdoor  life;  cartoonist, 
historical  Americana. 

BEARD,  Lina,  Flushing,  L.  L,  N.  T. 
I. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.;  sister  of  Dan- 
iel C.  Beard.  Pupil  of  Cooper  Union 
and  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Author  and  illus- 
trator, with  her  sister  Adelia,  of  "Little 
Folks   Handy   Book,"    etc. 

BEATTY,  John  W(esley),  Richland 
Lane,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P.,  E.— Born  Pittsburgh,  1851.  Pupil 
Royal  Bavarian  Academy,  Munich. 
Member:  Pittsburgh  Art  Soc; 
Pittsburgh  AA;  Pittsburgh  Photog- 
raphers' Soc.  (hon.),  Boston  GA  (hon.), 
A.  I.  Graphic  A.  (hon)  Lotos  Club. 
Director  Dept.  of  Fine  Arts,  Carnegie 
Inst.,  Pittsburgh,  since  1896.  Repre- 
sented in  National  Gallery,  Washing- 
ton, D.  C,  and  Lotos  Club,  New  York. 
Awards  :  Cross  of  Knight  of  the 
Legion  of  Honor,  1921.  Author:  "An 
Appreciation  of  Augustus  Saint 
Gaudens";  "Art  of  John  Alexander," 
etc. 

BEATTY,  Sarah  BIythe,  202  Penn  Ave., 
Wilkinsburg,    Pa. 

P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  Art  Assoc. 
Award  :  First  prize,  Pittsburgh  AA, 
1914. 

BEATTY,   W.    Gedney,   247  Central  Park, 
West,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

BEAULEY,  William  Jean,  140  West  57th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Joliet,  111.,  Sept.  15,  1874.  Pu- 
pil of  Henri  and  Maratta  in  New  York; 
Yvon  in  Paris.  Member:  N.Y.Arch. 
Lg.;  Salma.C. 1908;  Paris  AAA;  Phila. 
AC;  Players  C;  A.  Fund  S.  Award  : 
Arch.Lg.   prize,   1912. 

BEAUMONT,  Arthur,  112  Rhine  Ave., 
Stapleton,  S.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Bradford,  Eng.,  Apr.  7,  1879. 
Pupil  of  Bouguereau  in  Paris;  Olsson  in 
London.  Member:  S.  Indp,  A.; 
Salma.C;  United  Scenic  Artists'  Assoc. 
Award  :  Gold  medal,  Julian  Acad- 
emy, Paris,  1905. 

BEAUMONT,  Lilian  A(dele),  23  Alveston 
St.,  Jamaica  Plain,  Boston,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Jamaica  Plaiii,  Mass.  Pupil  of 
School  of  Boston  Museum  of  Fine  Arts 
under  Benson,  Tarbell  and  Philip  Hale. 
Member:    Copley  S. 

BEAUX,  Cecilia,  132  East  19th  St.,  New 
York,  N,  Y. ;  summer,  East  Gloucester, 
Mass. 

P., T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
William  Sartain,  Philadelphia;  Julian 
and  Lazar  schools  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: SAA  1893;  ANA  1894;  NA  1902; 
Port. P.;     NAC;     Soc.     des    Beaux-Arts, 


348 


BECHER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


BEISIEGEL 


Paris;  Fellowship  PAFA;  Allied  AA.; 
Phila.WCC  (lion.);  N.A.  Women  PS 
(hon.)  A  w  a  r  ds  :  Mary  Smith  prize, 
PAFA  1885,  1S87,  1891  and  1892;  gold 
medal,  AC  Phila.,  1893;  Dodge  prize, 
NAD  1893;  bronze  medal,  C.I.Pittsburgh, 
1896;  first  class  gold  medal  ($1,500), 
C.I.Pittsburgh,  1899;  Temple  gold  medal, 
PAFA,  1900;  gold  medal,  Paris  Exp., 
1900;  gold  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  Saltus  medal,  NAD  1914;  medal  of 
honor,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Proctor 
portrait  prize,  NAD,  1915;  NAC  prize, 
N.A.Women  PS.  1917.  Work:  "A 
New  England  Woman,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy,  Philadelphia;  "After  the 
Meeting,"  Toledo  Museum  of  Art; 
"Ernesta,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York  City. 

BECHER,   Arthur   E.,  Hopewell  Junction, 
N.  Y.,  P.  O.  Box  101,  Ardsley,  N.  Y. 
P., I.— Born  Freiberg,  Germany,  July  29, 

1877.  Pupil  of  Louis  Mayer  and  Howard 
Pyle.     Member:   SI  1910;   Salma.C. 

BECK,     Minna     McL(eod),    121     Chestnut 
St.;    h.    1705    North    Front    St.,    Harris- 
burg,  Pa. 
P.,   W.,   T.— Born  Atlanta,    Ga.,   May  18, 

1878.  Pupil  of  Arthur  W.  Dow  in  New 
York.  Member:  Washington,  AC. 
Art  Director  of  the  Harrisburg  Schools. 

BECK,  Otto  Walter,  964  Pelhamdale  Ave., 
Pelham  Manor,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Dayton,  O.,  March  11,  1864, 
Pupil  of  Isaac  Broome  of  Trenton; 
Munich  Academy  under  Gysis  and 
Loefftz;  scuplture  under  Riimann. 
Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.l902;  NAC 
(life) ;  S.Indp.A.  Awards  :  First 
prize.  National  competition  for  mural 
decorations  of  the  City  Hall,  Cincin- 
nati, 1897.  Work:  "The  Life  of 
Christ"  (20  pictures)  and  "Portrait 
of  a  Lady,"  Brooklyn  Institute  Mu- 
seum; "Portrait  Group,  Old  Guard," 
69th  Regt.  Armory,  New  York  City; 
two  paintings  illustrating  the  "Life  of 
Christ,"  National  Gallery,  Washington, 
one  at  Newark  Art  Assoc,  and  one  in 
Montclair  Museum. 

BECK,   Raphael,  78  Delaware  Ave.,  Buf- 
falo,  N.   Y. 

P.,  S.,  I. — Pupil  of  Weber  in  Munich; 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Member: 
Buffalo  SA.  Awards  :  Pan-Am. Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901;  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
Lewis  and   Clark  Exp.,   Portland,    1905. 

BECKER,     Frederick,    511    East    7th    St., 
Oklahoma    City,    OkJa. 
P.,   T. — Born   Vermilion,    S.   D.,   Mar.   24, 

1888.  Pupil  Joseph  T.  Pearson,  Hugh 
H.  Breckenridge,  Daniel  Garber,  Hale, 
Robert  Reid,  Emil  Carlsen.  Mem- 
ber: Asso.  of  Okla.  Artists.  Work: 
"Gray  Day,"  "After  the  Shower,"  Art 
Gallery,   University  of  Oklahoma. 

BECKER,    Mrs.      See   Dix,    Eulabee. 

BECKER,   Maurice,  Tioga,  Tioga  Co.,  Pa. 
P.,   Cartoonist — Born   in   Russia,    Jan.    4, 

1889.  Pupil  of  Robert  Henri.  Mem- 
ber:    S.Indp.A. 


BECKINGTON,  Alice,  Carnegie  Studios, 
154  West  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
summer,  Scituate,  Mass. 
Min.P.,T.— Born  St.  Charles,  Mo.,  July 
30,  1868.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under 
Beckwith;  Constant,  Lefebvre  and  La- 
zar  in  Paris.  Member:  Am.S.Min.P. 
(pres.) ;  Pa.Soc.Min.P.  Awards:  Hon. 
mention,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 
Work:  Miniature,  "Mrs.  Beckington," 
Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art,  New  York. 

BECKWITH,  Arthur,  438  Montgomery 
Block,  Montgomery  St.,  San  Francisco, 
Calif.;  summer,  "Green  Brae,"  Marin 
Co.,  Calif. 

P. — Born  London,  England,  Jan.  24, 
1860.  Pupil  of  South  Kensington  schools. 
Member:  San  F.Inst.of  Art;  Sequoia 
Club;  Bohemian  Club.  Work:  "Sun- 
light and  Shadow,"  Golden  Gate  Park 
Museum,  San  Francisco;  "Foggy  Morn- 
ing on  the  Coast,"  Sequoia  Club,  San 
Francisco. 

BEDFORD,    Cornelia     E.,    New    Century 
Club,   124   South   12th   St.,   Philadelphia, 
Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Fellowship    PAFA. 

BEDFORD,    Henry    E.,   Wiscasset,    Me. 
P.— M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

BEDORE,  Sidney,  Midway  Studios,  6016 
Ellis  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
S. — Born  Stephenson,  Mich.,  March  5, 
1883.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Beaux-Arts  Insti- 
tute of  Design;  and  'Solon  Borglum, 
Nev/  York,   N.   Y. 

BEEBE,    Miss    Dee,    231    Garfield    Place, 

Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,    T. — Born    New   Orleans,    La.      Pupil 
of  Chase,  Cox,  Snell  in  New  York;  Duv- 
eneck       in       Cincinnati.  Member: 

NYWCC;   N.   A.   Women  PS. 

BEEK.  Mrs.  Alice  D.  Engley,  1310  North 
5th  St.,  Tacoma,  Wash. 
P.,  W.,  L., — Born  Providence,  R.  I., 
June  17,  1876.  Pupil  of  Sidney  Bur- 
leigh in  Providence;  Academie  Dele- 
cluse,  Lazar,  L'hermitte.  Puvis  de  Cha- 
vannes  and  Edward  Ertz  in  Europe. 
Awards  :  Grand  prix;  2  croix  d'hon- 
neur;  2  gold  medals  and  1  silver  medal 
from  Expositions  Internationales  Fran- 
caises;  grand  prize  and  gold  medal  at 
Seattle  Exposition,  1909. 

BEEKMAN,   Henry  Rutgers,  38  East  76th 
St.,    New   York,    N.    Y. ;    summer.    West 
Hampton  Beach,   Long  Island,   N.   Y. 
P.— Born  New  York  City,   Nov.   18,   1880. 
Pupil  of  Hawthorne;  Bredin;  Lathrop. 

BEEMER,    Edwin    F.,    103    East   10th    St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

BEERS,  Alexander  Richard,  Auditorium 
Theatre;  h.  2828  Palmer  Ave.,  Chicago, 
111. 

P.— Born  Titusville,  Pa.,  1882.  Pupil  of 
Phila.  Textile  School  and  AIC.  Mem- 
ber:   Palette  and  Chisel  C. 

BEISIEGEL,    Albert,    170    Jefferson   Ave., 
Rochester,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:  Rochester  AC. 


349 


BELCHER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BENEKER 


BELCHER,  Hilda,  939  Eighth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Pittsford,  Rut- 
land Co.,   Vt. 

P., I.— Born  Pittsford,  Vt.,  Sept.  20,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Chase,  Henri  and  Hayes  Miller 
in  New  York.  Member:  AWCS 
NYWCC;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Conn. 
APA.  Awards  :  First  prize,  Strath- 
more  Water  Color  Contest,  1908; 
Beal  prize.  NYWCC,  1909;  Hudnut 
prize  AWCS,  1915  and  1918;  Dun- 
ham prize,  Conn.  AFA,  1915;  Barney 
prize,  Newport  A.  A.,  1916;  Hudnut 
prize,  NYWCC,  1917;  sketch  prize;  N. 
A.  Women  PS.  1917.  Work:  "The 
Mother,"  Maryland  Institute,  Balti- 
more; "The  Ascension,"  First  Luth- 
eran Church,  Baltimore;  "The  Easter 
Window,"  Pennsylvania  Academy  of 
the  Fine  Arts. 

BELCHER,  Mrs.  Martha  Wood,  Van  Dyke 
Studios,  939  Eighth  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  summer,  Pittsford,  Rutland  Co., 
Vt. 

P.,  E.,  T.— Born  in  England,  Aug.  17, 
1844.  Pupil  of  Cooper  Inst.,  New  York; 
Flugen,  Lietzenmeyer  and  LJnden- 
schmidt  in  Munich.  Member:  N. 
A.  Women  PS;  NYWCC.   (Asso.). 

BELL,  Caroline  M.,  Mattituck,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:      N.   A.   Women  PS. 

BELL,  Clara  Louise,  Hotel  Doanbrook, 
1924  East  105th  St.,  Cleveland,  O. 
P.— Born  Newton  Falls,  O.,  Dec.  18, 
1886.  Pupil  of  Edith  P.  Stevenson, 
Cleveland  School  of  Art;  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
Member:  NYWCC;  Studio  C. 
Award  :  Penton  medal  for  miniature 
painting,  Cleveland  Museum,  1919. 

BELL,  E(dward)  A(ugust),  226  West  59th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  and  Peconic, 
L.    I.,    N.    Y. 

P.— Born  New  York,  Dec.  18,  1862.  Pu- 
pil of  NAD;  Bavarian  Royal  Academy 
in  Munich.  Member:  SAA  1898; 
ANA,  1901;  Salma.C.  1904.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1889;  second 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD,  1893;  silver 
medal.  Pan- Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 
Work:  "Ready  for  a  Walk,"  Art 
Association,  Indianapolis;  "The  Stat- 
uette," Cincinnati  Museum;  "The  Rose," 
Smith   College,    Northampton,   Mass. 

BELLOWS,  George  W(esley),  care  of 
Knoedler  &  Co.,  556  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Columbus,  O.,  Aug.  12,  1882. 
Pupil  of  Maratta,  Jay  Hambidge  and 
Henri  in  New  York.  Member:  ANA 
1908;  NA  1913;  Am.  PS;  NAC;  Port. 
P.;  P-G;  MacD.  C;  S.  Indp.  A.;  Los 
Angeles  Modern  AS;  Nat.  Inst.  A.  L. ; 
Boston  AC  (hon.).  Awards:  Hall- 
garten prize,  NAD  1908;  Sesnan  medal, 
PAFA  1913;  first  Hallgarten  prize 
($300) ,  NAD  1913 ;  hon.  mention,  C.LPitts- 
burgh  1913;  3rd  medal  ($500),  C.LPitts- 
burgh,  1914;  Maynard  prize,  NAD  1914; 
gold  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915; 
Harris  bronze  medal  and  prize  ($300), 
AIC  1916;  Isidor  Medal,  NAD  1916; 
Texnple  Medal,  PAFA  1917;  landscape 
prize,  Newport  AA,  1918;  Beck  gold 
medal,     PAFA,     1921.      Work:      "Up 


Hudson,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  "North  River,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy,  Philadelphia;  "Snow  Capped 
River,"  Telfair  Academy,  Savannah; 
"Polo  at  Lakewood,"  Columbus,  (O.) 
Art  Association;  "Blackwell's  Bridge," 
Toledo  Museum;  "Summer  City,"  Na- 
tional Arts  Club,  New  York;  3  portraits, 
Ohio  State  University;  "Rain  on  the 
River"  and  "Portrait  of  Walter  Little- 
field,"  R.  I.  School  of  Design,  Provi- 
dence; "Love  of  Winter,"  Art  Institute 
of  Chicago;  "A  Day  in  June,"  Detroit 
Institute;  lithograph,  "In  the  Park," 
Carnegie  Institute,  Pittsburgh. 

BELLVILLE,  Laura  M.,  4225  Grove  Ave., 
Norwood,    Ohio. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

BEMAN,  Jean.     See  Mrs.  Cook  Smith. 

BEMENT,  Alon,  210  West  59th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  care  of  Maryland  Institute, 
Baltimore,   Md. 

P., Photo. ,T.— Born  Ashfield,  Mass.,  Aug. 
15,  1878.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum 
School:  Bonnat  and  Constant  in  Paris; 
Naas  School,  Sweden;  Ecole  des  Beaux 
Arts.  Member:  Salma.C.  1907. 
Prof,  of  Fine  Arts,  Teachers  Col.,  Colum- 
bia Univ.,  since  1906.  Instructor  College 
of  City  of  New  York.  Director,  Mary- 
land Institute,   Baltimore. 

BEMUS,  Mrs.  Mary  B.,  401  S.  Hope  St., 
Los  Angeles,  Calif.;  2130  Emerson  Ave., 
Santa  Barbara,  Calif.;  summer,  Owens- 
mouth,    Calif. 

P.,  T. — Born  Leicester,  New  York,  N. 
Y.,  Aug.  17.  1849.  Pupil  of  L.  M. 
Wiles. 

BENDA  W(ladyslaw)   T.,  140  Wadsworth 

Ave.;  1  Gramercy  Park,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

I.— M  ember:  SI  1907;  Arch.  Lg.  1916; 
Players  C,  1905;  Mural  P.  Award: 
Silver   medal,    P.-P.Exp.,    San   F„    1915. 

BENDER,  Russell  Thurston,  333  South 
Dearborn  St.;  h.  2717  Jackson  Blvd., 
Chicago,   111. 

I.— Born  Chicago,  1895.  Pupil  of  Chi- 
cago Academy  of  Fine  Arts.  Mem- 
ber:   Palette  and  Chisel  C. 

BENEKER,  Gerrit  A.,  care  of  Cleveland 
Pressed  Steel  Co.,  Cleveland,  O.;  sum- 
mer, Truro,  Mass. 

P.,  I.,  W.,  L.— Born  Grand  Rapids, 
Mich.,  Jan.  26,  1882.  Pupil  of  John 
Vanderpoel  and  Frederick  Richardson 
in  Chicago;  F.  V.  Du  Mond,  Henry 
Reuterdahl  in  New  York;  Charles  W. 
Hawthorne  in  Provincetown.  Mem- 
ber: Salma.C;  Provincetown  AA; 
Cleveland  SA.  Award  :  New  York 
Herald  Easter  prize,  1905;  Kellogg's 
Corn  Flakes,  4th  prize,  1914;  Scarab 
Club,  3rd  prize,  Detroit,  1916;  Penton 
medal  for  industrial  painting,  Cleve- 
land Museum,  1919.  Represented  in 
permanent  collection  of  Provincetown 
Art  Association  and  Grand  Rapids  Cen- 
tral High  School;  Youngstown  Museum 
of  Art.  Author  of  Victory  Liberty  Loan 
Poster,   "Sure,  We'll  Finish  the  Job." 


350 


BENN 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BERGE 


BENN,  Ben,  244  East  23rd  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Russia,  Dec.  27,  1884.  Pupil 
of  NAD.  Member:  Soc.  Modern 
Arti.sts  of  America.  Work:  Por- 
trait of  Judge  J.  Panken  in  Second 
Dist.  Municipal  Court  House,  New  York. 

BENNETT,  Charles  A(lpheus),  1711  Co- 
lumbia Terrace,  Peoria,  111. 
C,  W.,  T. — Born  Holden,  Mass.,  March 
28,  1864.  Editor  of  Manual  Training 
Magazine;  author  of  "The  Manual 
Arts." 

BENNETT,  E(mma),  (Dunbar),  (Mrs. 
Harrison  Bennett),  68  Boulevard  de 
Courcelles,  Paris,  France;  Cochituate, 
Mass. 

S. — Born  New  Bedford,  Mass.  Pupil  of 
British  Academy  in  Rome.  Member: 
Copeley  S;  MacD.  C;  Lyceum  Club  of 
Paris. 

BENNETT,  Francis  I.,  72  Whitford  Ave., 
Nutley,   N.   J. 

P.,  I. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Mar.  8, 
1876.      Pupil   of  Anshutz,    Chase,   Henri. 

BENSON,  Frank  W(eston),  120  River- 
way,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  46  Washington 
Square,  Salem,  Mass. 

P.,  E.,T.— Born  Salem,  March  24,  1862. 
Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School;  Bou- 
langer  and  Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1897;  NA  1905;  Ten 
Am.P.;  Nat.Inst.A.L.;  Chicago  SE; 
Port. P.;  P.-G. ;  Boston  GA.;  Brooklyn 
SE.  Awards  :  Third  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD  1889;  Clarke  prize.  NAD  1891; 
medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893; 
medal.  Mechanics'  Assoc,  Boston,  Ells- 
worth prize,  AIC;  Cleveland  Art  Assoc, 
prize;  Jordan  prize,  Boston,  $500  in 
1894  and  $300  in  1895;  Boston  AC 
prize,  $1,000  in  1895  and  $100  in  1896: 
Shaw  purchase,  SAA  1896;  chronological 
medal,  C.  I.  Pittsburgh,  1896;  second 
class  medal  ($1,000),  C.  I.  Pittsburgh, 
1899;  silver  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900; 
silver  medal,  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo. 
1901;  Lippincott  prize,  PAFA  1903;  gold 
medal  ($1,500),  CI  Pittsburgh,  1903; 
2  gold  medals,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
Proctor  prize,  NAD  1906;  gold  medal, 
ACPhila.  1906;  second  prize,  Corcoran 
Gallery,  Washington,  1907;  Temple  gold 
medal.  PAFA  1908;  silver  Harris 
medal,  AIC,  1909;  Palmer  medal 
and  prizp  ("$1,000).  AIC  1912;  Logan  prize 
($25),  Chicago  SE  1918;  first  W.  A. 
Clark  prize  ($2,000).  and  Corcoran  gold 
medal,  Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington, 
1919.  Work  :  "Autumn"  and  "Evening 
Light."  Cincinnati  Museum:  "Portrait 
of  a  Boy."  etching,  "Mallards,"  Carne- 
gie Institute,  Pittsburgh:  "The  Sis- 
ter^,"  Buffalo  Fine  Arts  Academy: 
"Thp  Bather."  "Studies  of  Autumn  and 
Spring,"  "Portrait  of  Mrs.  Jesse  Met- 
calf,"  "The  Black  Hat."  "Summer"  and 
"Isaac  C.  Bates,"  R.  I.  School  of 
Design.  Providence:  "Eleanor,"  "Head," 
and  "Plierht  of  Ducks,"  Boston  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts;  "Girl  Playing  Soli- 
taire." and  "Portrait  of  My  Daugh- 
ters," Worcester  Art  Museum;  "Sun- 
light," Indianapolis  Art  Association; 
"A    Rainy    Day,"    and    etching,    Chicago 


Art  Institute;  "Portrait  of  a  Lady," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York;  "On 
Lookout  Hill,"  Detroit  Athletic  Club; 
"My  Daughter,"  and  "Open  Window," 
Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C; 
"My  Daughter  Elizabeth,"  Detroit  In- 
stitute. 

BENSON,    Leslie    L(augulilie),    602    West 

190th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.— Born  Mahone.  N.  S.,  March  15,  1885. 
Pupil  Boston  Museum  of  Fine  Arts, 
Eric  Pape  School,  Fenway  School. 
Member:  Guild  of  Free  Lance  Art- 
ists;  SL 

BENTLY,   Benedict,  37  East  Roger  Ave., 
Merchantville,   N.   J. 
P. — M  ember:  Phila.  AA. 

BENTLEY.   John    W.,   Woodstock,    Ulster 
Co..    N.    Y. 

P..  T.— Born  Paterson,  N.  J.,  Jan.  3, 
1880.  Pupil  Bridgman,  DuMond,  Har- 
rison, Henri.  Member:  Salma.  C; 
Lg.  of  N.Y.A.;  Buffalo  SA.  1921. 
Award  :  Hon.  mention,  Buffalo  SA, 
1921. 

BENTON,    Harry   Stacy,    South   Norwalk. 
Conn. 

P., I. — Born  Saratoga  Springs,  N.Y.,  Oct. 
11,  1877.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Member: 
Salma.C.    1905. 

BENTON,  Thomas  H..  care  of  The  Daniel 

Gallery,  2  West  47th  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y.    (P.) 


Wiggins,       Topplnish, 


BENZ.       Mildred 
Wash.   (P.) 

BENZIGER,  August,  140  West  57th  St.. 
New  York,  N.  Y. :  summer.  Villa  Guten- 
berg, Brunnen,  Switzerland. 
Port. P. — Born  Einsiedein,  Switzerland, 
.Tan.  2,  1867.  Pupil  of  Royal  Academy 
in  Vienna;  Julian  Academy  and  Ecole 
des  Beaux-Arts  under  Bonn^^t  in  Paris. 
Member:  Union  Artistique,  Paris. 
W^ork:  Portrait  of  Roosevelt,  Chica- 
go Historical  Society. 

BERDAN,  Anna  P.,  71  Edgehill  Rd.,  New 
Haven,  Conn. 
P. — M  ember:   New  Haven  PCC. 

BERDANIER,  Paul  F.,  5877  Nina  PI.,  St. 
Loui«.   Mo. 

P. — Born  Frackville,  Pa.,  March  7,  1879. 
Pupil  of  Charles  Hope  Provost  in  New 
York:  Gustave  W^olff  and  School  of  Fine 
Arts  in  St.  Louis.  Member:  St.  Louis 
AG;  2x4  Soc;  St.  Louis  A.  Lg. 
A  Av  a  r  d  s  :  2nd  Prize;  Thumb  Box  Ex- 
hibition, St.  Louis  Art  League.  1919; 
1st  Prize,  Missouri  State  Fair,  Serlalia, 
Mo.,  1920:  St.  Louis  Chamber  of  Com- 
merce Prize,   St.L.  AG.  1920. 

BERG,  George  Louis.  Stony  Creek.  Conn. 
P. — Born  McGregor.  la.,  Oct.  27,  1870. 
Pupil  of  ASL.  of  N.  Y.  Chief  of  De- 
partment of  Fine  Arts.  Alaska-Yukon- 
Pacific  Exp.,  Seattle,  1909.  Member: 
Guild  of  American  Painters,  New 
Haven   PCC. 

BERGE,  Edward,  1335  Greenmount  Ave., 
Baltimore,  Md. 

S.— Born  Baltimore,  Jan.  3,  1876.  Pupil 
of  Maryland  Inst,  and  Rinehart  School 
of  Sculpture  in  Baltimore;  Julian  Acad- 


351 


BERENSON 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BICKNELL 


emy,  Verlet  and  Rodin  in  Paris. 
Member:  Charcoal  Club;  NSS  1908; 
NAC.  Awards  :  Clark  prize,  Paris 
AAA;  bronze  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901;  bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  bronze  medal,  P.-P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Monuments  to  Watson, 
Tattersall,  Latrobe  and  Armistead,  all 
in  Baltimore;  "The  Scalp,"  Museum  of 
Honolulu,  H.  I. 

BERENSON.  Elizabeth,  204^  West  13th 
St.,   New   York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

BERGLUND,  Hilma  L.  G.,  1860  Feronia 
Ave.,  St.  Paul,  Minn.;  summer,  Brook 
Park,   Minn. 

P..  C— Born  Stillwater,  Minn.,  Jan.  23, 
1886.  Pupil  St.  Paul  School  of  Art; 
Handicraft  Guild,  Minneapolis.  Mem- 
ber:    Artists   Soc,    St.    Paul,   Minn. 

BERNATH,  Sander,  45  Washington  Sq., 
South,  New  York,  N.  Y.   (P.) 

BERNEKER,  Louis  F(rederick),  122  East 
59th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Clinton,  Mo.  Pupil  of  St. 
Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts;  Laurens  in 
Paris.  Member:  NYWCC;  AWCS; 
Allied  AA;  Salma.  C.  Represented  in 
Dallas  (Tex.)  Art  Association.  In- 
structor  Mechanics   Institute. 

BERNEKER,   Maud    F(ox),  122   East   59th 

Street,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born     Memphis,     Tenn.,     April     11, 

1884.     Pupil   of  NAD.     Member:   NA 

Women   PS. 
BERNER,     iVIrs.     E.,     503     Grand     Street, 

Brooklyn,    N.    Y. 

P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

BERNINGHAUS,  Oscar  E.,  3939  Castle- 
man  Ave.,  St.  Louis,  Mo;  summer, 
Taos,   N.   M. 

P., I.— Born  St.  Louis,  Oct.  2,  1874.  Pupil 
of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts. 
Member  :  St.  Louis  AG;  Salma. C; 
St.  Louis  2  x  4  S.;  Taos  SA;  St.  Louis 
A.Lg-.  Awards  :  Dolph  prize  St.  Louis, 
1907;  share  of  Chicag-o  Fine  Arts  Bldg. 
prize,  SWA,  1913;  Bascom  prize,  St. 
L.  AG;  1915;  Brown  prize,  St.  L. 
AG,  1917;  Chamber  of  Commerce 
prize,  St.  L.  AG,  1918;  popular  prize, 
St.  L.  AG,  1919;  Weimar  prize,  St.  L. 
AG,  1919;  St.  L.  AG  prize,  1919. 
Work  :  Two  lunettes,  Jefferson  City, 
Mo.,  State  Capitol  Bldg. ;  "Winter  in 
the  West,"  City  Art  Museum,  St. 
Louis;  and  in  various  libraries  and 
schools.      Specialty,    Western    subjects. 

BERNSTEIN,  Aline,  233  West  End  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

BERNSTEIN,    Michael,   24   East   99th   St., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

BERNSTEIN,   Theresa    F.,   39  West   67th 

St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Policy 
Cove,   Mass. 

P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
Philadelphia  School  of  Design.  Mem- 
ber: P-G,;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Eclec- 
tics; Plastic  C.  Awards:  Shillard 
g-old  medal  for  water  colors.  Plastic 
C,  1915;  NAC  prize,  N.  A.  Women  PS, 
1916. 

352 


BERRY,  Annabel  Ledlie,  22  Green- 
ough  Place,  Newport,  R.  I.   (P.) 

BERRYMAN,  Clifford  Kennedy,  "Eve- 
ning Star"  Bldg.,  11th  and  Pa.  Ave.;  h. 
1754  Euclid  St.,  N.  W.,  Washington, 
D.    C. 

I- — Born  Versailles,  Ky.,  Apr.  2,  1869. 
Author  "Cartoons  of  58th  House  of 
Representatives";  originator  of  "Teddy 
Bear."  On  staff  of  Washington  "Eve- 
ning Star"  since  1907. 

BERSON,  Adolphe,  1037  Fillmore  St.,  San 
Francisco,   Calif. 

P. — Born  San  Francisco.  Calif.  Pupil  of 
Lefebvre    and    Robert-Fleury    in    Paris. 

BERTSCH,    Fred    S.,    15   East   Huron   St.; 
h.    1629    Granville   Ave.,    Chicago,    111. 
Des. — Born   in   Michigan   in    1879.     Pupil 
of     AIC.        Member:       Palette      and 
Chisel   C. 

BETTIS,  Charles  Hunter,  127  North 
Dearborn  St.;  h.  1429  Sherwin  Ave., 
Chicago,    111. 

I.,  Des. — Born  in  Texas  in  1891.  Pupil 
of  AIC.  Member:  Palette  and 
Chisel  C;  Chicago  Arch.  C;  T  Square 
and  Palette  C. 

BETTS,  Anna  Whelan,  59  High  St.,  Ger- 
mantown,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
I.,  P.,  C,  T.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil 
of  Howard  Pyle  at  Wilmington;  Cour- 
tois  in  Paris;  and  of  Vonnoh.  Mem- 
ber: Phila.WCC;  Fellowship  PAFA. 
Award  :  Bronze  medal,  P.P.Exp., 
San.  F.,  1915.  Work:  Illustrations 
in  color  for  "Century,"  "Harper's"  and 
other  magazines. 

BETTS,  Louis,  119  East  19th  St.,  New 
York,   N.  Y. 

Port.P.— Born  Little  Rock,  Ark.,  Oct. 
5,  1873.  Pupil  of  his  father,  E.  D. 
Betts,  Sr.;  Wm.  Chase;  AIC.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1912;  NA  1915;  Fellowship 
PAFA;  Chicago  SA;  Nat.  Inst.  A.L.; 
Port.P.  Alhed  AA;  'Salma. C.  Awards: 
Cresson  ($3,000)  Scholarship,  PAFA 
1903;  hon.  mention,  C.I.Pittsburgh,  1910; 
bronze  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915; 
Proctor  prize,  NAD,  1918.  Works  : 
William  M.  R.  French  and  "Apple  Blos- 
soms,''' Art  Institute  of  Chicago. 

BEVANS,    M.   T.,   Hotel  Brevoort,   8th  St. 
and  5th  Ave.,   New  York,   N.  Y. 
I.— M  ember:     SI. 

BEVANS,  Mrs.  M.  T.,  Hotel  Brevoort, 
8th  St.  and  5th  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.— M  ember:     SI. 

BEWLEY,  Murray  P.,  114  Waverly  PL, 
New  York.   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Fort  Worth,  Tex.,  June  19, 
1884.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Chase,  Beaux  and 
Henri  in  New  York.  Member:  Paris 
AAA;  Salma.  C;  Allied  AA.  Award  : 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1910; 
first  prize,  Salma.  C,  1921.  Work: 
"Buds"  and  "Portrait  of  Mrs.  Percy  V. 
Pennybacker,"  Ft.  Worth  (Tex.)  Mu- 
seum and  in  the  Pennsylvania  Academy 
of  the  Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia. 

BICKNELL,    Evelyn    M.,    care    of    Salma- 
gundi Club,   45  Fifth  Ave.;  and  18  West 
27th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born    in    New    York.      Member: 
NYWCC;    Salma.C.1901;    AWCS. 


BICKNELL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BITTINGER 


BICKNELL,     Frank    A(lfred),     School    of        B 
Design,    Carnegie   Institute    of    Teclmol- 
ogy,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.;  summer,  Old  Lyme, 

P._Born    Augusta,    Me.,    Feb.    17,    1866. 
Pupil  of  Albion  H.  Bicknell  at  Maiden,        g 
Mass.;   Julian  Academy  in  Paris   under 
Bouguereau  and  Robert-Fleury.    Mem- 
ber: Paris  AAA;  Salma.C.  1907;  NAC; 
Lotos    C;    Allied   AA.;    MacD.C;    ANA 
1913;    SPNY.    Work:     "October    Morn- 
ing,"   National   Gallery,   Washington,    D.         "=» 
C;  "Mountain  Laurel."  Montclair,  N.  J., 
Museum;    "Pirate's    Cove."    Denver    Art        B 
Assoc;    "November,"   Boston  Art  Club; 
"The     Beech    and     the     Birch,"     Union 
League   Club,    New   York,    N.    Y.      Asso. 
professor,    School     of     Design,    Carnegie 
Institute  of  Technology,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.         b 

BICKNELL,  W(illiam)  H(arry)  W(ar. 
ren),  Arlington  St.,  Winchester,  Mass. 
Etcher— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  July  12. 
1860.  Pupil  of  Otto  Grundmann  and 
Boston  Museum  School.  Member: 
Copley  S.  1880;  Chicago  SE;  Boston  SE. 
Award  :  Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  B 
Exp.,   1904. 

BIDDLE,   George,   52  East  53rd   St.,   New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P._M  ember:      Calif.   AC;   Fellowship 
PAFA. 

BIESEL,  Charles,  30  E.  Ontario  St.;  h. 
5249  Calumet  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.— Born  New  York  City,  Oct.  20,  1865. 
Member:  Providence  AC;  Providence 
WCC;  Wash.  AC;  S.  Indp.  A.;  Newport 
AA;  Art  Service  League,  Chicago;  Chi-  B 
cago  SA. 


B 


BIESEL,  H.  Fred.,  5249  Calumet  Ave., 
Chicago.  111. 
P.,  I.— Born  Philadelphia.  Sept.  27,  1903. 
Pupil  of  R.  I.  School  of  Design;  AIC. 
Member:     S. Indp. A. 

BIGELOW,  Charles  C,  1520  Chestnut  St., 
Philadelphia,   Pa.    (I.)  B 

BIGELOW,  L.  Seymour,  Jr.,  Plaza  Bldg., 
Philadelphia,   Pa.    (P.) 

BIGGS,  Walter,  39  West  67th  St.,  New 
York,  N.   Y. ;  summer,   Salem,  Va.  B 

I.— Born     Elliston,     Va.,     June     4,     1886.        b 
Pupil    of    Kenneth    Hayes    Miller,    Henri 
and  Edward  Penfield.      Member:    SI; 
Salma.  C.       Illustrates     for     "Harper's," 
"Scribner's"  and  "Good  Housekeeping." 

BILLINGS,   Mary   H(athaway),  Van  Dyck 
Studios,    939    Eighth    Ave.,    New    York, 
N.    Y.;    h.    373    Grand    Ave.,    Brooklyn,         B 
N.  Y. ;   summer.  Ford  River  Farm,  Am- 
herst,   Mass. 

P. — Born     Brooklyn.       Pupil     of    Rhoda        b 
Holmes  Nicholls,  Cullen  Yates.    Mem- 
ber:   NAC. 

BILOTTI,  Salvatore  F.,  9  Macdougal  Al- 
ley; h.  78  W.  11th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Cosenza,  Italy,  Feb.  3,  1879. 
Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1914  (assoc); 
Allied  AA.  NSS.  A  w  a  r  d  :  Cresson 
Scholarship,  PAFA,  1906-1907;  collabo- 
rative   prize,    N.Y.Arch.Lg.    1914. 

BINNS,    Elsie,  Alfred,   N.   Y.    (S.,   C.) 

353 


INTLIFF,     Mrs.      Martha      B(radshaw), 

1522  College  St.,  La  .loUa,  Calif. 
P.— Born  Superior,  Wis.,   Sept.  19,  1869. 
Pupil    of    Giuseppe    Ferrari    In    Rome. 
M  e  m  b  er  :     N. A. Women  PS. 
IRCH,    Reginald    B(athurst),    Lock    Box 
636,   Dover,  N.  J. 

I. — Born  London,  England,  May  2,  1856; 
came  to  America  at  age  of  16.  Studied 
in  Munich  and  Italy.  Member:  SI. 
iRD,  L.  Pern,  Glenlyn,  St.  Cross  Road, 
AVinchester,  England.  (I.) 
SRDSALL,  Amos,  Jr.,  Sharpless  Ave., 
Melrose  Park,  Pa.;  summer,  Tom's 
River,    N.    J. 

P. — Born  in  New  Jersey,  June  10,  1865. 
Self-taught.  Member:  Salma.  C. 
IRGE,  Mary  Thompson  (Mrs.  Edward 
Birge),  1914  North  Pennsylvania  St., 
Indianapolis,  Ind. ;  summer,  Ridgefleld, 
Conn. 

P.— Born  New  York,  June  5,  1872.  Pupil 
of  Yale  School  of  Fine  Arts.  Mem- 
ber: Paint  and  Clay  C.  of  New  Haven. 
IRREN,  Joseph  P.,  Art  Institute;  h. 
49  East  Elm  St.,  Chicago,  111.;  summer, 
Provincetown,    Mass. 

P. — Born    Chicago.      Pupil   AI    Chicago; 
studied     in     Philadelphia,     New     York, 
Paris    and    Munich.      Member:    Chi- 
cago AC;   Chicago  SA;   S.  Indp.  A.;  Pa- 
lette   and    Chisel    C.     (past    pres.);    AIC 
Alumni     Assoc,      (hon.     pres.);     Beach- 
combers' Club;  Provincetown  AA.     Rep- 
resented   in    Chicago    Municipal    Collec- 
tion and  Bermuda  Art  Commission. 
ISCHOFF,  Franz  A.,  320  Pasadena  Ave., 
South  Pasadena,   Calif. 
P.— M  ember:     Cahf.  AC. 
ISHOP,    Harold   S.,   Fine   Arts   Bldg.;    h. 
113   Hillside  Ave.,   Rochester,   N.   Y. 
P..    E.— Born    Mar.    25.    1884.       Pupil    of 
Cincinnati   Academy   and   Frank  Duve- 
neck.        Member:      Cincinnati      AC; 
Rochester  AC. 

ISHOP,  Hubert  E.,  87  East  Ave.,  Nor- 
walk.  Conn. 

P.— Born  Norwalk,  Conn.,  March  8,  1869. 
Self  taught.  Member:  Silvermine 
Group  of  Artists;  S. Indp. A. 
ISHOP,  Irene.  See  Mrs.  E.  T.  Hurley. 
ISSELL,  Edgar  J(ulian),  3016  Bartold 
Ave.,  Maplewood  Station,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 
P.— Born  Aurora,  111.,  March  14,  1856. 
Pupil  of  Otto  Grundmann  in  Boston; 
Boulanger,  Lefebvre,  Collin  and  Cour- 
tois  in  Paris.  Member:  St.  Louis 
Soc.  of  Artists  (ex-pres.). 
ITTERLY.  Mrs.  L.  P.,  1241  Lincoln  St., 
Denver,    Colo. 

P.,  S. — Member:  Denver  A  A. 
ITTINGER,  Charles,  Duxbury,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Washington,  D.  C,  June  27, 
1879.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.;  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts,  Delecluse  and  Colarossi 
academies  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA 
1912;  NAC  (Hfe) ;  Paris  AAA;  Allied 
AA;  St.  Botolph  C,  Boston;  Salma.C. 
1908;  Duxbury  AA.  Awards:  Bronze 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  second 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1909;  Clarke 
prize,  NAD  1912;  silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,    San   F.,    1915. 


BIVA 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BLASHFIELD 


BIVA,  Lucien,  162  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.  Y., 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

BJURMAN,  Andrew,  109  South  Almansor 
St.,  Alhambra,   Cal. 

S.,  C,  T. — Born  in  'Sweden,  Apr.  4, 
1876.  Member:  Cahf.  AC.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal,  San  Diego  Exp.,  1915; 
second  prize,  California  Liberty  Fair, 
1918. 

BLACK,  Eleanor  S(lmms)  (Mrs.  Robert 
M.  Black),  3732  Dawson  St.,  Pittsburgh, 
Pa.;  summer,  Provincetown,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Washington,  D.  C,  Jan.  9, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Howard  Helmick,  C.  W. 
Hawthorne  and  O.  L.  Linde.  Mem- 
ber: Pittsburgh  AA;  S.Indp.A. 

BLACK,  Mrs.  Kate  Eleanor,  4168  Forest 
Ave.,  South  Norwood,  O. 
P.,  C— Born  London,  Dec.  3,  1855.  Pu- 
pil of  Cincinnati  Academy.  Mem- 
ber: Cincinnati  Woman's  Art  C. 
Award  :  Bronze  medal,  Provincial 
Exhibition,  New  Westminster,  B.  C, 
Canada. 

BLACK,  Mary  C.  W.  (Mrs.  Clarence  A. 
Black),  "El  Cerrito,"  Santa  Barbara, 
Calif.;  summer,  "Black  Forest,"  Ham- 
ill's  Point,  Muskoka,  Canada. 
P. — Born  Poughkeepsie,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
W.  L.  Lathrop,  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Mora  and 
Glenn  Newell.  Member:  N.  A. 
Women  PS;  Calif.  AC;  NAC;  S. 
Indp.  A. 

BLACK,    Norman    I.,   414  West   154th    St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer.  Cliff  Island, 
Casco    Bay.    Me. 
P.,    I. — Born    Chelsea,    Mass.,    Nov.    8, 

1883.  Pupil  of  Eric  Pape  School,  Bos- 
ton; Julian  Academy  and  Beaux-Arts, 
Paris. 

BLACK,   Mrs.   Norman   I.,  414  West  154th 
St..    New    York.    N.    Y. ;    summer,    Cliff 
Island,   Casco  Bay,   Me. 
P. — Born    Providence,    R.    I.,    Apr.    15, 

1884.  Pupil  of  Eric  Pape  School,  Bos- 
ton; Julian  Academy  in  Paris;  studied 
in  Munich.    Member:  Providence  AC. 

BLACK,  Olive  P(arker),  124  West  77th 
St.,   New  York.   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Cambridge,  Mass.,  July  22, 
1868.  Pupil  of  H.  Bolton  Jones,  Chase, 
ASL  of  N.  Y.,  and  NAD  in  New  York. 
Member:     N.  A.  Women  PS;   SPNY. 

BLACK,   Mrs.  Robert      M.,    3732    Dawson 
St.,    Pittsburgh,    Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

BLACKMAN,  Carrie  Horton  (Mrs.  George 
Blackman),  17  Southmoor  Ave.,  St. 
T-ouis,    Mo. 

P.,W.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.  Pupil  of  St. 
Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts:  Chap- 
lin in  Paris.  Me  m  b  e  r  :  St.L.A.G. 
Awards  :  Medal,  Alaska- Yukon 
Exp.,  1909.  Specialty,  children's  por- 
traits. 

BLACKMORE,  Arthur  E(dward),  109 
East  14th  St..  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  426 
South  Second  Ave..  Mt,  Vernon,  N.  Y. 
P..C. — Born  Bristol,  England.  Feb.  8, 
1854.  Pupil  of  South  Kensington  Mu- 
seum, London.  Member:  Salma.C. 
1897;  A.  Aid  S.;  A.  Fund  S.;  N.Y.Arch. 
Lg.l914    (assoc);    Wash   AC;    S.Indp.A. 

354 


BLACKSTONE,  Harriet,  222  West  23rd 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  New  Hartford,  N.  Y.  Pupil 
of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris;  Chase 
summer  schools;  Pratt  Inst.,  Brooklyn. 
Member:  Chicago  SA;  American 
Women's  AA,  Paris;  Inter.  Soc.AL.; 
Chicago  AG;  Chicago  AC;  Chicago  Mu- 
nicipal AL.  Represented  in  Vincennes 
Art  Asso.;  San  Francisco  Museum;  Na- 
tional Gallery  of  Art,  Washington. 

BLACKTON,    J.    Stuart,    47    Fifth    Ave., 
New   York.    N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

BLACKWELL,  Wenonah,  1933  Broad- 
way, North,  Seattle,  Wash.   (P.) 

BLAIR,    E.    R.,   2248   Euclid  Ave.,    Cleve- 
land, O. 
I. — M  ember:   Cleveland  SA. 

BLAIR,   James   B.,  Woodland   Rd.,   Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

BLAISDELL,    Mrs.    Bertram,   539   Potters 
Ave.,   Providence,   R.  I. 
P. — M  ember:   Providence  WCC. 

BLAKE,  Donald,  244  West  14th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  2826  Central  Ave., 
Tampa,  Fla. 

I. — Born  Tampa,  Fla.,  June  26,  1889. 
Pupil  of  PAFA  and  Henry  McCarter. 
Award  :  Cresson  Traveling  Scholar- 
ship. PAFA.  Member:  Fellowship 
PAFA. 

BLAKE,  James  Henry,  117  Elm  St.,  West 
Somerville,  Mass, 

P.,L,C.,T.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  July  8, 
1845.  Pupil  of  Hollingsworth  and  Rim- 
mer  in  Boston;  Moore  in  Cambridge. 
President,  Cambridge  Art  Circle.  Spe- 
cialty,   scientific    subjects. 

BLANCHARD,  Ethel  C.  See  Mrs.  Leon 
Collver. 

BLANEY,  Dwight,  308  Fenway  Studios, 
30  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Brookline,  Mass.,  Jan.  24,  1865. 
Member:  Copley  S.,  1892;  Boston 
WCC;  Boston  GA;  Award:  Bronze 
medal,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 

BLANKE,  Esther,  1200  Steinway  Hall,  64 
East  Van  Buren  St.;  h.  418  Deming  PL, 
Chicago,  111.;  summer,  R.  R.  22,  Nash- 
otah.   Wis. 

P.,  C— Born  Chicago,  111..  Feb.  2.  1882. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  studied  in  London  and 
Munich.  Member:  Chicago  AG;  Cor- 
don C. 

BLANKE,  Marie  Elsa,  Fine  Arts  Bldg. ; 
h.  418  Deming  PL.  Chicago,  111. 
P. — Born  in  Chicago.  Pupil  of  AIC  and 
studied  in  Munich  and  London.  M  e  m- 
ber:  Chicago  SA;  Chicago  AC.  In« 
structor  in  art,  Lewis  Institute,  Chicago. 

BLASHFIELD,  Edwin  H(owland),  Car- 
negie Studios;  h.  40  West  59th  St..  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

Mural  P.,  W.,  L. — Born  New  York,  Dec. 
15,  1848.  Pupil  of  Bonnat  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1882;  NA  1888;  paint- 
er member  (National)  Commission  of 
Fine  Arts;  Mural  P.  (pres.);  N.Y. 
Arch. Lg.l 886;  N.Y.  Municipal  AS;  NSS 
(lay);      FAS;      Century     Assoc;      AIA 


BLEIL 


WHO*S  WHO  IN  ART 


BLUMENSCHEIN 


(hon.);  Nat.Inst.A.L.  (pres.);  Acad. 
AL;  So.  of  American  Artists  (ex-pres.); 
New  York  Fed,  of  Fine  Arts  (pres.); 
Fellowship  PAFA.  Awards:  Bronze 
medal  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  gold  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  medal  of  honor,  N.Y. 
Arch.Lg.  1911;  Carnegie  prize,  NAD 
1911.  Work  :  "Carry  On,"  Metropolitan 
Museum  of  Art,  New  York;  "Washing- 
ton Laying  Down  His  Commission,"  and 
"The  Edict  of  Toleration  of  Lord  Balti- 
more," Court  House,  Baltimore;  "The 
Law,"  Cleveland  Federal  Building;  "The 
Uses  of  Wealth."  lunette.  Citizens  Bank, 
Cleveland,  O.,  Fame,"  four  penden- 
tives,  Hudson  County  Court  House,  Jer- 
sey City;  "Wisconsin  in  the  Past  and 
Present,"  State  Capital,  1  idison;  four 
pendentives  to  main  dome,  Essex  Coun- 
ty Court  House,  Newark;  "The  Power  of 
the  Law,"  Appellate  Court,  New  York; 
"The  Graduate,"  lunette.  College  of  the 
City  of  New  York;  "Music  and  the 
Dance,"  Waldorf-Astoria;  Decoration 
of  semi-dome  and  choir.  Church  of 
the  Saviour,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  Panel 
in  Governor's  Room,  State  Capitol, 
Pierre,  S.  Dak.;  "Pittsburgh  Offering 
Its  Steel  and  Iron  to  the  World," 
lunette.  Bank  of  Pittsburgh;  "The  Dis- 
coverers and  Civilizers  Led  to  the  Head 
Waters  of  the  Mississippi,"  "Minnesota 
as  a  Grain  State,"  "The  Fifth  Minne- 
sota Regiment  at  the  Battle  of  Cor- 
inth," three  lunettes,  Minnesota  State 
Capitol,  St.  Paul;  "The  Evolution  of 
Civilization"  and  "The  Human  Under- 
standing," Library  of  Congress,  Wash- 
ington; "The  Law,"  panel,  Luzerne 
County  Court  House,  Wilkes-Barre, 
Pa.;  "The  Law,"  four  pendentives, 
Mahoning  County  Court  House,  Youngs- 
town,  O.;  dome  crown,  Wisconsin  State 
Capitol,  Madison;  mosaics  in  St.  Mat- 
thew's Church,  Washington,  D.  C;  two 
windows  in  First  Presbyterian  Church, 
Chattanooga,  Tenn.  Author,  with  Mrs. 
Blashfield,  of  "Italian  Cities":  editor, 
with  Mrs.  Blashfield  and  A.  A.  Hopkins, 
of  Vasari's  "Lives  of  the  Painters";  au- 
thor, "Mural  Painting  in  America,"  1914. 

BLEIL,  Charles  (George),  San  Mateo, 
Calif.;  summer,  Monterey,  Calif. 
P.,  E. — Born  San  Francisco,  Dec.  24, 
1893.  Pupil  San  Francisco  Inst,  of  Art. 
Member:  San  F.AA;  Calif  SE. 
Work:  "Autumn  Road."  Palace  of 
Fine  Arts;  "The  Green  House,"  "The 
Red   Barns,"    Calif.   Artists   Gallery. 

BLENNER,  Carle  J(oan),  58  West  57th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Richmond,  Va.,  Feb.  1,  1864. 
Pupil  of  Yale  Art  School;  Bouguereau, 
Robert-Fleury  and  Aman-Jean  in  Paris. 
Member:  Salma.C;  New  Haven 
PCC;  Conn.AFA;  Wash.AC,  Awards: 
Medal,  Boston  AC  1891;  third  Hallgar- 
ten  prize,  NAD  1899;  hon.  mention. 
Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  bronze 
medal,    St.    Louis    Exp.,    1904. 

BLISS,  Alma   Hirsig,  1664  Lexington  Ave., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 


BLISS,    Elizabeth    Sturtevant. 

Samuel  Theobald,   Jr. 


See    Mrs. 


BLOCH,  Julius  T(hiengen),  10  South  18th 
St.;  h.  2135  North  Uber  St.,  Philadel- 
phia.   Pa. 

P. — Born  Kehl,  Baden,  Germany,  May 
12,  1888,  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member: 
■S.  Indp.  A.;  Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila. 
Alliance. 

BLONDHEIM,  Adolphe  W.,  Province- 
town,    Mass. 

P.,E.,L,T.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Oct. 
16,  1888.  Pupil  of  Maryland  Inst,  and 
Charcoal  Club  in  Baltimore;  PAFA 
under  Chase,  Beaux,  Breckenridge,  etc. 
Member:  Salma.  C,  Fellowship 
PAFA.  Awards  :  Isidor  medal, 
NAD,  1918;  Logan  medal,  Chicago  Art 
Inst.,  1920.  Represented  in  Chicago  Art 
Inst.;  Calif.  Public  Library;  State 
House,   Mo. 

BLOODGOOD,    Robert    F.,    58    West    57th 

St.,   New   York,   N.   Y. 

P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 
BLOOIVl,    M.     E.,    741    Monroe    St.,    North 

Bergen,  N.   J. 

P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

BLUIVi,  Alex.  A,,  The  Kenmare,  Tentii  and 
Pine  Sts. ;  h.  1520  Chestnut  St.,  Philadel- 
phia,   Pa. 

P.,  E. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Feb,  7, 
1889.  Pupil  of  Duveneck  in  Cincinnati; 
Mielatz  in  New  York.  Member: 
Phila.  Alliance.  Work:  Four  etch- 
ings in  Congressional  Library,  Wash- 
ing; etchings  in  Museum  of  Fine  Arts, 
Boston. 

BLUM,  Helen  A(brahams)  (Mrs.  Alex  A. 
Blum),  1929  Girard  Ave.,  Philadelphia, 
Pa 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa„  Aug,  17, 
1886.  Pupil  of  Elliot  Dangerfleld,  Henry 
Snell  and  Hugh  Breckenridge.  Mem- 
ber:    Fellowship  PAFA. 

BLUME,  Mrs.  Melita,  Brookhaven,  L.  I., 
N.    Y. 

Ldscp.  P. — Born  Halle,  Germany.  Pupil 
of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  National  Academy, 
Munich.  Member:  N.  A.  Women 
PS;  S.  Indp.  A.;  PBC;  Alliance;  Lg.  of 
American  Artists. 

BLUMENSCHEIN,  Ernest  L(eonard), 
Taos,  N.  M. 

P., I.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  May  26, 
1874.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy; 
ASL  of  N.Y. ;  Constant,  Laurens  and 
Collin  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA  1910; 
Salma.  C. ;  SI  1901;  AWCS;  Paris  AAA; 
Taos  SA.  Awards  :  Beck  prize,  Phila- 
WCC  1909;  Isidor  portrait  prize,  Salma. 
C.  1910  and  1911;  Isidor  medal.  NAD 
1912;  silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  'San  F., 
1915;  Potter  Palmer  gold  medal  and 
$1,000,  AIC  1917.  Represented  in  Cin- 
cinnati Art  Museum;  Los  Angeles  Art 
Museum;   Kansas  City  Library. 

BLUMENSCHEIN,   Mary  Shepard  Greene 

(Mrs.  E.  L.  Blumenschein),  Taos,  N.  M. 
P.,S. — Born  in  New  York.  Pupil  of 
Herbert  Adams  in  New  York;  Collin  in 
Paris.  Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS; 
Pen  and  Brush  C;  SI  1912  (assoc); 
ANA  1913.  Awards:  Third  medal, 
Paris  Salon,  1900;  second  medal.  Paris 
Salon,  1902;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 


355 


BLUMENTHAL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BOHNERT 


1904;  Julia  Shaw  memorial  ($300),  NAD 
1915.  Represented  in  Brooklyn  Museum 
of  Arts  and  Sciences. 

BLUMENTHAL,  M(oses)  L(aurence), 
518  Walnut  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  h. 
Elkins   Park,   Pa. 

I.,  T. — Born  Wilmington,  N.  C,  July 
13,  1879.  Pupil  Pennsylvania  Museum 
School,  and  studied  in  Munich.  Mem- 
ber: Guild  of  Free  Lance  Artists; 
Phila.  Sketch  C.  Illustrates  for  "Sat- 
urday Evening-  Post,"  "The  Ladies 
Home  Journal,"  "Collier's,"  "Mc- 
Clure's,"    "Scribner's,"   etc. 

BLUMLER,    George,   113%    East  31st   St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

BOALL,  Marian  G.,  Mills  College,  Oak- 
land, Calif.     (P.) 

BOARDMAN,  Frank  C,  Columbia,  Tenn. 
P. — M  ember:   New  Haven  PCC. 

BOARDMAN,  Rosina  C(ox),  "Banbury- 
Holt,"  Huntington,  N.  Y. 
Min.  P. — Born  New  York  City.  Pupil 
of  Alice  Beckington,  George  Bridg- 
man,  Frank  du  Mond.  Member: 
NAC;  N.  A.  Women  PS. 

BOBBS,  Ruth  Pratt,  10  Gramercy  Park, 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  1610  North  Dela- 
ware St.,  Indianapolis,  Ind. 
P.— Born  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  Sept.  3,  1884. 
Pupil  of  Wm.  M.  Chase.  Member: 
NAC;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Pen  and  Brush 
C;  Indiana  AC.  Work:  "The  Span- 
ish Shawl,"  Herron  Art  Institute,  In- 
dianapolis. 

BOCK,  Charles  Peter,  Manvel,  Texas. 
P. — Born  in  Germany,  Aug.  13,  1872. 
Pupil  of  AI  Chicago;  Simon  in  Paris. 
Member:  Dallas  Painters;  Overland 
Landscape  Outfit.  Work:  "Where 
Sand  and  Water  Meet,"  Dallas  Public 
Library. 

BOCK,  Richard  W.,  The  Gnomes,  River 
Forest,   111. 

S.— Born  in  Germany,  July  16,  1865; 
came  to  America  at  age  of  5.  Pupil  of 
Schafer,  Berlin  Academy;  Falguiere. 
Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts,  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SA;  SW  Sc.  Award: 
Medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893. 
Work:  Illinois  State  Soldiers'  and 
Sailors'  Monument  at  Shiloh;  Lovejoy 
monument  at  Alton,  111.;  bronze  group 
on  Public  Library  at  Indianapolis;  Sol- 
diers' Monument  at  Chicamaugua,  for 
Lancaster,  Pa.;  group  of  3  figures  on 
Missouri  State  Bldg.,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  pediments  on  C.  B.  Q.  R.  R.  Sta- 
tion,   Omaha,    Neb. 

BODFISH,  Evelin.     See  Bourne. 

BOEBINGER,  Charles  William,  Walnut 
and  Central  Parkway,  Cincinnati,  O. ;  h. 
Beechwood  Rd.,  Ft.  Mitchell,  Ky. 
P.,  L,  C,  T.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  June 
17,  1876.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Acad- 
emy; ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  West- 
ern Drawing  and  Manual  Teachers 
Assoc. 

BOERICKE,    Johanna    M(agdalene),    5932 
Overbrook  Ave..   Philadelphia,   Pa. 
P., S.— Born   Philadelphia,   Feb.   13,   1868. 
PupU  of  PAFA;   studied   in  Rome  and 


Pans.  Member:  Plastic  C. ;  Fellow- 
ship PAFA;  Pa.S.Min.P.;  S.Indp.A.; 
Philc-i.  Alliance. 
BOGDANOVE,  A.  J.,  145  East  23rd  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Monhegan 
Island,  Me. 

P.,  T.— Born  Minsk.  Russia,  Aug:.  11, 
1887.  Pupil  at  NAD  under  Maynard  and 
F.  C.  Jones.  Member:  S.  Indp,  A. 
Lg.  of  NYA.  Work:  Mural  decora- 
tion in  Hebrew  Sheltering  Guardian  So- 
ciety, Pleasantviile,  N.  Y. ;  two  mural 
decorations  in  the  Brooklyn  Commercial 
High    School. 

BOGER,  Fred,  2440  Jefferson  Ave.,  S.  Nor- 
wood, O. 

P.,  L— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Oct.  12, 
1857.  Pupil  of  Frank  Duveneck  in  Cin- 
cinnati. Member:  Cincinnati  AC. 
Work:  "Judge  Alphonso  Taft,"  Supe- 
rior Court,  Hamilton  County,  O;  por- 
traits of  George  B.  Cox  and  August 
Herrman  at  Blaine  Club,  Cincinnati,  O. 

BOGERT,  George  H.,  108  West  57th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  and  Lyme,  Conn. 
Ldscp.P.— Born  New  York,  1864.  Pupil 
of  NAD;  Puvis  de  Chavannes.  AimS 
Morot  and  Boudin  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1899;  SAA  1899;  Lotos  C; 
Salma.C.1897;  A.Fund  S.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  PAFA,  1892;  Webb  Prize, 
SAA  1898;  first  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD 
1899;  bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900; 
silver  medal,  Pan-Am,  Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  gold  medal,  AAS,  Phila.,  1902  and 
1907;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 
Work:  "Surf  and  Wind,"  "Rouen," 
"Chale  Church,  Isle  of  Wight,  Eng- 
land," and  "October  Moonlight," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York; 
"Sunset,"  Corcoran  Gallery,  Washing- 
ton, D.  C;  "A  Stormy  Day  at  Katwyk, 
Holland,"  Buffalo  Fine  Arts  Academy; 
"Sea  and  Rain,"  National  Gallery, 
Washington,  D.  C;  "After  Sunset — 
Longpre,"  Pennsylvania  Academy, 
Philadelphia;  "Autumn  Sunset,"  "Ven- 
ice by  Moonlight"  and  "Dordrecht," 
Brooklyn  Institute  Museum. 

BOHM,     Max,    60    Summit    Ave.,    Bronx- 
ville.   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Cleveland,  O.,  Jan.  21,  1868. 
Pupil  of  Laurens,  Guillemet  and  Con- 
stant in  Paris.  Member:  ANA  1917; 
NA  1920;  Salma.C;  Mural  P.;  Province- 
town  Beachcombers'  C;  Provincetown 
AA. ;  Cleveland  AC;  Paris  SAP;  Paris 
AAA;  Chelsea  Arts  Club  and  United 
Arts  Club  in  London.  Awards  : 
Third  class  medal,  Paris  Salon,  1898; 
silver  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  bronze 
medal.  Pan- Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
gold  medal.  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915; 
Clarke  prize,  NAD  1917.  Work: 
"Golden  Hours,"  Luxembourg,  Paris; 
Minn.  State  Art  Society;  mural  decora- 
tion. Court  House,  Cleveland,  O.;  por- 
trait of  Gov.  Lind,  Capitol,  St.  Paul, 
Minn.;  work  in  National  Gallery,  Wash- 
ington,  D.   C. 

BOHNERT,    Herbert,    2258    Euclid    Ave.; 
•     h.    1875   East   81st   St..    Cleveland,    O. 
P.,  I.— Born  Cleveland,  C,  May  19,  1888. 
Pupil  Cleveland  School  of  Art.    M  e  m  - 


356 


BOLTON 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


BORGLUM 


b  e  r  :  Cleveland  'SA;  second  prize, 
Cleveland  SA,  1919. 

BOLTON,  Robert  F(rederick),  502  West 
139th  St.,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Cloverly 
Farm,  Verona  Station,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  New  York  City,  March  19, 
1901.  Pupil  of  Curran,  Francis  C. 
Jones,    Maynard. 

BONAR,   James,   Park   BIdg.,    Pittsburgh, 
Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

BONAWIT,    G.    Owen,    8    West    13th    St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P.— M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

BONAWITZ,  George,  320  Broadway,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

BOND,     Kate     Lee    Bacon,    899    Ash    St., 
Winnetka,   111. 

P.,  T. — Born  Topeka,  Kan.,  Nov.  18, 
1890.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;   Chicago  S.   Min.   P. 

BON  HA  JO,    Val,    23    Hulbert   Block,    Cin- 
cinnati,  O. 
P. — M  ember:   Cincinnati  AC. 

BONNET,    Leon    D.,    24    Gramercy    Park, 
New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

BONSALL,  Elisabeth  F(earne),  8430  Wal- 
nut St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P., L— Born  Philadelphia,  Sept.  12,  1861. 
Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Eakins  and 
Howard  Pyle;  Collin  and  Courtois 
in  Paris.  Member:  Plastic  C; 
Fellowship  PAFA.  Phila.  Alliance. 
Awards  :  First  Toppan  prize,  PAFA 
1885;  Mary  Smith  prize,  PAFA  1888  and 
1897.  Work:  "Hot  Milk,"  Pennsyl- 
vania Academy,   Philadelphia. 

BONSALL,    Mary    W.,    3430    Walnut    St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P.,  I. — Born  Fernwood,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
Cecilia  Beaux,  Robert  Vonnoh  and  Wm. 
M.  Chase.  Member:  Plastic  C;  Fel- 
lowship PAFA;  Pa.S.Min.P.  Specialty, 
portraits  in  oil  and  miniature  and  de- 
signs for  seals. 

BONTA,   Elizabeth   B(rainard),  290  Adel- 

phi  St.,  Brooklvn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T.— Born  Syracuse,  N.  Y.  Pupil 
of  A.  W.  Dow  in  New  York.  Mem- 
ber: Brooklvn  WCC.  Award  : 
Bronze  medal  for  water  color,  St.  Paul 
Inst.,  1916.  Work:  "The  Pale  Moon," 
St.  Paul  Inst. 

BOOG,  Carle  IVllchel,  206  Parkville  Ave., 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Sursee,  Canton  L,ucerne, 
Switzerland.  1877.  Pupil  of  AST.  of  N. 
Y. ;  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  and  Bonnat, 
Paris.  Member:  S.Indp.;  Lg.  of 
NYA. 

BOONE,  Cora  M.,  1450  Alice  St.,  Oakland, 
Calif.    (P.) 

BOOTH,  Franklin,  57  West  57th  St.,  New 

York,   N.   Y. 

I.— M  ember:  SI  1911;  Salma.C. 
BOOTH,    Hanson,   Woodstock,   Ulster  Co., 

N.  Y. 

P., I. — Born    Noblesville,    Ind.,    May    19, 

1886.      Pupil    of    Vanderpoel    and    C.    F. 

Browne     in     Chicago;      George     Bridg- 


man  in  New  York.  Member:  SI 
1910;  Salma.C.  Award:  Shaw  prize, 
Salma.C.  1913.  Illustrated  "The  Poet 
Who  Saved  His  Youth,"  "House  of  the 
Dawn,"  "Lady  of  the  Twilight,"  Mc- 
Clure's;  "The  Love  Tryst,"  American 
Magazine;  "Minister  of  Police,"  and 
other  books. 

BOOTH,  James  Scripps,  836  South  El  Mo- 
lino  Ave.,  Pasadena,  Calif.;  summer, 
"Cranbrook,"  Birmingham,  Mich. 
P.,  S.— Born  Detroit,  Mich.,  May  31, 
1888.  Studied  in  Europe.  Member: 
Calif.  AC;  Scarab  Club.  Awards: 
Second  Hopkin  Prize,  Detroit  Art  In- 
stitute,  1915. 

BOREIN,   Edward,  4  East  39th  St.,   New 

York,  N.  Y. 

E. — Born   San  Leandro,   Calif.,  1873. 

BORG.  Carl  Oscar,  Santa  Barbara,  Calif. 
P. — Born  at  Grinstad,  Sweden,  March  3, 
1879.  Self-taught.  Member:  Calif. 
AC;  Salma.C;  Inter.Soc.AL;  San  F.SA; 
San  F.SE;  Calif.  WCS.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Vichy,  1913;  silver  medal, 
Versailles,  1914;  silver  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  silver  medal,  San 
Diego,  1915;  gold  medal,  San  Diego, 
1916;  second  Black  prize,  Calif.  AC. 
1918;  silver  medal,  Societe  des  Artistes 
Francais,  1920;  Mabury  Purchase  Prize, 
Calif.  AC,  1920.  Represented  in  Univer- 
sity of  California,  Berkeley,  Calif.  Mu- 
nicipal Collection,  Phoenix,  Ariz.; 
Golden  Gate  Museum,  San  Francisco; 
Hearst  Free  Library,   Anaconda. 

BORGLUM  (John)  Gutzon  (de  la  Mothe), 
166  East  38th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h. 
Stamford,   Conn. 

S.,P.,L,T.— Born  in  Idaho,  March  25, 
1867.  Pupil  of  San  Fran.  Art  Assoc; 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Settled  in 
New  York  in  1902.  Member:  Soc. 
Nat.  des  Beaux- Arts,  Paris;  N.Y.Arch. 
Lg.l902;  Am. PS  (vice-pres.) ;  Royal  Soc. 
of  British  Artists.  Awards  :  Gold 
medal.  Western  Art  Assoc;  gold  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work:  Sheridan 
monument,  Washington,  D.  C;  colossal 
head  of  Lincoln,  Capitol,  Washington, 
D.  C;  "Mares  of  Diomedes,"  and  "Rus- 
kin."  Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York; 
"Lincoln  Memorial,"  Newark,  N.  J.; 
"The  Flyer."  University  of  Virginia, 
Charlottesville. 

BORGLUM.  Solon  H(annibal),  9  East 
59th  St.,  New  York,  N.  York;  h.  Rocky 
Ranch,  Norwalk,  Conn. 
S.— Born  Ogden,  Utah.  Dec  22,  1868. 
Pupil  of  his  brother,  Gutzon  Borglum, 
and  of  the  Art  Academy  of  Cincinnati 
under  Rebisso;  Fremiet  and  Puech  in 
Paris.  Member:  NSS  1901;  ANA 
1911;  Silvermine  Group  of  Artists. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1899;  silver  medal,  Paris  Exp..  1900; 
silver  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp..  Buffalo, 
1901;  gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
silver  medal,  Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910. 
Work:  Equestrian  statue  of  Gen. 
John  B.  Gordon,  Atlanta.  Ga. ;  eques- 
trian statue  of  "Bucky  O'Neil,"  Pres- 
cott,  Ariz.;  "Backus  Memorial,"  Packer 
Institute.  Brooklyn,  New  York;  "Sol- 
diers and  Sailors  Monument,"  Danbury, 


ZS7 


BORGORD 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BOURQUIN 


Conn.;  "Hurley  Monument,"  Topeka, 
Kan,;  "Border  of  White  Man's  Land" 
and  "Bulls  Fighting,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  "C.  A.  Schieren" 
(bust),  Brooklyn  Institute  Museum;  six 
bronzes  in  Detroit  Institute;  Schieren 
Memorial,  Greenwood  Cemetery;  "Pio- 
neer," Court  of  Honor,  San  F.Exp., 
1915;  heroic  statue  of  Jacob  Leisler, 
New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. ;  "Inspiration," 
"Aspiration,"  "Little  Lady  of  the  Den," 
St.  Marks  Church  in  the  Bouwerie,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

BORGORD.  Martin,  care  of  Salmagundi 
Club,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  S.— Born  Norway.  Feb.  8,  1869.  Pu- 
pil of  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member: 
Salma.  C;  Allied  AA;  Paris  AAA;  'St. 
Lucas  Society,  Amsterdam,  Holland. 
Award:  Medal,  Paris  Salon,  1905. 
Work:  "Laren  Weaver,"  Carnegie 
Inst.,    Pittsburgh. 

BORIE,  Adolphe,  4100  Pine  St.,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa.;  and  58  West  57th  St.,  New 
York,   N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Jan.  5,  1877. 
Pupil  of  PAFA  and  Munich  Academy. 
Member:  Fellowship  PAFA;  AC 
Phila.;  Port.P.;  Allied  AA.;  ANA  1917. 
Award  :  Beck  gold  medal,  PAFA 
1910;  silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F., 
1915;  Maynard  portrait  prize,  NAD  1917. 

BORON  DA,  Lester  D.,  131  Waverly  Place, 
New  York,   N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Reno,  Nev.,  July  24,  1886. 
Member:     Salma. C. 

BORZO,  K(arel),  3025  East  Madison  St., 
Seattle,  Wash. 

P.— Born  in  Holland,  April  3.  1888. 
Member:    Seattle  Fine  Arts  Society. 

BOSLEY,  Frederick  A(ndrew),  162  New- 
bury St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  Higginson 
Road,    Lincoln.    Mass. 

P.— Born  Lebanon,  N.  H.,  Feb.  24,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Tarbell  and  Benson  in  Boston; 
studied  two  years  in  Europe  on  Paige 
Scholarship  from  School  of  Boston  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts.  Instructor  of  paint- 
ing at  School  of  Boston  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts  since  1913.  Member:  Boston 
GA.  Award  :  Bronze  medal  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  honorable  men.  In- 
ternational Exhibition,  Carnegie  Inst., 
1920.  Work:  "The  Dreamer,"  Boston 
Museum. 

BOSS,     Homer,    37    West    16th    St.,    New 
York,   N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

BOSTON,  Frederick  J(ames),  735  Fulton 
St.;  h.  267  Marlborough  Rd.,  Brooklyn, 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Bridgeport,  Conn.,  Feb.  18, 
1855.  Pupil  of  Whittaker  in  Brooklyn; 
Carolus-Duran  in  Paris.  Member: 
Brooklyn  SA.;    Salma.C. 

BOSTON,  Joseph  H.,  Carnegie  Hall,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P,,T. — Born  Bridgeport,  Conn.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1901;  SAA  1896;  Salma.C. 
1898;  Allied  AA;  Brooklyn  AC.  Award: 
Bronze  medal  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901.  Work  :  "The  Devil's  Glen"  and 
"Portrait  of  Franklin  W.  Hooper," 
Brooklyn  Institute  Museum. 


BOSWORTH,  Winifred,  Woodland,  El- 
gin, 111. 

P.,  E.— Born  Elgin,  111.,  1885.  Studied 
at  AIC;  Boston  Museum  of  Fine  Arts; 

AST^  of  N.  Y.;  Laurens  in  Paris;  Eispn- 
griiber  in  Munich.  Member:  Chi- 
cago WCC;  Chicago  SE;   S.Indp.A. 

BOTH,  Armand,  245  Paine  Ave.,  New 
Rochelle,   N.   Y. 

I. — Born  Portland,  Me.,  Jan.  8,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Albert  E.  Moore  and  Eric  Pape 
in  Boston;  Laurens  and  Steinlen  in 
Paris.  Member:  SI  1913.  Illustra- 
tions: Sir  Gilbert  Parker's  works;  nov- 
els for  Harpers;   current  magazines. 

BOTH,    W.    C,    2314    Indiana    Ave.,    Chi- 
cago, 111. 
Etcher — M  ember:  Chicago  S.  Etchers. 

BOTKE,  Cornelius,  Carmel-by-the-Sea, 
Calif. 

P. — Born  Leenwarden,  Holland,  July  6, 
1887.  Pupil  of  Chris  Lebrun.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SA.  Awards  :  Fine 
Arts  Bldg.  Prize,  1918;  Hon.  mention 
for  landscape,  American  Exhibition, 
Chicago,  1921.  Work:  "The  Golden 
Tree,"  Public  Schools,  Chicago;  "The 
Last  Snow,"  Oak  Park  High  School; 
"Lifting  Clouds,"  Public  Library,  Ponca 
City,  Okla. 

BOTKE,  iVIrs.  Jessie  Arms,  Carmel-by- 
the-Sea.  Calif. 

P.,  I.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  May  27,  1883. 
Pupil  of  AIC,  Johansen,  Woodbury  and 
Herter.  Member:  Chicago  SA. 
Award  :  Englewood  Woman's  Club 
prize  ^$50),  AIC,  1917;  Cahn  prize,  AIC, 
1918;  bronze  medal,  Peoria  Society  of 
Allied  Arts,  1918;  medal,  Chicago  SA, 
1919.  Work:  "White  Swans,"  Mu- 
nicipal Gallery,  Chicago;  mural  deco- 
ration for  Ida  Noyes'  Hall,  University 
of  Chicago;  "Geese,"  Chicago  Art  In- 
stitute. 

BOTSFORD,  Anna.  See  Mrs.  John  H. 
Comstock. 

BOUGH  E,  Louis,  Daniel  Gallery,  2  West 
47th  St..  New  York.  N.  Y. 
P.,  E.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  March 
18,  1896.  Pupil  of  Richard  Miller,  'Simon, 
Menard  and  J.  P.  Laurens  in  Paris; 
Ossip  Linde,  Du  Mond,  Luis  Mora  in 
New  York.  Member:  Paris  AAA; 
Penguins. 

BOUCHE,  IVlarian  Wright,  care  of  Daniel 
Gallery,  2  West  47th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

P.,  W.— Born  New  York,  Dec.  8,  1895. 
Pupil  of  Henry  Matisse,  Walt  Kuhn. 
Member:  Paris  A.  A.  A.;  Penguin 
Club;   S.Indp.A. 

BOUDREAU,     James     C,     Fulton     Bldg., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

BOUGUEREAU,  Elisabeth  (Jane)  Gard- 
ner (Mrs.  W.  A.  Bouguereau),  75  Rue 
Notre-Dame-des-Champs,  Paris,  France. 
P.— Born  Exeter,  N.  H.,  1837. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1879;  third  class  medal,  Paris  Salon, 
1887;  bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1889. 

BOURQUIN,   J.    E.,   1632  University  Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 


358 


BOURNE 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


BRADDOCK 


BOURNE,  Mrs.  Evelin  Bodfish,  515  West 
122nd  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer. 
Box  29,  Waresham,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Waresham,  Mass.,  July  10, 
1882.  Pupil  of  NAD  under  Brush,  Volk 
and   Jones. 

BOURNE,  Gertrude  Beals  (Mrs.  Frank  A. 
Bourne),  130  Mt.  Vernon  St.,  Boston, 
Mass. 

P. — Born  in  Boston.  Pupil  of  Henry 
B.  Snell  and  Henry  W.  Rice.  Mem- 
ber: Copley  'S.,  1904;  NYWCC,  1916; 
N.  A.  Women  PS.  Specialty,  water  col- 
ors. 

BOUTWOOD,  Charles  Edward,  care  of  F. 
A.  Bryden  and  Co.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,T. — Born  in  England.  Pupil  of  Royal 
Academy  in  London;  later  studied  in 
Paris.  Member:  Chicago  SA;  Chi- 
cago WCC.  Award  :  Silver  medal, 
Chicago   SA,    1913. 

BOWDITCH,  Mary  O.,  16  Arlington  St., 
Boston,   Mass.    (S.) 

BOWER,  M.  L.,  1730  Sansom  St.,  Phila- 
delphia,  Pa.    (I.) 

BOWDOIN,  Harriette,  1947  Broadway;  h. 
164  West  66th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,I.,C.,T. — Born  in  Massachusetts.  Pu- 
pil of  Henry  B.  Snell  and  Elliott  Dain- 
gerfield  in  New  York;  Frank  Brangwyn 
in  France.  Member:  N.  A.  Wo- 
men PS;  AWCS;  NYWCC;  Pen  and 
Brush  C;  S.  Indp.  A.;  SPNY. 

BOWEN,  Benjamin  J.,  Hotel  des  Voy- 
ageurs,  Concarneau,  Finistere,  France; 
h.  517  Broadway,  South  Boston,  Mass. 
P. — Born  South  Boston,  Mass.,  Feb.  1, 
1859.  Pupil  of  Lefebvre,  Robert-Fleury 
and  Bouguereau   in   Paris. 

BOWER,  Alexander,  Salmagundi  Club,  45 
Fifth  Ave.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — Born   New   York,   N.   Y.,    March   31, 
1875.      Pupil    of    PAFA    under    Thomas 
P.  Anshutz,     Member:   Salma.C. 

BOWER,  Mrs.  Lucy  Scott,  18  Rue  Bois- 
sonade,  Paris,  France. 
P.,  W. — Born  Rochester,  Iowa,  Jan.  18, 
1867.  Pupil  of  Chase;  Robert-Fleury 
and  Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Member:  N. 
A.  Women  PS.  Work:  "The  Old 
Street,"    Museum    of   Vitre,    France. 

BOWLES,     Mrs.     Caroline,    375    Waverly 
Drive,    Pasadena,    Cal. 
P.— M  ember:     Cal.    AC. 

BOYD,  Myra,  R.  F.  D.  2,  Sharpsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

BOYD,   Rutherford,  Leonia,  N.  J. 
I. — M  ember:     Salma.  C. 

BOYD,     William,    Empire      Bldg.,      Pitts- 
burgh, Pa.;  h.   Sewickley,   Pa. 
P.,      Arch. — Born      Glasgow,      Scotland, 
Aug.     24,     1882.       Pupil     of     Paul     Cret. 
Member:     AIA;    Pittsburgh   AA. 

BOYDEN,     Dwight     Frederick,     care     of 

Algonquin  Club;  h.  382  Commonwealth 
Ave.,   Boston,   Mass. 

Ldscp.P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  1860. 
Pupil  of  Boulanger  and  Lefebvre  in 
Paris.  Member:  Salma.C.  1902. 
Awards:  Silver  medal,  Boston;  hon. 
mention,  Paris  Salon,  1899;  third  gold 
medal,    Paris    Salon,    1900. 


BOYER,  Jane  Allen  (Mrs.  Murray  Boyer), 

Riverton,   N.  J. 

P.— M  ember  :  Fellowship      PAFA; 

Plastic  C. 
BOYLAN,    W(illiam),    254    East    5th    St., 

Brooklyn,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born      Brooklyn,      April      10,      1879. 

Studied     in     New     York.       Member: 

Brooklyn  WCC;  Brooklyn   SA. 
BOYLE,     Charles    W(ellington),    Delgado 

Art  Museum;  h.  1615  Prytania  St.,  New 

P.,  T.— Born  New  Orleans,  La.  Pupil 
of  Paul  Poincy;  A.  Molinary;  ASL  of  N. 
Y.  Member:  NOAA;  NAC.  Work: 
"Afternoon  Light,"  Delgado  Museum; 
"Oak  on  Bayou,"  New  Orleans  Art  As- 
sociation. 

BOYLE,  Gertrude,  246  West  14th  St.,  New 

York,   N.   Y. 

S. — M  ember:   S. Indp. A. 
BOYLE,    Sarah    Yocum    McFadden    (Mrs. 

Frederic  A.  Boyle),  3505  Hamilton  St., 
West  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  h.,  94  'South 
Munn  Ave.,  East  Orange,  N.  J. 
Min.P. — Born  Germantown,  Pa.  Pupil 
of  Drexel  Inst.,  Pyle,  Deigendesch  and 
Herman  Faber  in  Philadelphia.  M  e  m- 
ber:  Plastic  C;  Phila.  Alliance;  Fel- 
lowship PAFA;  Pa.  S.  Min.  P. 

BOYNTON,  George  R(ufus),  Sherwood 
Studios,  58  West  57th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  summer,  Cragsmoor,  Ulster  Co., 
N.    Y. 

P.,  W. — Born  Pleasant  Grove,  Wis., 
Oct.  16,  1866.  Pupil  of  J.  G.  Brown, 
C.  Y.  Turner,  Walter  Shirlaw  and  Chase. 
Member:  Lotos  Club;  A.  Fund  S. 
Works  :  Portraits  of  Rear  Adml. 
Coghlan,  and  Gen.  Anson  G.  McCook  in 
the  Union  League  Club;  portrait  of  Gen. 
Alexander  S.  Webb,  in  West  Point  Mili- 
tary Academy;  portrait  of  Dr.  William 
Temple  Hornaday  owned  by  the  N.  Y. 
Zoological  Society. 

BRABAZON,  Thomas,  21  Pavilion  St., 
Hartford,  Conn. 

P.,L.,T.— M  ember:  Conn.AFA;  Hart- 
ford Municipal  AS.  Head  teacher  at 
Municipal  Art  Schools;  lecturer  on 
American  Indian  ideograms  for  interior 
decoration. 

BRACKEN,  Julia  M.  See  Mrs.  William 
Wendt. 

BRACKENRIDGE,  Cornelia,  see  Talbot, 
Mrs.  M.  W. 

BRACKETT,    Arthur    Loring,    22    Thorn- 
dike    St.,    Brookline,    Mass. 
P. — M  ember:  Boston  AC. 

BRADBURY,  Charles  Earl,  402  University 
Hall,  Urbana,  111.;  h.  610  South  Prairie 
St.,  Champaign,  111.;  summer,  129  East 
Pleasant  Ave.,  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  T.— Born  North  Bay,  Oneida  Co., 
N.  Y.,  May  21,  1888.  Pupil  of  Painting 
Department,  Syracuse  University;  Jean 
Paul  Laurens  and  Academic  Julian, 
Paris. 

BRADDOCK,  E(ffie)  Frances,  406  Third 
Ave.,  Warren,  Pa. 

S.,  C— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  PAFA, 
J.  Liberty  Tadd,  Emily  Sartain.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :    Plastic  C. 


359 


BRADFIELD 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


BRAUNER 


BRADFIELD,  Mrs.  E.  P.,  Pontiac,  Mich. 
(P.) 

BRADLEY,  Mrs.  Susan  H.,  20  Brimmer 
St.,    Boston,    Mass. 

Ldscp.P.— Born  Boston,  May  15,  1851. 
Pupil  of  Thayer,  Edward  Boit,  Chase 
and  School  of  Boston  Mus.  Mem- 
ber: Phila.  "WCC;  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Boston  WCC;  NYWCC;  S.Indp.A.  Rep- 
resented in  Herron  Art  Institute,  In- 
dianapolis. 

BRADLEY,.  W.     B.,    2771    Decatur    Ave., 
Bronx,   New   York,    N.   Y. 
P.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Nov.  16,  1890. 
Pupil   of  Edward   Trumbull. 

BRADLEY,  Will  (William  H.),  131  East 
23d  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Short 
Hills,    N.    J. 

I.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  July  10,  1868. 
Member:  SI  1910;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.l914 
(assoc);  Players,  1905.  Art  director 
"Collier's  Magazine,"  1907-09,  and  of 
"Good  Housekeeping,"  1911-13;  "Metro- 
politan," 1914-16;  "Century,"  1914-16. 
Author  and  illustrator  of  "Toymaker 
to  the  King"  and   "The  Wonder  Box." 

BRADT,  Delphine,  1820  Spruce  St.,  Phila- 
delphia,  Pa.    (P.) 

BRADWAY,  Florence  Dell,  Art  Alliance, 
1823  Walnut  St.;  h.  2012  West  Ontario 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Oct  16, 
1898.  Pupil  of  Philadelphia  School  of 
Design.  Member:  Plastic  C;  Alum- 
nae  of   Philadelphia   School   of   Design. 

BRAKKEN,  Andrew,  Belfair,  Washing- 
ton.     (P.) 

BRAMNICK,  David,  Mark  Bldg.,  721  Wal- 
nut St.;  h.  764  South  5th  St.,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa. 

P. — Born  KishinefC,  Russia,  May  17, 
1894.  Pupil  PAFA.  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA.  Work  in  Graphic 
Sketch  Club. 

BRANCH,  Grove  R.,  64  Fruit  St.,  Worces- 
ter, Mass. 

P.,  C,  T. — Instructor  of  Jewelry  Depart- 
ment School  of  the  Worcester  Museum; 
also  at  Commonwealth  'School  of  Art. 
Boothbay  Harbor,  Me.  Director  of 
Manual  Arts,  Worcester  Academy. 
Member:  Arts  and  Crafts  Society 
of  Boston. 

BRANCHARD,    Emiie    (Peter),    61    South 
Washington  Square,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Dec.  4,  1881. 
Member:      Lg.    of   N.Y.A.;    S.Indp.A. 

BRANDEGEE,  Robert  B.,  Farmington, 
Conn. 

P.,I.,C.,T.— Born  Berlin,  Conn.  Pupil 
of  JacQueson  de  la  Chevreuse  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA,  1908;  Conn.AFA; 
Eclectics.  Award  :  Silver  medal, 
Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  bronze 
medal,  Exp.  Universelle,  Paris.  Work: 
"The  Wanderer,"  Hillyer  Gallery, 
Smith   College,    Northampton,    Mass. 

BRANNAN,  Sophie  iVIarston,  27  West  67th 
St.,   New   York,    N.    Y. 

P. — Born  Mountain  View,  Cal.  Pupil 
of  Mark  Hopkins  Inst,  of  Art,  San 
Francisco;  studied  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: N.  A.  Women  PS;  SPNY;  San 
Francisco  Art.  Assoc;  Conn.AFA.;  PBC. 


Award  :  McMillin  prize,  N.  A. Women 
PS,  1912;  hon.  mention,  Conn.AFA. 
BRANNIGAN,  Gladys  (Mrs.  Robert  A. 
Brannigan,  242  West  56th  St.;  h.  419 
W.  119th  St.,  New  York;  summer.  East 
Gloucester,   Mass. 

P. — Born  Hingham,  Mass.  Pupil  of 
Corcoran  Art  School,  NAD,  and  H.  B. 
Snell.  Member:  N.A.  Women  P.S. ; 
Lg.    of  N.Y.A.;  Wash.   WCC. 

BRANSOM,     Edith,    411    West    114th    St., 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

BRANSOM,  Paul,  Green  Lake  P.  O.,  Ful- 
ton Co.,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Washington,  D.  C,  July  26, 
1885.  Member:  SI  1911;  New  York 
Zoological  Soc.  Illustrated:  "The  Call 
of  the  Wild";  "The  Wind  in  the  Wil- 
lows"; "Neighbors  Unknown";  "The 
Feet  of  the  Furtive";  "Hoof  and  Claw"; 
"The  Sandman's  Forest,"  "The  Sand- 
man's Mountain,"  "Over  Indian  and 
Animal  Trails,"  "More  Kindred  of  the 
Wild,"  "The  Secret  Trails,"  "Children 
of   the  Wild,"    etc. 

6RASZ,  Arnold  F(ranz),  189  Main  St.; 
h.  299  East  Irving  St.,  Oshkosh,  Wis. 
P.,  S.,  I.,  E.— Born  Polk  County,  Wis., 
July  19,  1888.  Pupil  of  Minneapolis 
School  of  Fine  Arts;  Henri  in  New 
York.     Member:   Wis.    PS. 

BRAUN,  Mrs,  Cora  Fischer,  Department 
of  Fine  and  Applied  Arts,  University  of 
Tennessee,  Knoxville,  Tenn. 
P.,  C,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Jordon,  Minn., 
May  27,  1885.  Pupil  of  Garber,  Hale, 
Joseph  Pearson,  Breckenridge,  Chase, 
Blashfield  and  Beaux.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA.  Acting  Associate 
Professor  of  Art,  University  of  Ne- 
braska, 1918-1919;  Acting  Assistant 
Professor  of  Art,  Ohio  State  University, 
1919-1920;  Director,  Dept.  of  Applied 
and  Fine  Arts,  University  of  Tennessee. 

BRAUN,  M(aurice),  Point  Loma,  Calif. 
P. — Born  Nagy  Bittse,  Hungary,  Oct. 
1,  1877.  Pupil  of  E.  M.  Ward,  Maynard 
and  Francis  C.  Jones  at  NAD  in  New 
York.  Member:  California  AC;  San 
Diego  AG.  Represented  in  Municipal 
Collection,  Phoeniz,  Ariz.;  San  Diego 
Museum.  Awards  :  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD  1900;  gold  medal,  Panama-Calif. 
Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915;  gold  medal, 
Panama-Calif.  Int.  Exp.,  San  Diego, 
1916. 

BRAUNER,  Olaf,  Franklin  Hall,  Cornell 
University;  Ithaca,  N.  Y. 
P.,S.,T. — Born  Christiania,  Norway,  Feb. 
9,  1869.  Pupil  of  Benson  and  Tarbell 
in  Boston.  Member:  Gargoyle  Soc; 
Central  N.Y.Chpt.AIA  (hon.).  Prof,  of 
painting,  Cornell  Univ.  since  1900. 
Work:  "Come  Unto  Me,"  altar  piece 
in  Church  of  Our  Saviour,  Chicago; 
portraits  in  the  Kimball  Library,  Ran- 
dolph, Vt. ;  in  Cornell  University  Li- 
brary, Ithaca;  in  Girls'  High  School, 
Boston;  in  Amherst  College.  Amherst, 
Mass.;  sculpture,  "Dane  Memorial"  In 
Walnut  Hill  Cemetery,  Brookline,  Mass.; 
Clifton  Beckwith  Brown  medal.  Col- 
lege of  Architecture,  Cornell  University; 
fountain   at   Seal   Harbor,   Me. 


360 


BRAUNHOLD 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


BRENNER 


BRAUNHOLD,   Louis,  35  North  Dearborn 
St.,  Chicago,  111. 

Etcher — M  ember:  Chicago  Soc.  of 
Etchers. 

BRAXTON,   William    Ernest,    436   Lexing- 
ton Ave.,  Brooklyn,   N.   Y. 
P.,  I.— Born  Washington,  D.  C,  Dec.  10, 
1878.     Pupil  of  J.  B.  Whittaker.    Mem- 
ber:    Lg.  of  N.Y.A.;   S.Indp.A. 

BRECK,  Joseph,  Metropolitan  Museum  of 
Art,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I. — A  ward:  Gold  medal  for  paint- 
ing, Minnesota  State  Art  Society,  1916. 

BRECKENRIDGE,    Hugh    H(enry),    Port 
Washington,   Pa. 

P., T.— Born  Leesburg,  Va.,  Oct.  6,  1870. 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  Bouguereau,  Ferrier 
and  Doucet  in  Paris.  Member: 
NYWCC;  Phila.WCC;  Fellowship  PAFA; 
ACPhila.;  ANA,  1913;  Phila.Chap.AIA 
(hon.).  Instructor  in  PAFA  since 
1894.  Member  of  Municipal  Art  Jury 
of  Phila.  Awards  :  First  Toppan 
prize  and  European  scholarship, 
schools  of  PAFA;  medal,  Atlanta  Exp., 
1895;  hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp.,  1900; 
bronze  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  second  Corcoran  prize,  S. Wash. A., 
1903;  gold  medal,  ACPhila.1907;  first 
prize,  Wash.WCC,  1908;  silver  medal, 
Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910;  gold  medal, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  third  W.  A. 
Clark  prize  ($1,000),  and  Corcoran 
bronze  medal,  Washington,  1916;  Stotes- 
bury  prize,  PAFA,  1917;  gold  medal  of 
honor,  PAFA,  1919;  Sesnan  gold  medal, 
PAFA,  1920;  gold  medal.  Fellowship 
PAPA,  1920.  Work:  Portraits  in 
University  of  Pa.,  Art  Club,  Jefferson 
Medical  College,  College  of  Pharmacy, 
College  of  Physicians,  Historical  So- 
ciety, Pennsylvania  Hospital,  Philoso- 
phical Society  and  City  Hall,  all  in 
Philadelphia;  University  of  Va. ;  State 
House,  Hartford,  Conn.  Landscapes  in 
St.  Louis  Club,  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  and  in 
University  Club,  Indianapolis,  Ind., 
"Still  Life,"  San  Francisco  Art  Mu- 
seum; Court  House,  Reading,  Pa.; 
State  Normal  School,  West  Chester, 
Pa.;  Delgado  Museum  of  Art,  New  Or- 
leans. 


56     Bedford    Ave, 


BREDEMEIER,     Carl, 

Buffalo,  N.  Y.   (P.) 

BREDIN,  C(hristine)  S.,  5450  Delancey 
St..  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P., I. — Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy; 
Colarossi  in  Paris.  Member:  AI 
Graphic  Arts.  Award  :  Medal,  At- 
lanta   Exp.,    1885. 

BREDIN,     R.    Sloan,    New    Hope,    Bucks 
County,   Pa. 

P.,    T.— Born    Butler,    Butler    Co.,    Pa., 
Sept.  9,  1881.     Pupil  of  Chase,  Du  Mond 

and  Beckwith.  Member:  ANA,  1921 
Allied  AA;  Salma.C;  Inter.  Soc.  AL 
NAC  (life);  Rochester  AC.  Awards 
Second  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD,  1914 
bronze  medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  P.,  1915 
Maynard  Portrait  prize,  NAD,  1921 
prize,  Salmagundi  Club,  1921.  Work 
"Midsummer,"  Minneopilas  Art  Society, 
and  in  the  National  Arts  Club. 


BREGLER,  Charles,  4935  North  11th  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P.,  S.,  C— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil 
of  Thomas  Eakins;  PAFA;  ASL  of 
New  York.  Member:  Fellowship 
PAFA. 

BREGY,  Edith  IVl(aurice),  1627  Sansom 
St.,  2023  North  Broad  St.,  Philadel- 
phia, Pa.;  summer.  Spring  Lake,  N.  J. 
P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
Phila.  School  of  Design  for  Women, 
PAFA,  Snell,  Beaux,  Carlsen  and 
Woodbury.  Member:  Plastic  C. ; 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila.  Alliance. 
Work:  "Pink  Roses,"  Herron  Art 
Institute,  Indianapolis,  Ind. 

BREHM,  George,  15  West  67th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

I.,  T.— Born  Anderson,  Ind.,  Sept.  30, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Forsyth,  Twachtman, 
Bridgman  and  Du  Mond.  Member: 
SL 

BREHM,   Worth,  15  West   67th   St.,   New 
York,    N.   Y.;   Norwalk,    Conn. 
I.— Born   Anderson,    Ind.,    Aug.    8,    1883. 
Pupil  of  John  Herron  Inst.;   AIC;   ASL 
of  N.Y.     Member:  SI  1910;  Salma.C. 

BREITMAYER,  M.  V.,  25^  East  Main  St., 
Jackson,  Mich. 

E.— M  ember:  Chicago  SE;  Fellow- 
ship PAFA. 

BREMER,  Anne,  Studio  Bldg.,  1369  Post 
St.,  San  Francisco,  Cal. 
P. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.  Pupil  of 
Mark  Hopkins  Inst,  of  Art,  San  Fran- 
cisco; ASL  of  N.  Y.;  La  Palette  and 
Academie  Moderne,  Paris.  Member: 
San  F.  Art  Assoc;  Calif.  A.  C. 
Award:  Bronze  medal,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  P.,  1915;  silver  medal,  San  P.  AA. 
1918.  Work:  "Memorial  Panel," 
Y.  W.  C.  A.,  San  Jose,  Cal.;  Del  Monte 
Art  Gallery,  Monterey,  Calif. ;  Beth.any 
College,  Lindsborg,  Kan.;  mural  decor- 
ation, Mt.  Zion  Hospital;  Palace  of 
Pine  Arts,  San  Francisco,  Cal;  Mills 
College,  Oakland  Art  Gallery,  Oakland, 
Calif. 

BREMOND,     Jean      Louis,     29     Rue     de 

I'Yvette,  Paris,  France. 

E. — M  ember:    Chicago  SE. 

BRENNAN,    Alexander    Joseph,    14    West 

98th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born     New     York,     May     18,     1881. 

Member:     S.  Indp.  A.;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A. 
BRENNAN,    Mrs.   A.    L.      See  Arrah   Lee 

Gaul. 

BRENNEN,  Charles,  Westfield,  N.  J. 
I. — M  ember:     SI. 

BRENNER,   Victor   D(avid),   18   East   8th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

S., Medalist. — Born  Shavely,  Russia, 
June  12,  1871.  Pupil  of  Louis  Oscar 
Roty.  Came  to  New  York  in  1890. 
Member:  NSS  1902;  N.Y.Arch.Lg. 
1902;  NAC.  Awards  :  Bronze  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  hon.  men.,  Paris  Salon, 
1900;  bronze  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901:  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  gold  medal,  Brussels  Exp.,  1910; 
silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  P.,  1915. 
Work:  Set  of  medals  in  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  Pine  Craftsmanship 


361 


BRETT 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  AHT 


BRIDGMAN 


Medal  for  School  Art  League  of  New 
York,  1911;  Schenley  memorial  fountain, 
Pittsburgh,  1917;  represented  in  Paris 
Mint;  Luxembourg,  Paris;  Munich 
Glyptothek,  Vienna  Numismatic  Soc; 
Am.  Numismatic  Soc,  New  York;  Bos- 
ton Museum  of  Fine  Arts;  Mint  in  Phil- 
adelphia; Art  Institute,  Chicago;  Minne- 
apolis Institute. 

BRETT,  Harold  M.,  Fenway  Studios,  30 
Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  summer, 
North  Chatham,  Cape  Cod,  Mass. 
P.,  I. — Born  Middleboro,  Mass.,  Dec. 
13,  1880.  Pupil  of  Walter  Appleton 
Clark,  H.  Siddons  Mowbray  and  How- 
ard  Pyle.     Member:   Boston  AC. 

BREUER,    H(enry)    J(oseph),   Lone  Pine, 

Inyo   Co.,    Calif. 

P.,  I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Aug.  16, 
1860.  Member:  San  F.  AA.  Awards: 
Silver  Medal,  Alaska-Yukon-Pacific 
Exp.,  Seattle,  1909;  gold  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,   San  Francisco,  1915. 

BREUL,  Harold  G(uenther),  57  West  10th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  251  Fruit 
Hill  Ave.,  Providence,  R.  I. 
I.— Born  May  6,  1889.  Pupil  of  Henry 
McCarter.  Awarded  Cresson  Schol- 
arship, PAFA.  Illustrates  for  Collier's 
and  McGraw-Hill  publications. 

BREWER,  Adrian  L(ou!s),  448  River 
Blvd.,  St.  Paul,  Minn. 
P.— Born  St.  Paul,  Minn.,  Oct.  2,  1891. 
Pupil  of  N.  R.  Brewer.  Member: 
Minneapolis  AC.  Award  :  Bronze 
medal,  'St.  Paul  Inst.,  1917;  silver  medal 
for  oils,   St.   Paul  Inst.,  1918. 

BREWER,  Alice  Ham  (Mrs.  F.  Layton 
Brewer),  241  Midland  Ave.,  Montclair, 
N.    J. 

Min.P. — Born  Chicago,  111.,  March  14, 
1872.  Pupil  of  AIC;  ASL  of  N.Y.;  Henry 
Mosler,  W.  J.  Whittemore  and  Rhoda 
Holmes  Nicholls.     Member:  NYWCC. 

BREWER,  Ethellyn.  See  Mrs.  Louis  De 
Foe. 

BREWER,  Nicholas  Ricliard,  Salmagundi 
Club,  45  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y., 
and  4  East  Ohio  St.,  Chicago,  111. 
P. — Born  in  Olmstead  Co.,  Minn.,  June 
11,  1857.  Pupil  of  D.  W.  Tryon  and 
Charles  Noel  Flagg  in  New  York. 
Member:  Chicago  SA  1891;  Salma. 
C,  1903;  Wash. AC;  N.Y.Municipal  AS; 
Nat.  AC;  Los  Angeles  AC.  Awards  : 
Second  prize,  Minn.  State  Art  Society, 
1912;  St.  Paul  Inst,  purchase  prize,  1915; 
First  prize  Illinois  State  Fair,  1917; 
Municipal  Art  League,  Art  Inst,  of 
Chicago  purchase  prize,  1921.  Repre- 
sented in  collection  of  portraits  of  gov- 
ernors of  Rhode  Island,  Wisconsin, 
South  Dakota  and  Minnesota,  and  in 
state  portrait  collections  of  Maine, 
Iowa,  North  Dakota;  and  Salmagundi 
Club,  New  York;  St.  Paul  Art  Institute; 
Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  Sioux  City 
High  School;  Municipal  Art  League, 
Decatur,  111.;  University  of  Oklahoma 
and   University   of  Minnesota. 

BREWSTER,  Amanda.  See  Mrs.  R.  V. 
V.    Sewell. 


BREWSTER,  Anna  Richards  (Mrs.  Will- 
iam T.  Brewster),  Hartsdale,  N.  Y.; 
summer,  Wakefield,  R.  I. 
P.,I.,S. — Born  Germantown,  Pa.,  Apr.  3, 
1870.  Pupil  of  Dennis  Bunker  and  H. 
Siddons  Mowbray  in  America;  Constant 
and  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS.  Award:  Dodge 
prize,   NAD,    1889. 

BREWSTER,  Eugene  V.,  175  Duffield  St., 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Roslyn, 
N.   Y. 

P.,  W.,  L.— Born  Bayshore,  N.  Y.,  Sept. 
7,  1870.  Self  taught.  Member: 
Salma.  C;  Allied  AA;  Brooklyn  SA. 
Editor,  The  Classic  Magazine  and  Mo- 
tion   Picture   Magazine. 

BREWSTER,  George  T(homas),  Ward's 
Point,  Tottenville,  S.  I.,  N.  Y. 
S.,T. — Born  Kingston,  Mass.,  Feb.  24, 
1862.  Pupil  of  Mass.  State  Normal  Art 
School;  Ecole  des  Beaux- Arts,  under 
Du  Mond,  and  of  Mercie  in  France. 
Member:  NSS  1898;  N.Y.ArchLg. 
1897;  NAC;  N.Y.Municipal  AS;  NSC; 
Nat.  Geographical  Soc.  Founder  Mod- 
elling Class  ASL,  1886;  Instructor  R.  I. 
School  of  Design,  1892-93.  Instructor  at 
Cooper  Union  since  1900.  Work: 
"Thomas  R.  Proctor,"  Utica,  N.  Y. ; 
"J.  Carroll  Beckwith,"  Library  of  New 
York  University;  "Robert  E.  Lee,"  for 
Hall  of  Fame,  New  York  City;  "J.  S. 
Sherman,"  Utica,  N.  Y. ;  "Indiana," 
Crowning  statue  at  Indianapolis; 
"Hope,"  Crowning  statue,  State  House, 
Providence,  R.  I.;  U.  S.  Senator  P. 
Walsh,  for  Augusta,  Ga. ;  "Defence 
of  the  Flag,"  Athens,  Pa.;  equestrian 
statue  of  W.  P.  Hussey,  Danvers, 
Mass.;  "Greek  Statesman"  and  "Greek 
Drama,"  Brooklyn  Institute  Museum; 
"Soldiers'  Monument,"  Maiden,  Mass.; 
"Bust  of  Bishop  Warren  A.  Candler," 
Atlanta,  Ga.;  "Alexander  Hamilton," 
Hamilton  College,  Clinton,  N.  Y. ; 
"First  Defender  Monument,"  Allentown, 
Pa.;  "Victory  and  Peace,"  Staten  Isl- 
and, N.  Y. ;  mural  portrait  tablets  of 
Judge  Andrews  and  Judge  BischofC,  Su- 
preme  Court,   New  York,   N.   Y. 

BREWSTER,     Isabel     (Mrs.     Samuel     D. 
Brewster),    635   Park  Ave.,    New   York, 
N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:   N.A. Women  PS. 

BREWSTER,  Julia,  216  Hope  St.,  Provi- 
dence,  R.   1. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence   WCC. 

BRIDGE,  Evelyn,  619  North  Michigan 
Blvd.,  Chicago,  111.;  summer,  Province- 
town,   Mass. 

Min.  P.,  E.— Born  Chicago,  111.  Pupil 
of  Ethel  Coe,  Fursman  and  Senseney. 
Member      Chicago  AG;   AIC  Alumni. 

BRIDGES,    Fidelia,   Canaan,    Conn. 
P.— Born    Salem,    Mass.,    May    19,    1834. 
Pupil  of  W.  T.  Richards.     Member: 
AWCS;  ANA  1873. 

BRIDGHAM,  Eliza.  See  Mrs.  Everard 
Appleton. 

BRIDGMAN,    F(rederic)    A(rthur),   5   Im- 
passe   de    Guelma,    Paris,    France;    and 
Lyons-la-Foret,   Eure,   France. 
P.,W. — Born    Tuskegee,    Ala.,    Nov.    10, 


362 


BRIDGMAN 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BROCK 


1847.  Pupil  of  NAD  in  New  York; 
Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  and  Ger6me  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1874,  NA 
1881;  Lotos  C;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.l899;  Paris 
SAP.  Awards  :  Third  class  medal, 
Paris  Salon,  1877;  second  class  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1878;  silver  medal,  Paris 
Exp.,  1889;  gold,  Munich,  1891;  second 
class,  Berlin,  1892;  first  class.  Antwerp. 
1894;  silver,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  silver, 
Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Legion  of  Honor 
1878;  officer  1907;  officer  of  Order  of 
St.  Michael  of  Bavaria.  Work:  "Pro- 
cession of  the  Sacred  Bull  Apis-Osiris," 
Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington;  "On  the 
Bosphorus,"  "An  Interesting  Game" 
and  "Oriental  Scene,"  Museum  of  the 
Brooklyn  Institute;  "Awaiting  His 
Master"  and  "Women  in  Biskra  Weav- 
ing the  Burnoose,"  Art  Institute,  Chi- 
cago, 111.  Author,  in  French,  of  "An- 
archy in  Art,"  "Vers  I'ldgal"  and 
"Winters  in  Algeria."  Author  of  a 
symphony  and  other  orchestral  compo- 
sitions. 
BRIDGMAN,  George  B.,  215  West  57th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Pelham,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T. — Instructor  at  Art  Students 
League  of  New  York. 

BRI DWELL,    Harry    L(oud),   287   McCor- 

mick   Place,   Cincinnati,    O. 

P.— Born   Leesburg,    C,    Aug.    13,    1861. 

Member:   Cincinnati  AC   (hon.) 
BRIGGS,  C.  A.,  care  New  York  Tribune, 

New  York,  N.  Y.     (Cartoonist.) 

BRIGHAM,  W.  Cole,  Harbor  Villa,  Shel- 
ter Island  Heights,  Suffolk  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P.,C.,T.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Jan.  11, 
1870.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.  Mem- 
ber: ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  A.  Aid  So. 
Specialty,   marine  mosaics. 

BRIGHAM,  William  Edgar,  460  Rocham- 
beau  Ave.,  Providence,  R.  I. 
P..  I.,  T.— Born  North  Attleboro.  Mass., 
July  29,  1885.  Pupil  of  Henry  Hunt 
Clark  and  Denman  Ross.  Me  m  b  e  r  : 
Providence  AC;  Boston  SAC.  Head  of 
Department  of  Decorative  Design,  Prov- 
idence.   R.    I. 

BRIGHAM,  Clara  Rust  (Mrs.  W.  E. 
Brigham),  460  Rochambeau  Ave.,  Provi- 
dence,  R.   I. 

P.,  C— Born  Cleveland,  July  25,  1879. 
Pupil  of  Blanche  Dillaye,  William 
Brigham.  Member:  Prov.  AC; 
Needle  and  Bobbin  Club;  Handicraft 
Club,  Providence.  Director:  In- 
dustrial Dept.,  Federal  Hill  House. 

BRINDESI,  Olympic,  care  of  Chester 
Beach,  207  E.  17th  St.;  h.  71  Thompson 
St.,    New  York,   N.   Y. 

S.— Born  Italy,  Feb.  7,  1897.  Pupil 
Chester  Beach,   A.    P.    Proctor. 

BRINGHURST,  Robert  P(orter),  21  Yale 
Ave.,  University  City,  Mo. 
S.,C.,T.— Born  Jerseyville,  111.,  Mar.  22, 
1855.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of 
Fine  Arts;  Ecole  des  Beaux- Arts  in 
Paris.  Member  :  St.  Louis  AG.; 
2x4  Soc.  Awards  :  First  class 
medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893; 
cash  prize,  Tennessee  Centennial,  Nash- 
ville, 1897;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 


1904;  medal  ($500),  St.  Louis  AG,  1915; 
Meston  prize,  St.  Louis  AG,  1916. 
Work:  "The  Artist's  Dream,"  Art 
Association,  Indianapolis;  "Awakening 
Spring,"  Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  rep- 
resented  in   St.   Louis  Museum. 

BRINKERHOFF,     RCobert)     M(oore),     50 

West  67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.— Born  Toledo,  O.,  May  4,  1879.  Pupil 
of  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Colarossi  Academy  in 
Paris.  Member:  SI  1912.  Illustra- 
tions in  Harper's,  Collier's,  etc.;  car- 
toons in  New  York  Evening  World, 
Evening   Mail,    etc. 

BRINLEY,      D(aniel)      Putnam,     Datchet 

House,  New  Canaan,  Conn. 
Ldscp.P.— Born  Newport,  R.  I.,  March 
8,  1879.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.;  studied 
in  Florence  and  Paris.  Member: 
NAC  (life);  N.Y.Municipal  AS;  MacD. 
C;  Am. PS;  Contemporaries;  Union  In- 
ternationale des  Beaux-Arts  et  des 
Lettres;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  Work:  Dec- 
oration for  Y.  M.  C.  A.  Convention 
Bldg.,  1919;  decorations  for  the  Hudson 
Motor  Car  Bldg.,   New   York,   N.    Y. 

BRINTON,  Caroline  Peart  (Mrs.  Christian 
Brinton),  Androssan  Park,  West  Ches- 
ter, Pa. 

P. — Born  in  Pennsylvania.  Pupil  of 
PAFA;  studied  in  Paris.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Plastic  C;  NAC. 
Awards  :  Mary  Smith  prize,  PAFA 
1898. 

BRISON,  Mary  J.,  36  West  Union  St., 
Athens,   O.    (P.) 

BRITT,  Ralph  M.,  456  East  South  St., 
Winchester,   Ind. 

P. — Born  Winchester,  Ind.,  July  19, 
1895.  Pupil  of  William  Forsyth. 
Member:  AA  of  Winchester;  Indiana 
AC.  Award  :  Hon.  mention,  India- 
napolis AA,  1918  and  1920.  Work: 
"Melting  Snow,"  Library,  Winchester, 
Ind.;  "Wood  Cutters,"  "November 
Weather,"  in  Public  Schools,  Lafayette, 
Ind. 

BRIXTON,  Harry,  67  Wellesley  St.,  Tor- 
onto, Canada.    (P.) 

BRITTON,  James,  Holbein  Studios,  117 
West  13th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer, Gloucester,  Mass. 
P.,I.,Engr.,W.— Born  Hartford,  Feb.  20, 
1878.  Pupil  of  C.  N.  Flagg,  A.  F.  Jac- 
caci,  George  de  F.  Brush,  R.  B.  Bran- 
degee.  Member:  Eclectics:  P-G;  Soc. 
Conn.  Artists.  Awards  :  First  prize, 
Farmington,  Conn.,  1902.  Work: 
"Portrait  of  William  Gedney  Bunce," 
Morgan  Museum,   Hartford,   Conn. 

BROBECK,  Charles  I.,  893  Locburne 
Ave.,   Columbus,   O. 

P.— Born  Columbus,  O.,  Sept.  29,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Columbus  Art  School  and  De- 
troit School  of  Fine  Arts.  Member: 
Col.  Pen  and  Pencil  C;  Col.  Soc.  Art- 
ists and   Sculptors. 

BROCK,    Emma    L(IIIIan),   Fort   SnelUng, 

Minn. 

P.,  I.,  W.— Born  Fort  Shaw,  Mont., 
June  11,  1886.  Pupil  of  Ernest  A.  Bat- 
chelder,    Mary   M.    Cheney   and   George 


363 


BROCKMAN 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BROWN 


Bridgman.  Award:  Poster  prize,  St. 
Paul  Inst.  1918.  Specialty,  illustration 
for  children. 

BROCKMAN,  Paul,  Carolina  Court,  Se- 
attle,  Wash.    (P.) 

BRODHEAD,      George      H(amilton),      194 
Harvard  St.,  Rochester,  N.  Y.;  summer, 
Marblehead  Neck,  Mass. 
P.,     C. — Born     Boston,     Mass.,     Dec.     5, 
1860.     Member:  Rochester  AC. 

BRODZKY,  H(orace),  141  East  27th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I.,  E.,  W. — Born  Melbourne,  Aus- 
tralia, Jan.  30,  1885.  Studied  in  Mel- 
bourne and  London.  Member:  "The 
Penguins";  Allied  Artists  Assoc,  Lon- 
don;  London  Group. 

BROEDEL,  Max,  Johns  Hopkins  Medical 
School;  h.  320  Suffolk  St.,  Guilford,  Bal- 
timore,  Md. 

I.— Born  June  8,  1870,  in  Leipzig,  Ger- 
many. Pupil  of  Leipzig  Acad,  of  Fine 
Arts.  Associate  professor  of  art  as 
applied  to  medicine,  John  Hopkins  Uni- 
versity. 

BROKAW,  Irving,  522  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer.  Mill  Neck,  N.  Y. 
P.,  W.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Mar. 
29,  1871.  Pupil  of  Bouguereau,  Ferrier, 
Julian  Academy. 

BROMWELL,     Elizabeth     Henrietta,     646 
Williams   Parkway,    Denver,    Colo. 
P.,    W.— Born    Charleston,    111.      Studied 
in     Denver    and     Europe.     Member  : 
Denver  AA. 

BROOK,    Alexander,    care   of   Mrs.    C.    R. 
Bacon,  Ridgfield,   Conn. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

BROOKE,  Lena  R.,  619  Boissevain  St., 
Norfolk,   Va.    (P.) 

BROOKS,  A(lden)  F(inney),  4357  St. 
Lawrence  Ave.,  Chicago,  111.;  summer, 
Hilaire  Cottage,  R.  F.  D.  No.  2,  Fenn- 
ville,   Mich. 

P., S.— Born  West  Williamsfield,  O.,  Apr. 
3,  1840.  Pupil  of  Edwin  White  in  Chi- 
cago; Carolus-Duran  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SA.  Awards  :  Yerkes 
prize,  Chicago  SA,  1892;  111.  State  Fair 
prize,  1895.  Work:  "Boys  Fishing," 
Union  Club,  Chicago;  "Gen.  George  H. 
Thomas"  and  "Judge  Kirk  Hawes," 
Public  Library,  Chicago;  "Gov.  Jno.  R. 
Tanner,"  Capitol,  Springfield,  111.;  "Isaac 
Elwood"  and  "James  Glidden,"  State 
Normal  School,  De  Kalb,  111.;  "Vice- 
Pres.  Sandison,"  State  Normal  School, 
Tej  re   Haute,    Ind. 

BROOKS,  Amy,  2  Colliston  Road,  Brook- 
line,   Mass. 

P.,I.,W. — Born  Boston,  Mass.  Pupil  of 
Boston  Museum  School.  Illustrates  own 
books,  such  as  "The  Dorothy  Dainty 
Books,"  "The  Randy  Books,"  and  a 
novel,  "At  the  Sign  of  the  Three 
Birches,"    "Prue   Series,"    etc. 

BROOKS,    Carol.      See   Mrs.    H.    A.    Mac- 
Neil. 
BROOKS,    Cora    S(malley),    524    Walnut 

St.,    Philadelphia,    Pa.;     h.    Lansdowne, 

Pa. 

P.— Studied    at    Phila.    Sch.    of    Design 

for  Women.  Member:     N.  A.  Women 


PS;  Plastic  C;  Phila.  Sch.  of  Design 
Alumni;  Phila.  Alliance;  l^g.  of  NY  a. 
Awards:  Hon.  mention,  Plastic  C. 
1920.  Represented  in  Pennsylvania 
State  College. 

BROUGH,  Walter  H.,  813  So.  58th  St., 
Philadelphia,   Pa.      (P.) 

BROUN,  Aaron,  Pocono  Bldg.,  229  4th 
Ave.;  h.  587  East  137th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

I.,  C. — Bom  London,  England,  Mar.  1, 
1895.  Pupil  New  York  School  of  De- 
sign, Beaux  Arts  Society.  Member: 
American  Bookplate  Soc. ;  Soc.  of  Pos- 
ter Friends:   Alliance. 

BROWN,  Alice  Van  Vechten,  Wellesley 
College,  W^ellesley,  Mass. 
P., T.— Born  Hanover,  N.  H.,  June  7, 
1862.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Abbott  H. 
Thayer  and  others;  studied  in  Europe. 
Member:  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Copley  S. 
1901;  Archaeological  Inst,  of  America; 
College  A.A.  Professor  of  Art,  Wel- 
lesley College  since  1897.  Author,  with 
William  Rankin,  of  "Short  History  of 
Italian    Painting." 

BROWN,  Arthur  William,  Van  Dyck  Stu- 
dios, 939  Eighth  Ave.;  h.  233  West  100th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.— M  ember:   SI  1910. 

BROWN,  Benjamin  C,  120  No.  El  Molino 
Ave.,  Pasadena,   Cal. 

Ldscp.P.,  E. — Pupil  of  Paul  Harney  and 
John  Fry  in  St.  Louis;  Laurens  and 
Benjamin-Constant  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Calif.  AC;  Calif.  PM;  Chicago 
SE.;  Lg.  NYA.  Awards:  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  bronze  medal,  Lewis  and 
Clark  Exp.,  Portland,  1905;  silver  medal, 
Alaska-Yukon  Exp.,  Seattle,  1909; 
bronze  medal  for  etching,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  prize  and  hon.  mention, 
Calif.  AC,  1916;  silver  and  gold  medal, 
San  Diego  Exp.,  1915;  bronze  medal 
for  etching,  Sacramento  Art  Exhibit, 
1917;  first  Black  landscape  prize,  Calif. 
AC,  1918.  Represented  in  Oakland  Art 
Gallery,  Public  Library,  Pasadena,  Cal.; 
Municipal  Gallery,  Phoenix,  Ariz.;  Sac- 
ramento State  Library;  Exposition  Park 
Museum,  Los  Angeles;  British  Museum; 
Smithsonian   Institution,    Washington. 

BROWN,  Bolton  (Colt),  National  Arts 
Club,  15  Gramercy  Park,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.,  E..  L..  W.,  T.— Born  Dresden.  N.  Y., 
Nov.  27,  1865.  Member:  NAC  (life); 
Instructor,  Cornell  Univ.;  Head  of  Art 
Dept.,  Leland  Stanford.  Jr..  Univ.  for  ten 
years.  Work:  "The  Bather,"  Na- 
tional Arts  Club,  New  York;  "Monterey 
Fishing  Village,"  Indianapolis  Art  Ass  >- 
elation;  "Sifting  Shadows"  and  "Farm- 
house in  Winter,"  Brooklyn  Institute 
Museum.  Series  of  lithographs  in  Brit- 
ish Museum;  lithographs  in  Brooklyn 
Museum  and  New  York  Public  Library. 
Founder  and  owner  of  The  Artists' 
Press.    New    York,    N.    Y. 

BROWN,  Charlotte  Harding  (Mrs.  James 
A.  Brown),  Smithtown,  L.  I.,  N.  .  Y. 
I.— Born  Newark,  N.  J.,  Aug.  31,  1873. 
Pupil  of  Phila.  School  of  Design  for 
Women;  PAFA;  Howard  Pyle  at  Drexel 
Inst.      Member:     Fellowship    PAFA; 


364 


BROWN 


WHO*S   WHO  IN  ART 


BROWN 


Phila.  WCC;  Plastic  C.  Awards: 
Silver  medal.  Woman's  Exp.,  London, 
1900:  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
silver  medal,  P. -P. Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Illustrations   for    "Century,"   etc. 

BROWN,    Dorothy    Hunter,    69    Arlington 
Ave.,    Providence,    R.    I. 
P. — M  ember:  Providence  AC. 

BROWN,  Ethel  Pennewill,  Frederica, 
Del. 

P., I.— Born  Wilmington,  Del.  Pupil  of 
Twachtman  and  Howard  Pyle.  Mem- 
ber: Phila.  Plastic  C;  Fellowship 
PAFA;  S.  In  dp.  A.;  Wilmington  So.  F. 
A.;    Phila.    Alliance. 

BROWN,  Fanny  Wilcox,  92  Fifth  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  C— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Oct.  10, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Bryson  Burroughs  in 
New  York.  Member:  S.Indp.A. ; 
Petrus  Stuyvesant  C.  Work:  "Youth," 
Y.  M.  C.  A.  Bldg.,  New  York  City; 
and   Wanamaker's,   New    York. 

BROWN,  Florence  Bradshaw  (Mrs.  Har- 
old Haven  Brown),  2007  North  Delaware 
St.,  Indianapolis,  Ind.    (P.) 

BROWN,  Francis  F.,  126i4  S.  W.  7th  St., 
Richmond,   Ind. 

P.,  T. — Born  Glassboro,  N.  J.,  Jan.  19, 
1891.  Pupil  of  J.  Ottis  Adams  and  Wil- 
liam Forsyth.  Member:  Indiana  AC. 
Awards  :  Prizes,  Indiana  State  Fair, 
1915,  1916,  1917,  1918,  1919  and  1920;  hon. 
mention,  Herron  Art  Inst.,  1918  and 
1919;  Art  Asso.  Prize,  Herron  Art  Inst., 
1920;  Foulke  Prize,  Richmond  AA.,  1920. 
Represented  in  Richmond  Public  Art 
Gallery  and  Herron  Art  Institute. 

BROWN,  Frank  A.,  care  of  The  Salma- 
gundi Club,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  h.  Machiasport,  Me. 
P. — Born  Beverley,  Mass.,  April  21, 
1876.  Pupil  of  Louis  Kronberg;  Julian 
in  Paris.      Member:     Salma.    C. 

BROWN,  George  Bacon,  84  Remsen  St., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  care  J.  S. 
Markey,  North  St.  Paul,  Minn. 
P. — Born  Ogdensburg,  N.  Y.,  April  9, 
1893.  Pupil  of  Chicago  A.I.,  of  Lee 
Woodward  Zeigler  at  St.  Paul  Institute. 
Member:  St.  Paul  A.S.  Work: 
Mural  decoration  in  Elks  Club,  St.  Paul, 
Minn. 

BROWN,  Glenn  Madison,  808  Seventeenth 
St.,  N.  W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
1^,  E.— Born  Hartford,  Conn.,  Oct.  28, 
1876.  Pupil  of  E.  C.  Messer  in  Washing- 
ton; ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Julian  Academy, 
Laurens,   Prinet  and  Colarossi  in  Paris. 

BROWN,  Grace  Evelyn,  Trinity  Bldg.,  168 
Dartmouth  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  27 
Hollis  St.,  Newton,  58,  Mass. 
P.,  I..  W.,  L. — Born  Beverly,  Mass.,  Nov. 
24,  1873.  Pupil  of  Joseph  De  Camp, 
Albert  H.  Munsell  and  Vesper  L.  George. 
Member:  S.Indp.A.;  Copley  S. 
Writer  of  short  stories,  poems,  essays 
and  articles. 

BROWN,  Harold  Haven,  care  of  John 
Herron  Art  Institute,  Indianapolis,  Ind. 
P.,I.,T. — Born  Maiden,  Mass.,  June  6, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art  School; 
Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  under  Gerome, 
and  Julian  Academic  under  Laurens  in 


Paris.  Award  :  Bronze  medal,  Pan- 
Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901.  Director,  John 
Herron  Art  Institute,  Indianapolis,  1914- 
1921. 

BROWN,  Harrison  Paul,  42  Macomb  St.; 
h.  104  Clinton  St..  Mt.  Clemens,  Mich. 
P.,  C,  T. — Born  Waterloo,  Ind.,  Jan. 
29,  1889.  Pupil  of  Walter  M.  Clute 
F.  F.  Fursman,  George  Senseney,  Well- 
ington Reynolds.  Member  :  Ind. 
AC. 

BROWN,  Helen  Parrish,  Stony  Brook, 
L.    I.,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

BROWN,    Horace,   Springfield,    Vt. 
P.— Born    Rockford,    111.,    Oct.    23,    1876. 
Pupil   of  John   Carlson;   John   Johansen, 
W.  L.  Lathrop.     Member:  Salma.C; 
Allied  AA. 

BROWN,  Howard  V.,  131  West  23d  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Lexington,  Ky.,  July 
5,  1878.  Studied  at  AIC,  and  ASL  of 
N.  Y.  M  e  m  b  e  r  :  SI  1910.  First  as- 
sistant, Fawcett  School  of  Industrial 
Arts,    Newark,    N.    J. 

BROWN,    Howell   C(hambers),   120   North 
El   Molino    Ave.,    Pasadena,    Cal. 
E.— Born    Little    Rock,    Ark.,    July    28, 

1880.  Member:  Calif.  SE. ;  Calif. 
P.M.;  Chicago  SE;  Brooklyn  SE.  Rep- 
resented in  the  Museum  of  History,  Sci- 
ence and  Art,   Los  Angeles. 

BROWN,   Irene,  Rome,  Italy;  h.  172  Pros- 
pect St.,  East  Orange,  N.  J. 
P.,    S.— Born    Hastings,    Mich.,    Feb.    26, 

1881.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Hawthorne  and 
Johansen.  Member:  N. A. Women 
PS. 

BROWN,  James  Francis,  51  West  10th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Niagara  Falls,  N.  Y,  Pupil  of 
NAD  in  New  York;  Collin  and  Bou- 
guereau  in  Paris;  Royal  Academy  in 
Munich.      Member:    Salma.C. 1904. 

BROWN,  J.  Randolph,  198  Dartmouth  St., 
Boston,  Mass. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

BROWN,   Lillian   Cushman    (Mrs.  Charles 

Lyman    Brown),    8    Eusworth    Terrace, 

Pittsburgh,   Pa. 

P.,    L.— Pupil    of    AIC:    ASL    of    N.    Y. ; 

Arthur    W.    Dow.      Member:    Nat'l 

Education     Assoc;     Western     Drawing 

and    Manual    Training    Assoc;    College 

AA. 

BROWN,  R.  Alston,  43  East  59th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

I.— Born  Xenia,  O.,  June  4,  1878.  Pupil 
of  Chase,  DuMond,   Mora,   Nowottny. 

BROWN,  Roy,  84  Grove  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  h.  Wilton,  N.  H. 
Ldscp.  P.,  I.— Born  Decatur,  111.,  1879. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Rafaelli  and 
Menard  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA; 
NAC  (life);  Allied  AA;  AWCS;  Salma. 
C. ;  Paris  AAA.  Award  :  Isidor  Prize, 
Salma.C,  1918.  Work:  "The  Dunes," 
Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  "Landscape," 
Northwestern  University,  Evanston, 
111.;  Springfield  Art  Assoc,  Springfield, 
111.;  Municipal  Art  Lg.,  Decatur,  111.; 
"Pines  and  Poplars,"  National  Arts 
Club. 


365 


BROWN 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


BROWNSCOMBE 


BROWN,  Ted,  "Chicago  Daily  News," 
Chicago,    111.     (Cartoonist.) 

BROWN,  Thomas  E.,  3358  Eighteenth  St., 
N.  W.,  Washington,  D,  C.    (P.) 

BROWN,  W(illiam)  Alden,  120  Dora  St., 
Providence,  R.  I. 

Ldscp.  P. — Born  Providence,  March  15, 
1877.  Pupil  of  E.  M.  Bannister;  R.  I. 
School  of  Design;  ASL  summer  class  at 
Woodstock,  N.  Y. ;  at  Lyme,  Conn.,  un- 
der Frank  V.  Du  Mond.  Member: 
Providence  AC;  Providence  WCC; 
Conn.AFA.  Work:  "Beside  Still 
Waters,"  Pen  and  Pencil  C,  Provi- 
dence, R.  I.;  "The  Oaks,"  Alpha  Delta 
Psi  Fraternity,  R.  I.  State  College, 
Kingston,  R.  I. 

BROWN,  Walter  Francis,  Palazzo  da 
Mula.  San  Vio  725,  Venice,  Italy;  and 
25  Orchard  PL,  Providence,  R.  I. 
P., I. —Born  Providence,  R.  I.,  Jan.  10, 
1853.  Pupil  of  Gerome  and  Bonnat  in 
Paris.  Member:  Providence  AC. 
Work:  "The  Acropolis"  and  "The 
Parthenon,"  Hay  Library,  Providence. 
Illustrated  "A  Tramp  Abroad,"  by 
Mark  Twain;  "Roger  Williams,"  by 
Charles   Miller. 

BROWNE,  Be  I  more.  Spray  Ave.,  Banff, 
Alberta,  Canada;  h.  R.  D.  No.  1,  South 
Tacoma,    Wash. 

P.— Born  Thomkinsville,  S.  I.,  N.  Y., 
June  9,  1880.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Carroll 
Beckwith;  and  Julian  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Soc.  Am.  Animal  P.  and  S. ;  Lg. 
of  N.Y.A. 

BROWNE,   Frances  E.,  11  The  Westmin- 
ster,   Walnut    Hills,    Cincinnati,    O. 
P. — M  ember:       Cincinnati    Woman's 
AC. 

BROWNE,  George  Elmer,  58  West  57th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  and  17  Place 
Vendome,  Paris,  France;  summer, 
Provincetown,  Mass. 

P.,  E.,  Lith. — Born  Gloucester,  Mass., 
May  6,  1871.  Pupil  of  School  of  Boston 
Museum  of  Pine  Arts;  Lefebvre  and 
Robert-Fleury  in  Paris.  Member: 
Salma.C.  1898;  A.Fund  S.  1902;  Paris 
AAA  1912;  AWCS  1915;  NAC  1915;  Al- 
lied AA  1915;  Societe  des  Arts  Moderne, 
Paris;  Salma.C;  Allied  AA;  P-G; 
NYWCC,  1917;  NAC;  ANA,  1919;  Beach- 
combers' Club;  Provincetown  AA; 
Brooklyn  SE;  Lotos  C.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal.  Mechanics'  Fair,  Bos- 
ton, 1895;  book  plate  prize,  Salma.C, 
1898;  George  Inness,  Jr.,  prize,  Salma.C, 
1901;  Isidor  prize,  Salma.C,  1915  and 
1917;  Vezin  prize,  Salma.C,  1919;  Shaw 
Purchase  Prize,  Salma.C,  1920;  Salma. 
Thumb  Box  prize,  1921.  Work  :  "The 
White  Cloud,"  and  "Edge  of  the 
Grove,"  Toledo  Museum;  "The  Wain 
Team,"  National  Gallery,  Washington; 
"The  Port,  Douarnenez  Brittany,"  Art 
Inst.,  Chicago;  "Coast  of  Brittany," 
Montclair  (N.  J.)  Museum;  "Autumn  in 
Finistere,"  Omaha  (Neb.)  Public  Li- 
brary; "Evening  in  Brittany,"  Erie 
(Pa.)  Art  Club;  "La  Guidecca,"  Union 
League  Club,  Chicago;  "The  Church, 
Montreuil,"  Kansas  University;  "After 
the  Rain,"  Milwaukee  Art  Institute; 
"Moonrise  in  Holland,"  University  Club, 


Milwaukee;  "Bait  Sellers  of  Cape  Cod," 
purchased  by  French  Government  from 
Salon  of  1904.  Instructor  of  drawing 
and  painting,  West  End  School  of  Prov- 
incetown,    Mass. 

BROWNE,  Harold  Putnam,  Dept.  Draw- 
ing and  Painting,  School  of  Fine  Arts, 
University  of  Kansas,  Lawrence,  Kas.; 
43  Elm  St.,  Danvers,  Mass.;  summer,  P. 
O.  Box  453,  Provincetown,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Danvers,  Mass.,  Apr.  27,  1894. 
Son  of  George  Elmer  Browne.  Pupil 
of  Caro-Delvaille  at  Colarossi  Acad- 
emy; Jean  Paul  Laurens  and  Paul  Al- 
bert Laurens  at  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris;  Heymann  at  Munich;  George 
Elmer  Browne  and  F.  Luis  Mora  in 
New  York.  Member:  Paris  AAA; 
Paris  AASC;  Provincetown  AA;  College 
AA.  Professor,  School  of  Fine  Arts, 
University  of  Kansas. 

BROWNE,  Margaret  Fitzhugh,  2636  West 
Somerset  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P., I. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  June  7,  1884. 
Pupil  of  Joseph  De  Camp.    Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA. 

BROWNE,  Matilda  (Mrs.  Frederick  Van 
Wyck),  142  East  18th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  Lyme,  Conn. 
P., T.— Born  Newark,  N.  J.,  May  8, 
1869.  Pupil  of  C  M.  Dewey,  H.  S. 
Bisbing  and  Julian  Dupre.  Mem- 
ber: N.  A.  Women  PS;  AWCS;  Lyme 
AA;  Artists'  Club  of  Newark;  Conn. 
AFA.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention, 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  Dodge 
prize,  NAD  1899;  third  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD  1901;  hon.  mention,  Conn.  AFA, 
1918;  Flagg  prize  ($100),  Conn.  AFA, 
1919. 

BROWNELL,  Matilda  A.,  1110  Carnegie 
Studios;  h.  322  West  56th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  in  New  York.  Pupil  of  Chase 
and   MacMonnies. 

BROWNELL,   Rowena   P.,  368  Thayer  St., 
Providence,   R.   I. 
P. — Member:    Providence    AC. 

BROWNING,  G.  W(esiey),  730  Third 
Ave.,  Salt  Lake  City,  Utah. 
P.,I.— Born  Salt  Lake  City,  Sept.  24, 
1868.  Member:  Soc.  Utah  Artists; 
Utah  Art  Inst.  Award  :  First  prize 
'for  water  color,  Utah  Art  Institute. 
Illustrations    on    nature    study. 

BROWNLOW,      C(harles)      V(ictor),      435 

Hansberry   St.,    Philadelphia,   Pa. 

P.— Born    in    England,     May    28,     1863. 

Pupil  of  J.  W.  Whymper. 

BROWNSCOMBE,    Jennie    (Augusta),    96 

Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer, 
Palenville,  Greene  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  HonesJdale,  Pa.,  Dec.  10,  1850. 
Pupil  of  L.  E.  Wilmarth,  NAD,  and 
ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Henry  Mosler  in  Paris. 
Member:  NAC;  N.Y.Municipal  AS; 
N.  A.  Women  PS;  Washington  AC. 
Work:  "First  Thanksgiving,"  Mu- 
seum of  Pilgrim  Hall,  Plymouth,  Mass. 
Specialty,  historical  figure  subjects, 
many  of  which  have  been  reproduced 
as  etchings,  etc. 


366 


BRUBAKER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


BUCK  LIN 


BRUBAKER,  J(ay)  O.,  32  West  47th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Valhalla, 
N.   Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Dixon.  111.,  Oct.  5,  1875. 
Pupil  of  Bridgman  and  Julian.  Mem- 
ber:    Guild   of  Free  Lance  A. 

BRUESTLE,  George  M.,  U?,  East  23d  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer.  Lyme,  Conn. 
Ldscp.P.,T.— Born  New  York,  Dec.  22, 
1872.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under 
Mowbray;  Colarossi  Academy  under 
Courtois  and  of  Aman-Jean  in  Paris. 
Member:  Artists'  Club  of  Lyme; 
Salma.C;  Allied  AA.  Work:  "After- 
noon Landscape,"  Gibbes  Memorial 
Museum,  Charleston,  S.  C. ;  "Brown  Hill- 
side,"  Reading-   (Pa.)    Museum. 

BRUMBACK,      Mrs.      Louise     Upton,     118 

East  19th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer, The  House  on  the  Hill,  Gloucester, 


P.,  W.,  L.— Born  Rochester,  N.  Y.  Pupil 
of  Chase.  Member:  N. A. Women  PS; 
NAC;  Pen  and  Brush  C.  Award: 
First  Moore  prize  ($100),  Artists  of 
Kansas  City  and  vicinity,  1915.  Rep- 
resented at  Art  Association,  Omaha, 
Nebr. ;  Memorial  Gallery,  Rochester,  N. 
Y. 

BRUMMER,    Beata    Mortensson,    43    East 
57th   St.,   New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

BRUNDAGE,  Frances  I.  (Mrs.  W.  T. 
Brundage),  311  Decatur  St.,  Brooklyn, 
N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Newark.  N.  J.,  June  28,  1854. 
Pupil  of  her  father,  Rembrant  Lock- 
wood. 

BRUNDAGE.  W(illiam)   T(yson),  311  De- 
catur 'St.,   Brooklyn,   New  York,  N.  Y. 
P., I. — Born    New   York,    N.    Y.,    Jan.    14. 
1849.     Pupil  of  Shirlaw  at  ASL  of  N.Y. 
Member:   Salma.C;  ASL  of  N.Y. 

BRUNNER,  F(rederick)  Sands,  6033  Web- 
ster St.,   Philadelphia,  Pa. 
L— Born   Boyertown,    Pa.,   July  27,   1886. 
Pupil  of  Herman  Deigendesch. 

BRUSH,  George  de  Forest,  9  MacDougal 
Allev,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Dub- 
lin,   N.   H. 

P.— Born  Shelbyville,  Tenn.,  Sept.  28, 
1855.  Pupil  of  Gerome  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1888;  NA  1908;  A. 
Fund  S;  SAA  1880;  Nat.Inst.A.L.;  Am. 
Acad. A. L.  Awards  :  First  Hallgarten 
prize,  NAD  1888;  medal,  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  Temple  gold  medal. 
PAFA  1897;  gold  medal,  Paris  Exp., 
1900;  gold  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  Saltus  medal,  NAD  1909.  Work: 
"In  the  Garden"  and  "Henry  George," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
"Mother  and  Child,"  Corcoran  Gallery, 
Washington;  "Portrait  of  a  T.ady."  Car- 
negie institute,  Pittsburgh;  "Mother 
and  Child,"  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Bos- 
ton; "The  Moose  Chase,"  National  Gal- 
lery, Washington;  "Mother  and  Child," 
Pennsylvania  Academy,  Philadelphia; 
"Young  Violinist,"  Worcester  Art  Mu- 
seum; "Mother  and  Child,"  Brooklyn 
Museum. 


BRYANT,  Everett  Lloyd,  care  of  Alley  & 
Trask,  52  East  53rd  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.— Born    Gallon,     O.,     1864.       Pupil     of 
Blanc  and  Couture  in  Paris;  Herkomer 
in  London;  Anshutz,  Chase  and  Breck- 
enridge    in    Philadelphia.      Member 
Fellowship     PAFA;      Phila.     Sketch     C 
Phila.    WCC;    Charcoal    C.      Award 
Silver    medal,    P.-P.Exp.,    San    F.,    1915 
Specialty,    flowers.     Work:    "Asters,' 
Pennsylvania     Academy     of     the     Fine 
Arts,     Philadelphia;      "A     Study,"     St. 
Paul  Institute. 

BRYANT,  Mrs.  Maude  D.,  Hendrioks,  Pa. 
P. — Born  Wilmington,  Del.,  May  11, 
1SS0.  Punil  of  PAFii  under  >nshutz. 
Breckenridge  and  Chase;  Colarossi 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  Char- 
coal C;  N.  A.  Women  PS.  Award: 
Ball  prize  ($100),  Charcoal  C.  1914. 
Work  :  "Calendula  and  Aster,"  Penn- 
sylvania Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts; 
"Pompons  and  Doll,"  Fellowship  PAFA, 
Phila. 

BRYANT,  Mrs.  Nanna  Matthews,  9  Ex- 
eter St.,    Boston,    Mass.      (S.,   P.) 

BRYANT,  Wallace,  Cosmos  Club,  Wash- 
ington,  D.   C. 

Port.  P. — Born  in  Boston.  Pupil  of 
Constant,  Laurens,  Robert-Fleury  and 
Bouguereau  in  Paris. 

BUCCINI,    Alberto,    347    Fifth    Ave.,    New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

BUCHANAN,  Ella,  1539  North  Edgemont, 
Los  Angeles,   Calif. 

S. — Born  Preston,  Canada.  Pupil  of 
Charles  J.  Mulligan.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;  Cal.  AC.  Award:  First 
prize,  Calif.  Liberty  Fair.  1918;  second 
Moore  prize,  Calif.  AC.  1918;  Utah  Mor- 
mon Memorial  Prize.  Work  :  "Martha 
Baker  Memorial,"  Chicago;  "Pete"  and 
"Dry  Water  Hole,"  Southw^est  Museum, 
Los  Angeles,  Calif. 

BUCHANAN,  Luvena,  see  Mrs.  E.  A. 
Vysekal. 

BUCHBINDER.  D.  G.,  315  East  End  Ave., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:   AA   Pittsburgh. 

BUCK,     Charles    Claude,     495    East    188th 

St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.,    S.,    E.,    T.— Born    New    York    City, 

July    3,    1890.      Pupil    of    Emil    Carlsen 

and   Francis   C.   Jones. 
BUCK,   Emma  G.,  1732  North  Shore  Ave., 

Chicago,   111. 

P.,    S.,   C— Born   Chicago,   111.,   Feb.   16, 

1888.        Pupil      of      Charles      Mulligan. 

Member:     Chicago  AG;  Chicago  AC; 

Boston      SAC.         Work:         Wisconsin 

Perry's   Centennial   medal. 

BUCKHAM,    Charles   W.,    175   Fifth   Ave., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P.— M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

BUCKLIN,  W(illiam)  S(avery),  River- 
side, Conn.;  summer.  Law's  Farm, 
Fitchburg,   Mass. 

P.— Born  Phalanx,  N.  J.,  Oct.  2,  1851. 
Pupil  of  Normal  Art  School  in  Boston; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Rondel  in  New  York. 
Member:    ASL  of  N.  Y. 


367 


BUDD 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BURBANK 


BUDD,  Charles  Jay,  119  East  18th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  218  North  Grove 
St.,  'East  Orange.  N.  J. 
P., I. — Born  S.  Schodack,  Rensselaer  Co., 
N.  Y.,  Feb.  14,  1859.  Pupil  of  PAFA 
under  Eakins;  ASL  of  N.Y.  Mem- 
ber: Phila. Sketch  C.  Specialty,  chil- 
dren's books. 

BUDD,  Katherine  Cotheal,  527  Fifth  Ave., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P., I., Arch.— Pupil  of  William  M.  Chase. 

BUDELL.  Ada,  76  Washington  PL,  New 
York.    N.   Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Westfield,  N.  J.,  June  19, 
1873.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber: N.  A.  Women  PS.  Illustrated 
numerous  books  for  children. 

BUDWORTH,  William  S(ylvester),  615 
South  Eighth  Ave.,  Mt.  Vernon,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Sept.  22, 
1861.  Self-taught.  Awards:  Silver 
medals  AAS,  1902  and  1903;  second 
prize,  Atlanta  Fair,  1919  and  1920. 
Work   in   Rochester   (N.   Y.)    Museum. 

BUEHLER,     Lytton     (Briggs),    346    West 

58th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  Province- 
town.    Mass. 

P.— Born  Gettysburg,  Aug.  6,  1888. 
Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member:  Fellow- 
ship PAFA.  Award  :  European  trav- 
eling scholarship,  PAFA  1908.  Work: 
"Portrait  Maj.  Richardson"  in  Canan- 
daigua   (N.   Y.)   Public  Library. 

BUEHR,  Karl  Albert,  1727  Chase  Ave., 
Chicago,  111. 

P.,  T. — Born  in  Germany.  Studied  in 
England,  France  and  Holland;  pupil 
of  AIC.  Member:  Chicago  SA; 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904,  hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1910;  silver  medal,  Chicago  SA,  1914; 
Chicago  Municipal  Purchase;  silver 
medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  second 
Logan  medal  and  Butler  prize.  AIC 
1919;  first  medal,  Peoria  Society  of 
Allied   Arts  1920. 

BUEHR,  Mary  G.  Hess  (Mrs.  Karl  Albert 
Buehr),   1727  Chase  Ave.,   Chicago,   111. 
Min.P.,C.— Born  Chicago,  111.  Studied  in 
Holland  and  in  France;  pupil  of  AIC. 

BUERGERNISS,    Carl,    2819   West   Girard 
Ave.,    Philadelphia,    Pa. 
P. — M  ember:   Fellowship  PAFA. 

BUFFI  NGTON,   Eliza,  Madison,  N.  J.    (I.) 

BUFFUM,  Katharine  G.  Died  December, 
1921. 

I.— Born  Providence,  R.  I.,  Sept.  2,  1884. 
Pupil  PAFA.  Member:  Plastic  C, 
Fellowship  PAFA.  Works:  Illustrated 
"The  Secret  Kingdom";  "Mother  Goose 
in  Silhouette";  "Silhouettes  to  Cut  in 
School";  "Songs  of  Schooldays,"  etc. 
S'^ecialty:    Silhouettes. 

BULL,  Charles  Livingston,  Oradell,  N.  J. 
I., P.— Born  New  York  State,  1874.  Pupil 
of  Harvey  Ellis  and  M.  Louise  Stowell. 
Member:  NYWCC;  Salma.C;  NAC. 
Specialty,   wild  animals. 

BULL,    W.    H.,    San   Mateo,    Calif.    (P.,  I.) 

BULLARD,  Mrs.  Marion  R.,  Woodstock, 
N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Middletown,  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber:     N.  A.  Women    PS;     Conn,    AFA. 


Award  :  McMillin  landscape  prize 
($100),  N.A.Women  PS.  1916. 

BULLEY,    Rachel.      See   Mrs.    Trump. 

BULLOCK,  Mrs.  James  Cunllffe,  17  Han- 
over  St.,   Providence,   R.   I. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence   AC. 

BUMSTEAD,    Ethel    Quincy,    12    Berkeley 
St.,   Cambridge,   Mass. 

P. — Born  London,  England,  June  22, 
1873.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School; 
of  Abbot  Graves  and  of  A.  W.  Biihler. 
Member:    Copley   S.1893. 

BUNCH,    J.    Arnold,    3101    Brooklyn    Ave., 
Kansas  City,  Mo.    (P.) 

BUNDY,    John     Elwocd,    527    West    Main 
St.,    Richmond,   Ind. 

Ldscp.  P.— Born  Guilford  Co.,  N.  C, 
May  1,  1853.  Awards:  Mary  T.  R. 
Foulke  prize,  Richmond,  1911;  Hol- 
comb  prize,  Herron  Art  Institute,  1917. 
Member:  Richmond  Art  Assoc. 
Work:  "Blue  Spring,"  and  "Old 
Farm  in  Winter,"  Public  Gallery, 
Richmond,  Ind.;  in  City  Art  Museum, 
St.  Louis;  Public  Art  Collection,  Vin- 
cennes,  Ind.;  Art  League,  Muncie,  Ind.; 
Art  Assoc,  Rockford,  111.;  Art  Assoc, 
Sioux  City,  la.;  "Wane  of  Winter," 
and  "Beech  Woods  in  Winter,"  Art  As- 
sociation of  Indianapolis. 

BUNNER,   Rudolph    F.,   Ridgefield,   Conn.; 
Great  Kills,   S.   I.,   N.'  Y. 
P.,    L— M  ember:   NYWCC;    Salma.C. 
1890. 

BUONGIORNO,    Donatus,   Maddaloni,   Ca- 
serta,  Italy. 

Mural  P.,  T. — Born  Solofra,  Italy,  Nov. 
11,  1865.  Pupil  of  Roil  Inst,  of  Fine  Art, 
Naples.  Work:  "Apotheosis  of  the 
Evangelist,"  Church  of  St.  Leonard  of 
the  Franciscan  Fathers,  Boston,  Mass.; 
"St.  Charles  Borromeo,"  in  Church  of 
Sacred  Heart,  Boston;  "Fall  of  the 
Angels,"  in  Church  of  St.  Michael,  Brat- 
tleboro,  Vt.;  "The  Holy  Trinity,"  in 
Church  of  St.  Peter,  Boston;  "The 
Apotheosis  of  St.  Clara,"  in  St.  Clara's 
Church;  "Our  Lady  of  Peace,"  in  the 
Church  of  Our  Lady  of  Peace;  "Prin- 
cipal Episodes  in  the  Life  of  Christ, 
of  St.  Francis  of  Assisi,  and  of  St. 
Anthony  of  Padua,"  in  Church  of  the 
Most  Precious  Blood,  in  New  York  City. 
"Episodes  of  Christ  and  'St.  Charles 
Borromeo"  in  the  Church  of  St.  Lazarus, 
East  Boston,   Mass. 

BURBANK,  E(lbridge)  A(yer),  Stigler, 
Oklahoma;  h.  Harvard,  111. 
P.— Born  Harvard,  111.,  Aug.  10,  1858. 
Pupil  of  Academy  of  Design  in  Chicago; 
Paul  Nauen  in  Munich.  Member: 
Chicago  SA.  Awards  :  Yerkes  first 
Prize,  Chicago,  1893;  medals  and  hon. 
mention,  Atlanta  Exp.,  1895.  Since  1897 
has  made  portraits  of  over  125  types  of 
N.  American  Indians;  represented  in 
Field  Museum  and  Newberry  Library, 
Chicago,  and  Smithsonian  Institution, 
Washington,    D.    C. 

BURBANK,  William    Edwin,   Manchester, 
N.    H. 

P., T.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Oct.  6,  1866. 
Pupil  of  Cowles  Art  School  in  Boston; 
Laurens    and    Constant    in    Paris.      In- 


368 


BURCKHARDT 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BURN  HAM 


structor   of   drawing   and   painting   and 
one   of   Directors,    Manchester   Institute 
of  Arts  and  Sciences. 
BURCKHARDT,     H.     W.,     2346     Madison 
Road,    Cincinnati,    O.  .    .  ^ 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  AC. 

BURD,  Clara  Miller,  18  West  34th  St., 
New  York.  N.  Y.;  45  Myrtle  Ave.,  Mont- 
clair,  N.  J.  ,     ^_         _.     ,.    , 

p  I  c.— Born  New  York  City.  Studied 
in'  New  York  and  Paris.  Illustrated  "In 
Memoriam"  and  numerous  children's 
books;  designs  covers  for  magazines; 
paints  portraits  of  children;  designed 
and  executed  numerous  memorial  win- 
dows. 

BURDETTE,  Hattie  E.,  1419  G  St.,  N. 
W.;  h.  "The  Nansemond,"  Washington, 
D.    C. 

p' — M  ember:  S.  Wash.  A.;  Wash. 
WCC;   Wash. AC. 

BURDICK,    Doris,    Maiden,    Mass. 
P.,     I. — Born    Maiden,     Mass.,    May    21, 
1898.       Specialty:     Silhouette   por- 
traits. 

BURDICK,  H(orace)  R(obbins),  16  Park 
Ave.,  Maiden,  Mass.;  summer,  Went- 
worth,   N.   H. 

Port.  P.,  T.,  W. — Born  East  Killingly, 
Conn.,  Oct.  7,  1844.  Pupil  of  Lowell 
Inst,  and  Boston  Museum  School  under 
Hollingsworth  and  Grundmann.  Mem- 
ber: Boston  AC.  Awards  :  Medal 
at  Mechanics  Inst.,  Boston.  Work: 
Portraits  in  State  House  and  Faneuil 
Hall,  Boston;  Memorial  Hall,  Cam- 
bridge; New  Bedford  Savings  Bank  and 
High  School;  Berkshire  "  Co.  Court 
House;  Pittsfield  Berkshire  Savings 
Bank;  Berkshire  Life  Insurance  Co. 

BURGDORFF,  Ferdinand,  Bohemian 
Club,  San  Francisco,  Calif.;  summer, 
Carmel  Highlands,  Calif. 
P.— Born  Cleveland,  O.,  Nov.  7,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Cleveland  School  of  Art. 
Member:  Salma.  C.  Work:  "Old 
Wharf,"  Memorial  Museum,  San  Fran- 
cisco. 

BURGER,  A.  W.,  3  Suter  Terrace,  Roch- 
ester,   N.    Y. 
P. — Member:   Rochester  AC. 

BURGESS,  A(lice)  Lingow,  (Mrs.  W.  H. 
Warner),  1268  Quinnipiac  Ave.,  New 
Haven,    Conn. 

P.,  C,  T. — Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  Jan.  7, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Anton  Fabres,  W.  M. 
Chase,  W.  L.  Lathrop.  Member  : 
S.Indp.A. 

BURGESS,  Ida  J.,  Woodstock,  Ulster 
Co.,    N.    Y. 

P.,  C,  W.— Born  Chicago,  111.  Pupil  of 
Chase  and  Shirlaw  in  New  York;  Mer- 
son  in  Paris.  Member:  Chicago  SA; 
N.Y. Woman's  AC;  Pen  and  Brush  C. 
Awards  :  First  prize  for  competitive 
design  for  decoration  of  Reception 
Room,  Illinois  State  Bldg.,  World's  Fair, 
Chicago,  1893.  "Work:  "Youth  En- 
quiring of  the  Sphinx,"  "The  Libation 
Pourer,"  "The  Law,"  "Inspiration," 
mural  decorations  in  the  Ovington  Lunt 
Library,      North     Western     University, 


Evanston,  111.  Designed  many  stained- 
glass  windows  and  has  written  on  this 
subject. 

BURGESS,  Mrs.  R.  T.  See  Rosamund 
Tudor. 

BURGESS,  Ruth  Payne  (Mrs.  John  W. 
Burgess),  Athenwood,  Rhode  Island 
Ave.,  Newport,  R.  I. 

Port.P. — Born  Montpelier,  Vt.  Pupil  of 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Brush,  Cox,  Beck- 
with       and       Melchers.  Member: 

Hartford  Art  Academy;  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
ex-pres.);  N. A. Women  PS  (pres.  five 
years);  Providence  WCC;  Art  Asso.  of 
Newport,  patron  of  Metropolitan  Mu- 
seum. Work:  "Hon.  A.  B.  Hep- 
burn," Treasury  Bldg.,  AVashington; 
"Judge  Pierson  "  Public  Library.  Hol- 
yoke.  Mass.;  "Prof.  March"  and  "Dr. 
Daniel  Bliss."  Amherst  College;  "His 
Royal  Highness,  Prince  August  Wil- 
liam,"  Potsdam,   Berlin,   Germany. 

BURLEIGH,  Sydney  R(ichmond),  "Fleur- 
de-Lys":  h.  69  College  St.,  Providence, 
R.   I. 

P., I.— Born  Little  Compton,  R.  I.,  July 
7,  1853.  Pupil  of  Laurens  in  Paris. 
Member:  NYWCC;  Providence  AC, 
(pres.);  Boston  WCC;  AWCS;  Salma.C. 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  open  prize,  Buffalo  SA,  1913. 
Work:  "Landscape"  and  "Luxem- 
bourg Garden,"  R.  I.  School  of  Design, 
Providence. 

BURLIN,  Paul,  106  West  57th  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  L.— Born  New  York  City,  Sept.  10, 
1886.  Pupil  of  NAD.  Member:  Sal- 
ma.C. Inter.  Soc,  AL. ;  Contemporary; 
S.Indp.A. 

BURLINGAME,  Charles  Albert,  Nanuet, 
N.    Y. 

P.,I.,T. — Born  Bridgeport,  Conn.,  March 
29,  1860.  Pupil  of  Edward  Moran,  Wm. 
H.  Lippincott  and  J.  B.  Whittaker. 
Member:  Salma.C.  1908.  Nanuet 
Society  of  Painters.  Teacher  of  drawing 
and    State    Regents    for    thirty   years. 

BURLINGHAM,    Mrs.    Ethel    R.,    230    Mc- 
Cormick  PI.,   Mt.   Auburn,    O. 
P. — M  ember:     Cincinnati     Woman's 
AC. 

BURNHAM,  Anita  Willets  (Mrs.  Alfred 
Newton  Burnham),  1255  Asbury  Ave., 
Hubbard    Woods,    111. 

P.,E.,C.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  22, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Freer,  Vander- 
poel,  Du  Mond,  Cecilia  Beaux,  John 
Johansen,  Martha  Baker,  Lawton 
Parker;  etching  under  Ralph  Pearson. 
Member:  ASL  of  Chicago;  Cordon, 
Chicago;  Chicago  AC;  Chicago  SA; 
Chicago  AG;  Art  Fellowship  Assoc,  of 
AIC.  Work:  School  frieze,  Chicago 
Public    School. 

BURNHAM,  Roger  Noble,  5  Garden  Ter- 
race, Cambridge,  Mass.,  Honolulu,  T.  H. 
S.,  L.,  T. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Aug.  10, 
1876.  Pupil  of  Caroline  Hunt  Rim- 
mer.  Member:  Boston  Arch.C; 
Amer.Numismatic  Soc;  Honolulu  Art 
Society.  Awards  :  Avery  prize, 
N.Y.Arch.Lg.    1904;    first   prize    for    de- 


369 


BURNS  IDE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BUSH-BROWN 


signing  and  executing  scholarship 
medal  for  University  of  Calif.  Work: 
Four  colossal  figures,  City  Hall  Annex, 
Boston;  panels  on  main  doors  Forsyth 
Dental  Infirmary  for  Children,  Boston; 
"Uncle  Remus"  memorial  tablet,  At- 
lanta; medallion,  Johann  Ernest  Pe- 
rabo,  Boston  Art  Museum;  Carrington 
Mason  Memorial,  Memphis;  figure  of 
centaur,  head  of  Athena  and  Tritons  on 
Germanic  Art  Museum,  Harvard; 
Graham  Memorial  Fountain,  Chapel  Hill, 
N.  C. :  Lowry  Memorial  Fountain,  Hono- 
lulu, T.  H.;  medals  in  Herron  Art  Insti- 
tute, Indianapolis;  Boston  Art  Museum. 
Kansas  City  Fine  Arts  Institute;  In- 
structor at  School  of  Architecture, 
Harvard  University,   1912   to   1917. 

BURNSIDE,  Cameron,  86  Rue  Notre  Dame 
des  Champs,  Paris,  France. 
P. — Born  London,  England,  July  23, 
1887,  of  American  parents.  Pupil  of 
Rene  Menard,  Rupert  Bunny  and  Lu- 
cien  Simon  in  Paris.  Member: 
Societe  des  Artistes  Independants. 
Award  :  Silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915.  Work:  Painting  owned  by 
French  Government.  Official  painter  to 
American  Red  Cross  in  France,   1918-19. 

BURR,     G(eorge)     Brainerd,    Old    Lyme, 
Conn. 

P. — Born  Middletown,  Conn.  Pupil  of 
Berlin  and  Munich  Acad.P.A.;  ASL  of 
N.Y. ;  Colarossi  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  Allied  AA;  Salma.C; 
Lyme   Art   Asso;    Calif.    PM. 

BURR,    George    Elbert,    1325    Logan    St., 
Denver,    Colo. 

P., I., Etcher. — Born  near  Cleveland,  O. 
Pupil  AIC;  studied  five  years  in  Europe. 
Member:  Chicago  SE;  Denver  AA; 
Calif. SE;  Am.SE;  AI  Graphic  A;  Soc. 
Frangaise  aux  Etats  Unis;  Brooklyn 
SE;  Calif.  PM.  Made  illustrations  for 
catalogue  of  Heber  Bishop  Collection 
of  Jades  at  Metropolitan  Museum. 
Award  :  Silver  medal  for  etching, 
St.  Paul  Inst.,  1916.  Work  in  Li- 
brary of  Congress,  Washington,  D.  C. ; 
New  York  Public  Library;  Museum  of 
Newark,   N.  J. 

BURRAGE,    Mildred    G(iddings),    Kenne- 
bunkport.  Me. 

P. — Born  Portland,  Me.,  May  18,  1890. 
Pupil  of  Richard  Miller.  Member: 
Inter. A. Union,  Paris. 

BURRELL,      Mrs.      Louise,      1189      West 
Adams   St.,   Los  Angeles,   Cal. 
P. — Born    London,    England.      Pupil    of 
Herkomer.      Member:      A.   R.    M.    S., 
Calif.   AC. 

BURROUGHS,  Bryson,  67  Hillside  Ave., 
Flushing,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Hyde  Park,  Mass.,  Sept.  8, 
1869.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Merson, 
Julian,  and  Puvis  de  Chavannes  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1904; 
SAA  1901;  Cincinnati  AC.  Awards  : 
Silver  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  second  medal  ($1,000),  CI  Pitts- 
burgh, 1903;  third  prize,  Worcester. 
Mass.,  1904;  bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp,,  1904.  Curator  of  Paintings,  Met- 
ropolitan Museum  of  Art,  New  York. 
Work:  "Danae  in  the  Tower,"  Brook- 


lyn Museum;  "Ariadne  and  Bacchus," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York;  "The 
Fishermen,"  Chicago  Art  Inst. 

BURT,  Beatrice  IVIiiliken,  355  Union  St., 
New   Bedford,    Mass. 

Min.  P. — Born  New  Bedford,  Mass., 
Dec.  17,  1893.  Pupil  of  Del6cluse  and 
Mme.  Laforge  in  Paris;  Mrs.  Lucia  F. 
Fuller,  Mrs.  Elsie  Dodge  Pattee  and 
Miss  Welch   in   New   York. 

BURT,  Frederic,  Box  645,  Harrison,  N.  Y. 
S.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

BURT,  Louis,  3835  W^hite  Plains  Ave., 
Bronx,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  July  20, 
1900.  Pupil  Henri,  George  Bellows, 
John  Sloan.  Awards  :  Hon.  men- 
tion,   MacDowell    Club,    1916,    1917,    1918. 

BURT,  IViary  Theodora,  1203  Walnut  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of  PAFA; 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Member: 
Plastic  C;  Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila.  Al- 
liance. 

BURTIS,    iVIary    E(lizabeth),    406    Claren- 
don  PL,    Orange,    N.    J. 
P.— Born    Orange,    N.    J.,    June    8.    1878. 
Pupil      of     Mme.      Christine      Lumsden. 
Member:   S.   Indp.  A. 

BURTON,  S(amuel),  C(hatwood),  63  Riv- 
erside; h.  Campus  Club,  112  Church  St.. 
Minneapolis,  Minn.;  summer.  Province- 
town,  Mass. 

P.,  S.,  I.,  E.,  W..  L.,  T.— Born  Manches- 
ter, England,  Feb.  18,  1881.  Pupil  of 
Laurens  in  Paris;  Lanteri  in  London. 
Member:  Beachcombers'  Club,  Prov- 
incetown;  Chicago  SE;  Art  Masters  of 
England.  Awards  :  Third  prize  for 
painting,  1917;  second  prize  for  paint- 
ing, 1918,  and  bronze  medal  for  etch- 
ing, 1920,  Minnesota  State  Fair;  second 
prize  for  etching,  Minneapolis  Inst., 
1921.  Professor  of  painting  and  lecturer 
on  art,  University  of  Minnesota. 

BUSENBARK,    E.    J.,    117    East    27th    St., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

BUSEY,  Nerval  H.,  39  West  67th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  in  Christiansburg,  Va.,  Dec. 
28,  1845.  Studied  in  Paris  under  Bou- 
guereau.     Member:     Salma.C. 

BUSH,     Agnes     S(elene),     529     Belmont, 
North,   Seattle,  Washington. 
P. — Born     Seattle,     Washington.       Pupil 
of  Ella  S.  Bush  and  Paul  Morgan  Gus- 
tin.      Member:     Seattle  FAS. 

BUSH,  Ella  Shepard,  223  West  Laurel 
Ave.,  Sierra  Madre,  Calif. 
Min. P. — Born  Galesburg,  111.  Pupil  of 
J.  Alden  Weir,  Kenyon  Cox,  Robert 
Henri,  Theodore  W.  Thayer.  Mem- 
ber: P.  S.  Min.  P.;  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
Calif.  AC;  Seattle  Fine  Arts  Soc. 
Award  :  Prize,  Seattle  Fine  Arts 
Soc,    1920. 

BUSH-BROWN,  Henry  K(irke),  1729  G 
St.,  N.  W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
S. — Born  Ogdensburg,  N.  Y.,  Apr.  21, 
1857.  Pupil  of  NAD  in  New  York  and 
Henry  K.  Brown;  studied  in  Paris  and 
Italy.      Member   :     NSS    1893;    NAC; 


370 


BUSH-BROWN 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


BYRAM 


N.Y.Arch.Lg.l892;  S.Wash.A.  Work: 
Equestrian  statues  of  "Gen.  G.  G. 
Meade,"  "Gen.  John  Sedgwick"  and 
"Gen.  John  P.  Reynolds,"  Gettysburg, 
Pa.;  "Justinian,"  Appellate  Court,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  Memorial  Arch,  Stony 
Point,  N.  Y. ;  "Gen.  Anthony  Wayne," 
Valley  Forge;  "Mountaineer  Soldier," 
Charleston,  W.  Va.;  First  Philadelphia 
Regiment  Soldier,  Union  League,  Phil- 
adelphia; represented  in  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  National  Museum, 
Washington,  D.  C. 
BUSH-BROWN,  Margaret  Lesley  (Mrs 
H.  K.  Bush-Brown),  1729  G.  St.,  N.  W., 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Port.  P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  May 
19,  1857.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris  under  Lefebvre  and 
Boulanger.  Member:  Wash.  AC;  'S. 
Wash.  A;  Wash.  WCC.  Awards  :  Sil- 
ver medal,  Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  hon, 
mention,  PAFA;  bronze  medal,  Ashe- 
ville.  Work:  Portraits  of  Lincoln 
and  Lee,  Blue  Ridge,  N.  C. 

BUTENSKY,  Jules  Leon,  32  Union 
Square,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Ra- 
mah,  Pomona,  Rockland  Co.,  N.  Y. 
S. — Born  Stolvitch,  Russia,  Dec.  13, 
1871.  Pupil  of  Hellmer  and  Zumbusch 
at  Imperial  Academy  of  Fine  Arts  in 
Vienna;  Mercie  and  Alfred  Boucher  in 
Paris.  Work:  "Universal  Peace," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York;  por- 
trait of  former  president,  First  National 
Bank,  Brooklyn;  "Jacob  M.  Gordin  Me- 
morial," Seward  Park,  New  York; 
"Exile,"  White  House,  Washington, 
D.  C;  "Ames  Prize  Medal,"  Harvard 
Law  School;  "Goliath,"  group  at  He- 
brew Institute,   Chicago. 

BUTLER,  C(ourtland)  L.,  804  Kennedy 
Bldg.,    Tulsa,    Okla. 

P.,  Arch. — Born  Columbus,  O.,  Nov.  12, 
1871.     Member:    Pittsburgh    AA. 

BUTLER,  Edward  B.,  1608  Monroe  Bldg., 
Chicago,  111.;  h.  945  Sheridan  Rd.,  Hub- 
bard Woods,   111. 

P.— Born  Lewiston,  Me.,  Dec.  16,  1853. 
Pupil  of  F.  C.  Peyraud.  Member: 
Chicago  SA;  Chicago  AG;  Chicago  AC; 
Chicago  Munic.  AL;  Calif.  AC.  Work: 
"Clearing  Up — Long  Island  Sound," 
Chicago  Art  Institute;  "Misty  Morn- 
ing," City  of  Chicago;  "October  Mist," 
Chicago  Municipal  Art  League;  "Cal- 
ifornia Wheat,"  Los  Angeles  Museum; 
"Late  Afternoon— Berkshires,"  Union 
League  Club,  Chicago;  "O'er  Hill  and 
Dale,"  Crags  Club,  Los  Angeles,  Calif.; 
Cleveland  Museum  of  Art;  "Early 
Springs,"  Chicago  Public  School  Art 
Society. 

BUTLER,  Edward  Smith,  1001  Chapel  St., 
♦Walnut  Hill,   Cincinnati,   O. 
P.,C.,T.— Born  Cincinnati,  Jan.  26,  1848. 
Self-taught.       Member:       Cincinnati 
AC. 

BUTLER,  Mrs.  Helen  Sharpies,  Long- 
port.  N.  J. 

P.— Born   West   Chester,    Pa.,    Nov.    22, 
1885.       Pupil    of    Chase    and    Anshutz. 
Member:   Fellowship  PAFA;   S.Indp. 
A.;    Plastic    C. 


BUTLER,     Howard     Russell,     485    Maylin 
St.,   Pasadena,   Calif. 

P.— Born  New  York,  March  3,  1856. 
Pupil  of  Dagnan-Bouveret,  Roll  and 
Gervex  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA 
1897;  NA  1899;  SAA  1889;  NYWCC;  N.  Y. 
Arch.Lg.l889;  Century  Assoc;  AFAS 
(pres.  1889  to  1905);  Lotos  C;  NAC; 
Nat.Acad. Assoc,  (pres.).  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1886;  Tem- 
ple silver  medal,  PAFA  1888;  medal,  At- 
lanta Exp.,  1895;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am, 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Carnegie  prize, 
NAD,    1916. 

BUTLER,    James,    75    Washington    Place, 

New  York,   N.  Y. 

P. — M  ember:     S.Indp. A. 

BUTLER,    Mary,    2127    Green    St.,    Phila- 
delphia,   Pa. 

P.— Pupil  of  Chase,  Henri  and  Phila, 
School  of  Design,  PAFA  and  Redfield 
in  Philadelphia;  Courtois,  Prinet  and  Gi- 
rardot  in  Paris.  Member:  Fellow- 
ship PAFA  (1st  vice-pres.);  Plastic  C; 
Buffalo  SA;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Phila. 
Alliance;  Conn.  AFA;  Print  Club, 
Phila.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention, 
Buffalo  SA  1913  and  1914;  Georgine 
Shillard  gold  medal,  Plastic  C,  1918. 
Work:  "Goatfell  Mountain,"  Penn- 
sylvania Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts, 
Philadelphia;  "Ogunquit  Dunes,"  West 
Chester  State  Normal  School;  "Maine 
Headland,"    Williamsport    High    School. 

BUTLER,    Theodore     E.,    75    Washington 
Place,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp. A. 

BUTTON,    Albert    Prentice,    44    Boylston 
St.,    Boston,    Mass. 

P., I.— Born  Lowell,  Mass.,  Nov.  18,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Boston  art  schools.  Mem- 
ber: NYWCC;  Boston  SWCP;  Prov- 
idence WCC.  Work  in  Boston  Art 
Club. 

BUZBY,   Rosella   T.,  Fuller  Bldg.,   10   So. 

18th    St.;    h.    5153    Wakefield    St.,    Ger- 

mantown,   Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P.,  I. — Born  Germantown,  Philadelphia, 

Pa.,    Nov.    21.    1867.      Pupil    of    PAFA. 

Member:   Fellow.   PAFA;   Plastic  C. 
BYARD,   Dorothy   R.,  42  Barrow  St.,  New 

York,  N.  Y. 

P. — M  ember:     S.Indp. A. 

BYE,  Arthur  Edwin,  Langhorne,  Pa. 
P.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa., 
Dec.  18,  1885.  Pupil  of  School  Indus. 
Art,  Phila.;  Academie  de  la  Grande 
Chaumiere,  Paris;  John  Carlson  and 
Charles  Rosen.  Member:  College  AA; 
Salma.C;  Phila.  Art  Alliance.  Author, 
"Pots  and  Pans,  or  Studies  in  Still- 
Life    Painting." 

BYER,    Samuel,    439    South    Halstead    St.; 
h.   3342  West   Polk  St.,   Chicago,   111. 
P.— Born    in    Poland    in    1886.      Pupil    of 
AIC.      M  ember:     Palette    and    Chisel 
C. 

BYRAM,     Ralph     Shaw,     Lena     St.,     and 
Church    Lane,    Germantown;    h.    Roum- 
fort  Road,  Mt.  Airy,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.,I.,C. — Born  Germantown,  March,  1881. 


371 


BYRNE 


WHO*S  WHO  IN  ART 


CALIGA 


Pupil  of  Pa.  School  of  Industrial  Art 
and  of  C.  P.  Weber.  Member: 
Phila.Sketch  C. 

BYRNE,  Ellen  A(bert),  2022  N  St.,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C;  summer,  "The  River- 
side," Ogunquit,  Me. 

P. — Born  Fort  Moultrie,  S.  C,  Dec.  4, 
1858.  Pupil  of  Corcoran  School  of  Art 
In  Washington;  William  M.  Chase;  Si- 
mon and  M6nard  in  Paris.  Member: 
S.  Wash.  A. 

CADY,   Mrs.   Edwin  A.,  Warren,  R.  I. 
P. — M  ember:  Providence  AC;  Provi- 
dence  WCC. 

CADY,  (Walter)  Harrison,  The  Imperial, 
corner  Bedford  Ave.  and  Pacific  St., 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I. — Born  Gardner,  Mass.,  June  17,  1877. 
Member:  Salma.C;  SI  1911;  Illus- 
trated, "Rackety  Packety,"  "Queen 
Silver  Bell,"  "The  Spring  Cleaning," 
"The  Cosy  Lion,"  by  Frances  Hodgson 
Burnett,  etc.;  contributor  to  "Life,"  "St. 
Nicholas,"  "Saturday  Evening  Post," 
"Country  Gentleman,"  "Ladies'  Home 
Journal,"    etc. 

CAFARELLI,    M.    A.,    24    West    60th    St., 
New   York,    N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

CAHAN,  Samuel,  644  Riverside  Drive, 
New  York,   N.   Y.    (L) 

CAHILL.  Arthur,  San  Anselmo,  Cal. 
P.,  I.,  T. — Born  San  Francisco,  May  15, 
1879.  Pupil  of  Cal.  Art  School.  Mem- 
ber: Cal.  AA;  Bohemian  C,  San  Fran- 
cisco. Work:  "Governor  Hiram  John- 
son of  California,"  State  Capitol,  Cal.; 
"Congressman  Kent  of  California"  and 
"Templeton  Crocker"  in  Crocker  Art 
Gallery,  Sacramento;  "Chief  Justice  Ir- 
win,"   Bohemian    Club,    San   Francisco. 

CAHILL,  William  V(incent),  2625  Polk 
St.,  San  Francisco,  Calif. 
P.,  T. — Born  Syracuse,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Birge  Harrison  and 
Howard  Pyle.  Member:  Salma.C. 
Calif.  AC;  All  Arts  Club  of  San  Fran- 
cisco. Awards  :  Evans  prize,  Salma. 
C,  1912;  Vezin  prize,  Salma.C.  1913; 
Ackerman  prize  ($100),  Calif.  AC,  1917; 
bronze  medal,  Sacramento  Exp.,  1917; 
silver  medal,  Sacramento  Exp.,  1918; 
Black  prize  ($150),  Calif.  AC,  1919; 
first  prize,  figure,  Phoenix  Exh.,  1919; 
figure  prize,  Sacramento  Exp.,  1920. 
Work:  "Thoughts  of  the  Sea,"  Mu- 
seum of  History,  Science  and  Art,  Los 
Angeles;  "Summer,"  Municipal  Collec- 
tion, Phoenix,  Ariz.  Professor  of  draw- 
ing and  painting.  University  of  Kansas, 
1918-19. 

CAHILL,  Mrs.  W.  V.  See  Katherine 
Kavanaugh. 

CALDER,  Alexander  (Milne),  1724  North 
17th  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
S. — ^^Born  Aberdeen,  Scotland,  Aug.  23, 
1846.  Pupil  of  John  Rhind  in  Edin- 
burgh; studied  in  England;  came  to 
United  States  in  1868;  pupil  of  PAFA 
under  J.  A.  Bailly  and  Thomas  Eakins. 
Work:  Equestrian  statue  of  Gen. 
George  G.  Meade  in  Fairmount  Park, 
Philadelphia,  Pa.;  colossal  statue  of 
William  Penn  and  groups  on  City  Hall 


tower;  memorials  of  Chief  Justice 
Sharswood  and  of  John  McArthur  in 
City  Hall;  three  portrait  busts  in  Union 
League  Club,  Philadelphia;  represented 
in  PAFA  and  Drexel  Institute. 
CALDER,  A(lexander)  Stirling,  11  East 
14th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Jan.  11, 
1870;  son  of  Alexander  Milne  Calder. 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  Chapu  and  Falgui^re 
in  Paris.  Member:  NSS  1896; 
ACPhila.;  SAA  1905;  Fellowship  PAFA; 
ANA  1906;  NA.  1913;  N.  Y.  Municipal 
AS;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  1910;  Century 
Assoc;  Players';  Nat.Inst.A.L. ;  NAC 
(life);  Lg.  of  NYA.  Instructor,  NAD; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Awards:  Gold  medal, 
ACPhila.,  1893;  hon.  mention,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Lippincott  prize, 
PAFA,  1905;  grand  prize,  Alaska- Yu- 
kon-Pacific Exp.,  1909.  Work: 
Statues  of  Witherspoon,  Marcus  Whit- 
man and  Davies,  Presbyterian  Bldg., 
Philadelphia;  marble  sun  dial,  Fairmount 
Park,  Philadelphia;  monumental  arch- 
ways, Throop  Institute,  Pasadena,  Cal.; 
Lea  Memorial,  Laurel  Hill  Cemetery, 
Philadelphia;  Fountain  of  Energy,  etc., 
P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  "The  Star," 
Herron  Art  Inst.,  Indianapolis;  "Wash- 
ington Group,"  Washington  Arch,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  Depew  memorial  fountain, 
Indianapolis,  Ind. ;  "The  Island,"  Vis- 
caya,  Fla.  Represented  in  permanent 
collection,  Pennsylvania  Academy;  St. 
Louis  Museum  of  Art;  Franklin  Inn 
Club  and  Smithsonian  Institution 
grounds,  Washington,  D.  C;  Metropoli- 
tan Museum,  New  York,  N.  Y.  Acting 
Chief,  Dept.  of  Sculpture,  Panama-Pa- 
cific Exposition,    San  Francisco,   1915. 

CALDER,  Mrs.  Josephine,  1861  Parkwood 
Ave.,   Toledo,   O. 
P. — M  ember:    N.  A.  Women  PS. 

CALDER,      Ralph      M(ilne),      care     Paul 
Chalfin,   597  Fifth  Ave.;  h.   645  Lexing- 
ton  Ave.,    New   York,    N.    Y. 
P.,  A.,  T. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  April 

17,  1884.     Pupil  of  PAFA. 

CALDWELL,  L.  H.,  221  South  44th  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa.   (L) 

CALEWAERT,    Louis    H.    S.,   4316   Green- 
wood   Ave.,    Chicago,    111. 
P.,    E.,     S. — Born    Detroit.     Mich.,    Aug. 

18.  1894.  Pupil  Detroit  School  of  Fine 
Arts  under  Wicker  and  studied  in  Italy, 
'Sicily,  France  and  Belgium.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SE:  Calif.  SE.  Work 
in:      Toledo    Museum   of   Art. 

CALHOUN,  Frederic  D.,  Studio  17, 
Handicraft  Guild,  89  So.  Tenth  St., 
Minneapolis,   Minn. 

P. — Born  Minneapolis,  Minn.,  Jan.  12, 
1883.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Minneap- 
olis School  of  Art.  Member:  Min- 
neapolis  AC;    Minneapolis   AL. 

CALIGA,  l(saac)  H(enry),  1422  Federal 
St.,  Salem,  Mass.;  Provincetown.  Mass. 
P. — Born  Auburn.  Ind.,  March  24,  1857. 
Pupil  of  William  Lindenschmidt,  studied 
in  Munich.  Boston  and  Salem.  Mem- 
ber:    Salma.  C;  S.  Indp.  A.     Work: 


Z72 


CALKINS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


CANTER 


"Portrait  of  H.  F.  Waters,"  New  Eng- 
land Historical  and  Genealogical  So- 
ciety; "Portrait  of  Matliew  Robson," 
Salem  (Mass.)  Y.  M.  C.  A.;  "James  B. 
Colgate."  and  "Marcus  Waterman,"  New 
York    Chamber    of    Commerce. 

CALKINS,  Loring  Gary,  24  Milk  St.,  Bos- 
ton,   Mass. 

E.,  T.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  June  11,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Vanderpoel;  Charles  Francis 
Brown;  Freer.  Member:  AlC.  Alumni 
Assoc;  ASL,  of  Chicago.  Illustrated 
"Land  and  Sea  Mammals  of  Middle 
America  and  West  Indies." 

CALVERT,  Bertha  Winifred,  Fourth  Ave. 
and  Union  St.;  h.  1002  Acklin  Ave., 
Nashville,    Tenn. 

P.— Born  Nashville,  Dec.  6,  1885.  Spe- 
cialty,   ivory   miniatures. 

CALVERT,  E.,  238^  Fourth  Ave.,  North; 
h.  1002  Acklin  Ave.,  Nashville,  Tenn. 
P. — Born  in  York,  England,  May  4, 
1850.  Work  :  Portraits  in  Mercer 
University,  Macon,  Ga. ;  Vanderbilt  Uni- 
versity; Lake  Geneva,  Wis.,  Assembly 
Hall;   Masonic  Grand  Lodge,   Nashville. 

CALVERT,  Peter  R.,  Fourth  Ave.  and 
Union  St.;  h.  807  Sixteenth  Ave.,  South, 
Nashville,    Tenn. 

P. — Born  near  Leeds,  Yorkshire,  Eng- 
land, Apr.  14,  1855.  Pupil  of  John  Sow- 
den.     Specialty,  ivory  miniatures. 

CAMERON,  EdG^''  S^Dler),  10  East  Ohio 
St.,  Chicago,  111. 

Mural  P.,W. — Born  Ottawa,  111.,  May  26, 
1862.  Pupil  of  Chicago  Academy  of  De- 
sign; ASL  of  N.Y. ;  Cabanel,  Constant 
and  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member: 
Chicago  SA;  Cliff  Dwellers.  Awards  : 
Silver  medal.  Paris  Exp..  1900;  Grower 
prize,  AIC  1909;  Butler  Purchase  prize, 
AIC  1914;  Carr  prize,  AIC  1914;  Rosen- 
wald  purchase  prize,  AIC  1917;  Carr 
prize,  AIC  1917;  "Palmes  Academiques," 
Paris.  1920.  Work:  In  Chicago 
Historical  Soc. ;  Chicago  Union  League 
Club;  Supreme  Court  Library,  Spring- 
field, 111.;  "Youth  and  Moonlight,"  Chi- 
cago Commission  purchase.  City  Hall, 
1915;  "Cabaret  Breton,"  Art  Institute 
of   Chicago. 

CAMERON,   Elizabeth  W.,  240  Hazelwood 
Ave.,   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:   AA   Pittsburgh. 

CAMERON,  Marie  Gelon  (Mrs.  Edgar  S. 
Cameron),  10  East  Ohio  St.,  Chicago, 
111. 

P. — Born  Paris,  Prance.  Pupil  of  Mo- 
reau  de  Tours,  Cabanel,  Laurens  and 
Constant  in  Paris;  and  AIC.  Mem- 
ber: Cordon  C.  Award:  Prize, 
AIC,   1902. 

CAMERON,  W(illiam)  R(oss),  545  New 
Call  Bldg.;  h.  545  Duboce  Ave.,  San 
Francisco,   Calif. 

I.,  E.,  W.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y., 
June  14,  1893.  Pupil  F.  L.  Meyer,  Xav- 
ier  Martinez,  Nahl,  E.  Spencer  Mackey, 
Martin   Griffin. 

CAMFFERMAN,  Margaret  T.,  Langley, 
Wash.    (P.) 


CAMFFERMAN,       Peter       M. 
Wash.    (P.) 


Langley, 


273 


CAMPBELL.  Anne  Barraud,  1977  Bilt- 
more  St.,  Washington,  D.  C;  summer, 
Bremo  Bluff.  Fluvanna  Co.,  Va. 
Min.  P.— Born  Nelson  County,  Va.,  Aug. 
13,  1879.  Pupil  of  Alice  Beckington  and 
ASL  of  N.  Y.,  C.  C.  Critcher,  Corcoran 
Art  School,  Bertha  E.  Perrie.  Mem- 
ber:   Wash.    WCC;    Wash.    AC. 

CAMPBELL,  Blendon  R.,  147  West  Fourth 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  July  28. 
1872.  Pupil  of  Constant,  Laurens  and 
Whistler  in  Paris.  Member:  SI  1905; 
Paris  AAA;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.l911.  Award  : 
Third  prize,  Paris  AAA  1900.  Repre- 
sented in  Chicago  Art  Institute  and 
Wichita  AA.  Specialty,  figure,  land- 
scapes   and   portraits. 

CAMPBELL,  Edmund  S.,  36  East  Center 
St.,  Park  Ridge,  111.;  care  of  Chicago 
Art  Institute,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  T.— Born  Freehold.  N.  J.  Pupil  of 
Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology. 
Member:      Pittsburgh   AA;   NYWCC. 

CAMPBELL,     Floy,     4026    East    67th    St. 
Terrace,   Kansas   City,   Mo. 
P.,  L,  C,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Kansas  City, 
Mo.      Pupil    of    ASL    of    N.    Y.;    Simon 
and   Cottet,    Paris. 

CAMPBELL,  Mrs.  H(elena)  E(astman) 
Ogden,  The  Delaware,  520  West  122d 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer.  Twi- 
light Park,  Haines  Falls,  N.  Y. 
P.,  W.,  T.— Born  Eastman,  Ga.  Pupil 
of  Chase  School  in  New  York;  Grande 
Chaumiere  School  in  Paris.  Member: 
N. A. Women  PS;  S.Indp.A.;  Lg.  of  NYA. 
Work  :  "Portrait  of  Rt.  Rev.  Fred- 
erick F.  Reese,  Bishop  of  Georgia," 
owned   by  the  Diocese  of  Georgia. 

CAMPBELL,    Heyworth,    care    of   Vogue, 
19  West  44th  St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
I.— M  ember:     SI. 

CAMPBELL,     Mary,    Washington     Semi- 
nary, Washington,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:  Cin.  Woman's  AC. 

CAMPBELL,    Pauline,   1343   Harvard   St., 
Washington,   D.    C. 
P.— M  ember:   Wash.  WCC. 

CANDLER,   Eleanor  S.,  85  Putnam  Ave., 
Detroit,    Mich.    (P.) 

CANDLER,    Miriam    L.,   85   Putnam  Ave., 
Detroit.   Mich.    (P.) 

CANE,     Florence,     126     Riverside     Drive, 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

CANNON,    Beatrice,    1115    East    61st    St., 
Chicago,  111. 

P.,  W.,  T.— Born  Louisville,  Ky.,  July 
6,  1875.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Member: 
Alumni  AIC. 

CANNON,  Mrs,  Jennie  Vennerstrom,  1631 
La  Vereda  St.,  Berkeley,  Calif.;  sum- 
mer, Carmel-by-the-Sea.  Calif. 
P.,  W.,  L.  T.— Born  Albert  Lea,  Minn., 
Aug.  31,  1869.  Pupil  of  Bolton  Brown. 
Edgar  Ward  and  William  M.  Chase;  and 
I-ondnn  School  of  Art.  Member: 
San  F.  AA;  People's  Art  Guild. 

CANTER,     Albert     M.,     Mark  Bldg.,     721 

Walnut  St.;  h.  6226  Spruce  St.,  Phila- 
delphia,   Pa. 

P.,   T.— Born   Norma,    Salem  Co.,   N.   J., 


CANTRALL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


CARLSON 


June  1,  1892.  Pupil  of  Jos.  T.  Pearson, 
Jr.  Member:  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Graphic  Sketch  Club;  Alumni  Assoc, 
School  Ind.  A.,  Phila.  Work:  "Vir- 
g-inia  Road"  and  "Landscape,"  Graphic 
Sketch   Club   Gallery. 

CANTRALL,  Harriet  M.,  853  Grand  Blvd., 
Springfield,    111. 

P.,  T. — Born  near  Springfield.  Pupil  of 
Pratt  Inst.,  Dow,  Woodbury,  Townsley, 
Poore,  Van  Laer.  Member:  West- 
ern Arts  Assoc;  St.  Louis  AG;  Spring- 
field  Art  Assoc. 

CARBEE  (Scott)  Clifton,  110  Tremont 
St.,   Boston,   Mass. 

p..  T. — Born  Concord,  Vt.,  April  26, 
1860.  Pupil  of  Hugo  Breul  in  Provi- 
dence; Bouguereau  and  Ferrier  in 
Paris,  Max  Bohm  in  Florence.  Mem- 
ber:  Boston  AC;   Copley  S.1902. 

CAREW,  Mrs.  Berta,  Red  Acres,  Pine 
Forge,  Berks  Co.,  Pa. 
P. — Born  Springfield,  Mass.,  March  12. 
1878.  Pupil  of  Blashfield,  Mowbray  and 
Chase  in  New  York:  Carlandi  in  Rome; 
Mme.  Richarde  in  Paris.  Member: 
N.A.  Women  PS;  Pa.S.Min.P.;  Royal 
Soc   Min.P.,   London. 

CAREW,    Frank,   Pine  Forge,   Pa.    (P.) 

CARLES,  Arthur  B,  2007  Girard  Ave., 
Philadelphia,   Pa. 

P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 
Awards  :  Harris  bronze  medal  ($300), 
AIC  1913;  silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915;  Lippincott  prize.  PAFA,  1917; 
Stotesbury  prize,  PAFA,  1919.  Work: 
"An  Actress  as  Cleopatra,"  Pennsyl- 
vania Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts. 

CARLES,  Sara,  2007  Girard  Ave.,  Phila- 
delphia,  Pa.    (P.) 

CARLETON,  Clifford,  52  West  94th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Elizabeth- 
town,    N.    Y. 

L— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Nov.  7,  1867. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.  under  Mowbray. 
Member:  SI  1901.  Illustrated:  "Pem- 
broke," by  Mary  Wilkins:  "People  We 
Pass,"  by  Julian  Ralph;  "Their  Wed- 
ding Journey,"  by  Howells. 

CARLHART,   Genevieve   Acee,   131   River- 
side Drive,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

CARLISLE,  Mary  Helen,  24  West  40th 
St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 

P. — M  ember:  N.  A.  Women  PS. 
Award  :  McMillin  prize,  N.  A.  Wo- 
men   PS,    1914. 

CARLSEN,  Dines,  43  East  59th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Falls  Village, 
Conn. 

P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  March  28, 
1901.  Pupil  of  Emil  Carlsen.  Award: 
Third  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1919. 
Work:  "The  Brass  Kettle,"  The  Cor- 
coran Gallery  of  Art,  Washington,  D.  C. 

CARLSEN,  Emil,  43  East  59th  St.,  New 
York.    N.   Y. 

P. — Borji  Copenhagen,  Denmark,  Oct. 
19,  1853;  came  to  United  States  in  1872. 
Studied  architecture  at  Danish  Royal 
Academy.  Member:  SAA  1902; 
ANA  1904;  NA  t906;  Nat.Inst.AL;  NAC; 
Lotos    C;    Fellowship    PAFA    (assoc); 


Salma.C.  1903.  Awards  :  Second 
Inness  prize,  Salma.C.  1904;  Shaw 
Purchase,  SAA  1904;  gold  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.  1904;  Webb  prize,  SAA  1905; 
Inness  medal  NAD  1907;  Hurd  third 
medal,  CI.  Pittsburgh,  1908;  bronze 
medal,  Buenos  Aires,  1910;  Temple  gold 
medal,  PAFA  1912;  Lippincott  prize 
($300).  PAFA  1913;  silver  medal  NAC 
1915;  Sesnan  gold  medal,  PAFA  1916; 
Saltus  gold  medal,  NAD  1916.  Carnegie 
prize,  NAD,  1919.  Work:  The 
Open  Sea,"  and  "Still  Life,"  Met- 
ropolitan Museum,  New  York;  "Moon- 
light on  the  Kattegat,"  Albright 
Art  Gallery,  Buffalo;  "Morning,"  Rhode 
Island  School  of  Design,  Providence; 
"The  South  Strand,"  National  Gallery, 
Washington;  "The  Lazy  Sea,"  Brook- 
lyn Institute  Museum:  "Still  Life."  Art 
Institute,  Chicago;  "Open  Sea"  and 
"Woods  Interior,"  Minneapolis  Insti- 
tute; "Still  Life,"  Herron  Art  Institute, 
Indianapolis;  "Still  Life,"  Art  Museum, 
Worcester,  Mass.;  "Coast  of  Maine" 
and  "Entrance  to  St.  Thomas'  Har- 
bour," and  2  still  life  pictures.  City  Art 
Museum.  St.  Louis,  Mo.;  "Near  Wind- 
ham," Engineers'  Club,  New  York;  in 
permanent  collection  Lotos  Club,  New 
York;  Inst,  of  Art,  San  Francisco,  Cal. ; 
"Summer  Clouds,"  Pennsylvania  Acad- 
emy of  the  Fine  Arts.  Philadelphia; 
"Moonlight  on  a  Calm  Sea,"  Corcoran 
Gallery   of   Art,   Washington,    D.    C. 

CARLSEN,   John    H.,   5230  West  Congress 
St.,   Chicago,   111. 

P.,  E. — Born  Arendal,  Norway,  Dec.  16, 
1875.  Member:  Palette  and  Chisel 
C. ;  Chicago  SA.  Award:  Palette  and 
Chisel  Club  ($100).  associate  prize,  1916; 
gold  medal,  Palette  and  Chisel  C,   1918. 


CARLSON,    Harry, 

lyn,    N.   Y. 

P. — M  ember: 


1909— 59th   St.,   Brook- 
S.Indp.A. 


CARLSON,  John  F.,  care  of  Macbeth  Gal- 
leries, 450  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ; 
Woodstock,   N.   Y. 

Ldscp.P.,  T. — Born  in  Sweden,  1875. 
Member:  ANA  1911;  NYWCC; 
AWCS;  Salma.  C;  Wash.  WCC. 
Awards  :  First  prize,  Swedish  Amer- 
ican Exp.,  Chicago,  1911  and  1913;  Vezin 
and  Isidor  prizes.  Salma.  C,  1912;  silver 
medal.  Wash.  SA,  1913;  silver  medal, 
P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Carnegie  prize, 
NAD,  1918.  Work:  "Woods  in  Win- 
ter," Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington,  D. 
C. ;  "Woodland  Repose,"  Toledo  Muse- 
um; "Passing  Winter,"  Ol^erlin  College, 
Oberlin,  O.;  "Morning  Mists,"  Brooks 
Memorial  Gallery,  Memphis,  Tenn. ; 
"Autumn  Beeches,"  Public  Art  Gallery, 
Dallas,  Tex.;  "Winter  Dream  Days," 
Art  Association,  Lincoln,  Neb.  In- 
structor, Art  Students'  League  Land- 
scape   School,    Woodstock,    N.    Y. 

CARLSON,  Margaret  Goddard     (Mrs.  John 

Carlson),    Woodstock.    N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Plainfield,  N.  J.,  Apr.  6,  1882. 

Member:     N.A. Women  PS. 

CARLSON,  Mrs.  Margaret  Mitchell,  393 
Throckmorton  Ave.,  Mill  Valley,  Calif. 
L— Born  Deming,   Wash.,   Mar.   25,   1892. 


374 


CARMAN 


WHO*S  WHO  IN  ART 


CARTOTTO 


Pupil   of   Ella    Bush,    ASL.    of  N.Y.,    Pa. 

School    of   Design;    NAD.      Member: 

West  Coast  Arts,  Lag-una  Beach,  Calif. 
CARMAN,  Eva   L.,  939  Eighth  Ave.,  New 

York,   N.   Y.      (Min.P.) 
CARNALL,    James    Linton,    80    Columbia 

Heights,  Brooklyn,  N.   Y. 

P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 
CARNELL,  Althea  J.,  1907  North  7th  St., 

Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P.,I.,C. — M  ember:  Plastic  C.  (treas.) 

CARPENTER,  Charles  E.,  91  Cottage  St., 
Pawtucket,    R.    I. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence  AC. 

CARPENTER,  Dudley  Saltonstall,  Mining 
Exchange  Bldg.,  La  Jolla,  Calif. 
P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Nashville,  Tenn.,  Feb. 
26,  1880.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.;  Julian, 
Laurens,  Constant,  and  Aman-Jean  in 
Paris.  Member:         Denver       AA. 

Award  :  Honorable  Mention,  Paris 
Salon,   1911. 

CARPENTER,  F(letcher)  H.,  97  Middle- 
sex Rd.,  Rochester,  N.  Y. ;  Summer, 
Yorkville,   Mich. 

P.,  C,  L.,  T. — Born  Providence,  R.  I., 
June  27,  1879.  Pupil  of  Ernest  Major. 
Me  m  b  e  r  :     Rochester   AC. 

CARPENTER,  Fred  G(reene),  Art  School, 
Washington  University,  St.  Louis,  Mo.; 
summer,  Wyalusing,  Wis. 
P.— Born  Nashville,  Tenn.,  June  1,  1882. 
Pupil  of  Laurens,  Baschet,  Simon  and 
Collin  in  Paris,  Member:  St. 
Louis  AL;  St.  Louis  AG;  2x4  Soc. 
Award:  Hon.  mention.  Salon  des  Ar- 
tistes Frangais,  1911;  silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Bascomb  prizes,  St. 
Louis  AG,  1916.  Work:  "Day  Dreams,' 
Herron  Art  Inst.,  Indianapolis;  "Girl 
with  Apples,"  Wednesday  Club,  'St. 
Louis;  "La  Chaise  Libre,"  St.  Louis 
Museum;  picture.  Artists'  Guild  of  St. 
Louis;  "Rosecolor,  Scarlet  and  Black," 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts, 
Philadelphia;  "The  Entry  into  Havana," 
"The  Battle  of  Sacramento,"  Missouri 
State   Capitol. 

CARPENTER,  Helen  K(nipe)  (Mrs.  Ed- 
ward Childs  Carpenter),  75  West  55th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  "The 
Salt  Box,"  New  Hartford,  Conn. 
I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Dec.  6,  1881.  Pu- 
pil of  PAFA  under  Chase,  Breckenridge 
and  AnshuLz. 

CARR,  Alice  (Robertson),  934i^  State  St., 
Santa  Barbara,  Calif.;  h.  4312  9th  Ave., 
N.  E.,  Seattle,  Wash.;  summer,  3  Ala- 
meda Court,  Santa  Barbara,  Calif. 
S.— Born  Roanoke,  Va.,  Oct.  3,  1899. 
Pupil  C.  Stirling  Calder,  George  Bridg- 
man,  Albert  Herter.  Member:  ASL 
of  N.Y.  Award  :  1st  prize  in  sculp- 
ture, Studio  Club  of  N.  Y.,  1920. 


CARR,  Michael  Carmichael,  711  Missouri 
Ave.,  Columbia.  Mo.;  summer,  care  of 
E.  J.  Camp,  Union  Pier,  Mich. 
P.,  Engr.,  L.,  W. — Born  San  Francisco, 
Cal.,  June  25,  1881.  Pupil  of  Wilson 
Steer,  Frederick  Brown,  Gordon  Craig. 
Member:  S.Indp.A.  Awarded 
Slade  Scholarship,  Slade  School,  Lon- 
don University.  Work:  "Sunset," 
Public  Library,   Bordighiera,   Italy. 

CARRIGAN,  William  L.,  Falls  Village. 
Conn.;  Century  Association,  7  West 
43d  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  1868.  Pu- 
pil of  Emil  Carlsen.  Member:  Conn. 
AFA.  Awards  :  Silver  medal.  Wash. 
SA  1914;  silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San 
F..   1915. 

CARSON,  E.  Francis,  Craftsman  Studios, 
26  Lime  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  summer, 
Provincetown,   Mass. 

P.— Born  Waltham,  Mass.,  Sept.  8,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art  'School;  N. 
Y.  ASL.  Member:  Copley  S. ;  Provi- 
dence Water  Color  Club;  Provincetown 
AA. 

CARTER,    A.    Helen,    112    West   Eleventh 
St.,  Nev/  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

CARTER,  Charles  M(ilton),  care  of  C.  R. 

Tuttle.  209  West  Jackson  Blvd.,  Chi- 
cago, 111. 

P.,T.,W. — Born  North  Brookfield,  Mass., 
Dec.  9,  1853.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal 
Art  School  in  Boston.  Studied  in  Euro- 
pean schools.  Member:  Boston  AC; 
Denver  AC;  Ex-Director  of  Art  Public 
Schools  of  Denver;  former  State  Super- 
visor of  Drawing  for  Massachusetts; 
hon.  pres.  U.  S.  Section,  International 
Congress  for  the  Teaching  of  Drawing, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900.  Member:  Inter- 
national Jury  of  Awards,  Dept.  of  Edu- 
cation, St.  Louis  Exp.,  1903;  delegate, 
Dept.  of  Interior,  to  Art  Congress,  Lon- 
don, 1908.  Author  of  "Some  European 
Art    Schools." 

CARTER,    George    W.,    16    East    87th    St., 
New   York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

CARTER,  Mary  Mein  (Mrs.  James  New- 
man Carter),  2002  Spruce  St.,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa. 

Min.P.,C.— Born  Philadelphia,  Aug.  16, 
1864.  Pupil  of  Carl  Weber  and  C. 
Faber  Fellows.  Member:  Plastic  C. 
Work:  In  Pennsylvania  Academy  of 
the  Fine  Arts,  Plastic  Club  and  Art 
Club  of  Philadelphia. 

CARTER,  Pruett  A.,  140  Wadsworth  Ave., 
New   York,   N.   Y. 
I. — M  ember:    Salma.   C. 

CARTER,    Robert  A.,   Ridgefield,   N.   J. 
P. — Born     Toronto,     Canada,     Mar.     25, 
1860. 


CARR,    Gene,    "The   World,"    New    York,        CARTOTTO,    Ercole,    200    West    57th    St. 


N.  Y.;  h.  Forest  Hills  Gardens,  L.  I., 
N.  Y. 

I.— Born  New  York,  Jan.  7,  1881.  On 
staff  of  the  "World"  since  1903.  Illus- 
trated: Comic  series;  "Step  Brothers," 
"Lady  Bountiful,"  "Dooley,"  and  for 
New  York  World. 


New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  "The  Mt. 
Washington,"  Bretton  Woods,  N.  H. 
P.,T. — Born  Valle  Mosso,  Italy,  Jan. 
26,  1889.  Pupil  of  Paxton,  Hale,  Ben- 
son, Bosley  and  Tarbell  in  Boston. 
Award  :  Second  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD.  1919. 


375 


CARTWRIGHT 


WHO'S  WHO  /A'  ART 


CAVANAGH 


CARTWRIGHT,     Mrs.     Isabella     Branson, 

The  Art  Alliance,  Rittenhouse  Square, 
Philadelphia,   Pa. 

P.— Born  Coatesville,  Pa.,  Sept.  4,  1885. 
Pupil  of  Daingerfield,  Henry  B.  Snell, 
and  Frank  Brangwyn.  Member: 
Phila.  Alliance;  Plastic  C.  Awards: 
European  Fellowship  from  Philadelphia 
School  of  Design,  1906;  Art  Club  of 
Philadelphia  Gold  Medal  for  water 
color,    1906. 

CASEAU,  Charles  H(enry),  133  East  34th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I.,  C. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  -May  2, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School 
of  Fine  Arts;   Denman   Ross. 

CASELLA,  Alfred,  1889  Lombard  St.,  San 
Francisco,  Calif.    (P.) 

CASER,  Ettore,  care  of  O'Brien  Art  Gal- 
lery, 670  Michigan  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
P., E.— Born  Venice,  1880.  Pupil  of  de 
Maria  in  Venice.  Went  to  Boston  1908. 
A.  w  a  r  d  :  Silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San 
F.,   1915. 

CASEY,    F.    De   Sales,   care   of  Life  Pub- 
lishing    Co.,     598     Madison    Ave.,     New 
York,    N.    Y. 
I. — M  ember:    SI. 

CASEY,  J(ohn)  J(oseph),  278  West  11th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.,  P. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  May  4, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Tarbell  and  Benson  in 
Boston;  Laurens,  Julian's  and  Lazar  in 
Paris. 

CASEY,    Mrs.    L.    W.,    Stoneleigh    Court, 
Washington,    D.    C. 
P.— M  ember:     S.  Wash.  A. 

CASSATT,  Mary,  care  of  Durand-Ruel,  12 
East  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  and  10 
Rue  de  Marignan,  Paris,  France. 
P.,  Etcher— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.  In- 
fluenced by  Manet  and  Degas.  Stud- 
ied at  PAFA  and  in  Europe.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1909.  Awards  :  Lippin- 
cott  prize,  PAFA  1904;  gold  medal 
of  honor,  PAFA  1914.  Chevaher  of 
Legion  of  Honor  of  France,  1904. 
Work:  "Mother  and  Child,"  Metro- 
politan Museum,  New  York;  "La  Fem- 
me  au  Chien,"  Corcoran  Gallery,  Wash- 
ington; "On  the  Balcony,"  Wilstach 
Gallery,  Philadelphia;  "Mere  et  deux 
Enfants,"  Rhode  Island  School  of  De- 
sign, Providence;  "At  the  Opera,"  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts,  Boston;  "Mother 
and  Child,"  Worcester  Museum;  "Ca- 
resse  Enfantine,"  National  Gallery, 
Washington;  "Femmes  et  Enfant,"  De- 
troit Museum;  "The  Toilet,"  Art  Insti- 
tute, Chicago;  "Mother  and  Child," 
Luxembourg,   Paris. 

CASSELL,  John  Harmon,  "Evening 
World,"  Park  Row;  h.  2  West  67th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  Silvermine,  Conn. 
Cartoonist. — Born  Nebraska  City,  Neb., 
1873.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  SI, 
1905. 

CASSIDY,  l(ra)  D.  Gerald,  541  El  Canimo 
del  Canon,  Santa  Fe,  N.  M. 
P.,  I. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.  Pupil  of 
Cincinnati  Academy;  NAD  in  New 
York;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
NAC ;  Salma.  C. ;  Denver  AA .  Award: 
Grand  prize  and   gold   medal,    Panama- 


Calif.  Exp.,  San  Diego,  Calif.,  1915. 
Works  :  Decorations  on  Indian  Arts 
BIdg.,  San  Diego,  Cal.;  decorations, 
"Last  of  the  Indians,"  Hotel  Grama- 
tan,  Bronxville,  N.  Y. ;  "Reflections," 
Freer  Collection,  Detroit,  Mich.  Repre- 
sented in  San  Diego  Museum  and  Mu- 
seum of  New  Mexico;  Freer  Collection, 
Washington,  D.  C;  Canton  (China) 
Christian  College;  El  Oriate  Theatre, 
Santa   Fe. 

CASSIDY,  Laura  E.,  6426  Desmond  Ave., 
Madisonville,  O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

CASTELLO,  Eugene,  3728  Locust  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P.,  S.,  W.— Born  Philadelphia,  Jan.  12, 
1851.  Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Eakins. 
Member:  Fellowship  PAFA;  Salma. 
C.  1904;  Phila.  Print  C.  (hon.);  Phila. 
ACG  (hon.);  Phila.  Chpt.  AIA  1871; 
Inter.  'Soc.  A.  L. ;  Phila.  AC.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal  AAS  1904;  prize,  Phila- 
delp...a  Arts  and  Crafts  G.  1906:  ex- 
hibitor's bronze  medal,  Ghent  Exp., 
1913.  Wo  r  k  in:  Historical  Society  of 
Pennsylvania;  University  of  Pennsyl- 
vania. Correspondent,  "American  Art 
News,"   "The  Studio,"  London. 

CASTERTON.  Mrs.  Eda  Nemoede,  Fine 
Arts  Bldg. ;  h.  2823  North  Albany  Ave., 
Chicago,  111. 

Min.  P.— Born  Brillion,  Wis.,  Apr.  14, 
1877.  Pupil  of  Virginia  Reynolds, 
Lawton  S.  Parker  and  Chicago  Acad- 
emy of  Fine  Arts;  Minneapolis  Sch.  of 
Fine  Arts;  AIC;  Chicago  School  of 
Illustration;  Ralph  Clarkson;  Students' 
Hostel,  Paris.  Member:  Am.  S.  Min. 
P. ;  Chicago  S'.  Min.  P.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  International  Art  Union, 
Paris,  1907  and  1908;  silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,   San  F.,  1915. 

CASTLE,    Montague,    247   West    36th    St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Mural   P. 

CATALANO,        Guiseppi,        Chiesannova, 
Province  of  Trapani,  Sicily. 
E. — M  ember:   Chicago   SE. 

CAULDWELL,  Leslie  Giffen,  4  bis  Cit6 
du  Retiro,  Paris,  France. 
P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  18,  1861. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under 
Boulanger,  Lefebvre  and  Carolus-Duran. 
Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.,  1894;  Paris 
AAA;  rUnion-Interalliee,  Paris.  Spe- 
cialty,  portraits  in  pastel. 

CAVACOS,  E(mmanuel  A.),  5  Rue  Larrey, 
Paris,  France. 

S.,P. — Born  Island  of  Kythera,  Greece, 
Feb.  10,  1885.  Pupil  of  Ephraim  Key- 
ser  in  Baltimore;  Jules  Coutan  and 
V.  Peter  in  Paris.  Member:  Bait. 
WCC;  Assoc. des  Anciens  E16ves  de 
I'ecole  Nationale  des  Beaux-Arts  de 
Paris;  Inst. Social  de  I'Enseignement. 
Awards  :  Rinehart  Paris  Scholarship, 
1911-1915;  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon 
1913.  Works  :  "Aspiration,"  Enoch 
Pratt  Free  Library;  "Penseur,"  Pea- 
body   Institute,    Baltimore. 

CAVANAGH,   J.  Albert,  25  East  26th  St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 


376 


CECERE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


CHAPIN 


CECERE,  Gaetano,  care  of  the  American 
Academy  in  Rome,  Rome,  Italy;  426 
East  15th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S._Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Nov.  26, 
1894.  Pupil  of  H.  A.  MacNeil  and 
Beaux-Arts  Institute  of  Design.  Work: 
Art  in  Trades  Club  medal  for  'School 
Art  League  of  New  York.  Award  : 
American  Academy  in  Rome  scholar- 
ship,  1920. 

CHACE,  Dorothea,  108  Dorchester  Rd., 
Buffalo,    N.    Y. 

P.,  S.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Feb.  3, 
1894.  Pupil  of  the  Art  School  of  the 
Albright  Art  Gallery;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  In- 
structor of  Art  at  Bennett  School,  Mill- 
brook. 

CHADEAYNE,  Robert  O.,  Firthcliffe, 
N.   Y.      (P.) 

CHADWICK,  William,  Black  Hall,  Conn. 
P. — Me  m  b  e  r  :     Salma.  C. 

CHAFFEE,    Mrs.    Everitte    S.,    193    Hope 
St.,   Providence,   R.   I. 
P. — M  ember:     Providence   AC. 

CHAFFEE,  Oliver  N(ewberry),  Province- 
town,  Mass.;  141  East  21st  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  T.— Born  Detroit,  Mich.,  Jan.  23, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Henri,  Haw- 
thorne and  Miller.  Member:  S. 
Indp.A. 

CHAFFITZ,   Bar,  111  West  86th  St.,  New 
York,  N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp.A. 

CHALFANT,   J(efferson)    D(avid),   "Ash- 
ley,"  Wilmington,   Del. 
P. — Born    Pennsylvania,     Nov.    6,    1856. 
Pupil  of  Bouguereau,  Robert-Fleury  and 
Lefebvre  in  Paris. 

CHALFIN,  Paul,  597  Fifth  Ave.;  h.  349 
Lexington  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P.,  Arch. — Born  in  New  York,  N. 
Y.,  Nov.  2,  1874.  Member:  Mural 
P.;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1911;  Players. 
Award  :  Lazarus  Scholarship  for  mu- 
ral painting,  1905. 

CHAMBERLAIN,  Arthur  B.,  16  Gladstone 
St.,  Rochester,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Kitchener,  Ontario,  Canada, 
Jan.  18,  1860.  Member:  Rochester 
AC. 

CHAMBERLAIN,  Judith,  728  Montgomery 
St.,  San  Francisco,  Calif. 
P.— Born    San   Francisco,    Feb.    28,    1893. 
Pupil  of  Max  Weber. 

CHAMBERLIN,  F.  Tolies,  223  South 
Catalina  Ave.,  Pasadena,  Calif. 
P.,  S.,  E. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal., 
March  10,  1873.  Pupil  of  D.  W.  Tryon 
in  Hartford;  George  de  Forest  Brush 
and  George  Bridgman  at  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
Member:  Mural  P. ;  Guild  of  Book- 
workers;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.,  1913;  Mac- 
Dowell  Memorial  Assoc;  Rome  Acad. 
Alumni.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention 
Beaux  Arts  Inst,  of  Design,  Fine  Arts 
Club,  Pasadena;  Lazarus  Scholarship  in 
mural  painting,  American  Academy  in 
Rome,  1909-1912;  Avery  prize,  N.Y.Arch. 
Lg.  1914.  Represented  in  Peabody  Inst., 
Baltimore,  New  Rochelle  (N.  Y.)  Pub- 
lic Library,  and  Detroit  Institute. 


CHAMBERS,  C.  Bosseron,  Carnegie  Hall; 
h.  3  52  West  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P..  I.,  T.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  May  13, 
1883.  Pupil  of  Louis  Schultze  at  the 
Berlin  Academy;  Alois  Hrdliezka  at  the 
Royal  Academy  of  Vienna.  Mem- 
ber: Salma.  C;  SI;  Alliance.  W  o  r  k: 
Decoration  and  altar  pieces  in  St.  Igna- 
tius' Church,  Chicago;  portraits  in 
Missouri  Historical  Soc,  St.  Louis,  and 
Osceola   Club,    St.    Augustine,    Fla. 

CHAMBERS,  C(harles)  E(dward),  Waldo 
Ave.,  Riverdale-on-Hudson,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

I. — Born  Ottumwa,  la.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  SI  1912; 
Salma. C,  1915;  Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 
Award  :     Shaw  prize,    Salma. C,    1918. 

CHAMBERS,  Christine  F.,  624  South 
Washington   Sq.,   Philadelphia,   Pa.    (P.) 

CHAMBERS,  Hallie  Worthington  (Mrs. 
Kirby  L.  Chambers),  100  East  Main  St.; 
h.  "Kenwood  Hill,"  Louisville,  Ky. 
P.— Born  Louisville,  Oct.  27,  1881. 
Pupil  of  A.  Margaretta  Archambault 
and  Hugh  Breckenridge.  Award  : 
Prize  for  still  life,  Kentucky  State 
Fair,    1921. 

CHAMBERS,  Robert  W(illiam),  43  East 
83d  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  May  26,  1865. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  Nat.Inst.AL;  Century  As- 
soc. Illustrator  for  "Life,"  "Vogue,"  etc. 

CHAMPLIN,  Ada  Belle,  640  Prospect 
Blvd.,  Pasadena,  Calif.;  Carmel-by-the- 
Sea,   Calif. 

P.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  Cal.  AC; 
AIC  Alumni;   Laguna  Beach  AA. 

CHAMPLIN,   Hallie.     See  Mrs.  Fenton. 

CHANDLER,  George  Walter,  86  rue  Va- 
neau,  Paris,  France. 
E. — Born  Milwaukee.  Pupil  of  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris  under  Laurens. 
Member:  Chicago  SE,  Work  in: 
Petit  Palais,  Paris;  Victoria  and  Albe'rt 
Museum,  London;  Library  of  Congress, 
Washington,   D.   C. 

CHANDLER,  Helen  Clark,  5431/2  North 
Heliotrope  Drive,  Los  Angeles,  Cal. 
P.,  I.,  E.,  C,  T.— Born  Wellington, 
Kan.,  Jan  20,  1881.  Pupil  of  MacMon- 
nies,  Birge  Harrison,  Arthur  W.  Dow. 
Member:    San   F.   AA. ;    Cal.    SE. 

CHANLER,  Robert  W.,  147  East  19th  St., 
New   York,   N.   Y. 

P.— M  ember:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1914  (as- 
soc);   Mural  P. 

CHAPEL,    Guy    M.,    3919   North    Kenneth 

Ave.,    Chicago,    111. 

P. — Born    in    Detroit    in    1871.      Pupil    of 

AIC.     Member:     Palette   and   Chisel 

C. 
CHAPIN,    Archibald     B.,    435    Clay    Ave., 

Kirk  wood,   Mo. 

I.,     Cartoonist. — Born    Mt.     Vernon,    O., 

June   22,    1875. 
CHAPLIN,    James,    care    of    the    Seattle 

Fine  Arts   Society,    Seattle,   Wash.    (P.) 
CHAPIN,  James  (Ormsbee),  232  West  14th 

St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  West   Orange,    N.    J.,   July  9, 


Z77 


CHAPIN 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


CHASE 


1887.  Pupil  of  Julian  De  Vriendt,  Ant- 
werp Royal  Academy.  Member:  S. 
Indp.A. 

CHAPIN,  Lucy  C,  Dickinson  Seminary, 
Williamsport,  Pa.;  h.  4040  McPherson 
Ave.,   St.  Louis,   Mo. 

P.,  T. — Born  Syracuse,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  18, 
1873.  Pupil  of  Baschet,  Merson,  Collin 
and  Prinet  in  Paris.  Member: 
Graduates'  Club,  College  of  Fine  Arts, 
Syracuse  University.  Works  :  Por- 
trait of  Chief  Justices  Ezekiel  Whitman 
and  Prentiss  Mellen,  in  State  Gallery, 
Capitol,  Augusta,  Me.;  "Portrait  of 
Bishop  Eveland,"  Dickinson  Seminary, 
Williamsport,  Pa. 

CHAPLIN,    Margaret,    346    West   22d    St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:  N.  A.  Women  PS. 

CHAPMAN,  Carlton  T(heodore),  58  West 
57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P., I. — Born  New  London,  O.,  Sept.  18, 
1860.  Pupil  of  NAD  and  ASL  of  N.Y.; 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Member: 
ANA  1900,  NA  1914;  SAA  1892;  AWCS; 
A.Fund  S.;  Century  Assoc;  Lotos  C; 
NAC.  Specialty,  marines.  Awards  : 
Silver  medal,  Boston,  1892;  medal,  Co- 
lumbia Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  medal,  At- 
lanta Exp.,  1895;  bronze  medal,  Pan- 
Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  bronze  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902.  Work:  "A 
Rocky  Coast,"  Toledo  Museum;  "Calm 
in  Gloucester  Harbor,"  Brooklyn  Insti- 
tute Museum;  "Bonhomme  Richard  and 
Serapis,"  City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis, 
Mo. 

CHAPMAN,  Charles  S.,  Leonia,  N.  J. 
P., I.— Born  Morristown,  N.  Y.,  1879. 
Pupil  of  Chase  and  W.  Appleton  Clark. 
Member:  Salma.  C.  1908;  ANA,  1919. 
Awards  :  First  Shaw  prize,  Salma. 
C,  1910;  second  Shaw  prize,  Salma. C, 
1911;  Salma. C.  prize,  1917;  Saltus  gold 
medal,  NAD,  1917.  Work:  "In  the 
Deep  Woods,"  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York. 

CHAPMAN,  C(yrus)  Durand,  3323  Wis- 
consin Ave.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.,  I.,  A.,  W.,  T.— Born  Irvington,  N.  J., 
Sept.  23,  1856.  Pupil  of  Wilmarth  and 
J.  G.  Brown  in  New  York;  Cormon  and 
Constant  in  Paris.     Member:    AAS. 

CHAPMAN,    Esther    McCord,    1600    Q    St., 
Washington,  D.  C. 
P.— M  ember:    Wash.   WCC. 

CHAPMAN,  Kenneth  Milton,  Museum  of 
New  Mexico;  h.  317  Acequia  Madre, 
•Santa  Fe.,   N.   M. 

P.,  L,  A.,  C,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Ligon- 
ier,  Ind.,  July  13,  1875.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
New  York  ASL.  Works:  Three 
murals,  Museum  of  New  Mexico;  illus- 
trator of  works  on  Natural  Sciences; 
writer  and  lecturer  on  Indian  Art. 

CHAPMAN,  Minerva  J(osephlne),  9  Rue 
Falgui^re,  Paris,  France;  h.,  care  of 
W.  B.  Chapman,  Arlington  Heights,  111. 
P.— Born  Altmar,  N.  Y.,  Dec.  6,  1858. 
Pupil  of  AIC  and  Annie  Shaw;  Robert- 
Fleury,  Bouguereau,  Courtois  and  Chas. 
Lazar  in  Paris.  Assoc. Soc. Nat. des 
Beaux-Arts,  Paris,  1906. 


378 


CHAPMAN,  W.  E.,  18  East  90th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

CHARD,    Louise  Cable,  54  Melrose  Place, 

Montclair,  N.  J. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 
CHARD,      Walter      G(oodman),     Fenway 

Studios,  Ipswich    St.,    Boston,   Mass.;    h. 

Meadowood  Farms,  Cazenovia,  N.  Y. 

S.,    C— Born    Buffalo,    N.    Y.,    April    20, 

1880.     Pupil  of  Charles  Grafly,  School  of 

the  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Boston,  Beaux 

Arts  Institute  of  Design. 

CHARMAN,  Laura  B.,  Magnolia,  N.  J. 
S. — M  ember:    Fellowship  PAFA. 

CHASE,  Adelaide  Cole  (Mrs.  William 
Chester  Chase),  8  Marlboro  St.,  Boston, 
Mass. 

Port. P.— Born  Boston,  1868;  daughter 
of  J.  Foxcroft  Cole.  Pupil  of  Tarbell 
at  Boston  Museum  School;  Carolus  Du- 
ran  in  Paris.  Member:  Copley  S. 
1898;  SAA  1903;  ANA  1906;  Boston  GA. 
Award:  Silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  silver  medal,  jiP.-P.  Exp.,  San  F., 
1915.  Work  :  "Thife  Violinist,"  Museum 
of  Fine  Arts,   Boston. 

CHASE,  Edward  L.,  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
(I.) 

CHASE,  Ellen  Wheeler,  "The  Meyer 
Studios,"  1110  Elmwood  Ave.,  Buffalo, 
N.  Y.;  h.  76  Ontario  St.,  Lockport,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T.— Born  Faribault,  Minn.  Studied 
in  Buffalo,  New  York  City,  Boston,  un- 
der Tarbell,  and  Rene  Menard,  and 
Lucien  Simon,  Paris.  Member: 
Buffalo   SA;    Buffalo   GAA. 

CHASE,  Elsie  Rowland  (Mrs.  Frederick 
S.  Chase),  165  Grove  St.,  Waterbury, 
Conn.;  summer,  Middlebury,  Conn. 
P.,  I.,  E.,  C,  W.— Born  Saratoga 
Springs,  N.  Y.,  Feb.  10,  1863.  Pupil 
of  Yale  School  of  Fine  Arts.  Mem- 
ber: New  Haven  PCC;  Hartford  ACC, 
NAC;  S.  Indp.  A. 

CHASE,  Frank  Swift,  Woodstock,  N.  T. 
P.,  T.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  Mar.  12, 
1886.  Member:  Allied  AA;  Salma. 
C;  Lg.  of  NYA.  Work:  "Morning 
Shadows,"  South  Carolina  Art  Associa- 
tion,  Charleston,   S.   C. 

CHASE,  Jessie  Kalmbach  (Mrs.  Wilfrid 
E.  Chase),  2009  Adams  St.,  Madison, 
Wis. 

Ldcsp.  P. — Born  Bailey's  Harbor,  Wis., 
Nov.  22,  1879.  Pupil  AIC  and  Frederick 
Fursman.  Member:  Wis.  Painters 
and    Sculptors;    Madison   AG. 

CHASE,  Joseph  Cummings,  Hotel  Chelsea, 
222  West  23rd  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ; 
h.  Flushing,   N.  Y. 

P.,  W..  T.— Born  Kents  Hill,  Me.,  May 
5,  1878.  Pupil  of  Jean  Paul  Laurens. 
Awards:  First  and  second  prizes, 
Grunwald  poster  competition,  Paris, 
1904.  Work:  Portraits  of  General 
Pershing,  Marechal  Foch,  and  140  gen- 
erals, etc.,  of  the  American  Expedition- 
ary Forces  in  France.  Author  of  "Dec- 
orative  Design";    "Soldiers   All". 

CHASE,    Marion    Monks,    144    Brattle    St., 
Cambridge,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Boston,  Mass.     Pupil  of  G.  L. 


CHASE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


CHURBUCK 


Noyes  and  School  of  the  Museum  of 
Fine  Arts,  Boston.  Member:  N.  A. 
Women   PS;   Copley   S. 

CHASE,  Sidney  Marsh,  4  Mt.  Vernon  St., 
Haverhill,   Mass. 

P.,  I.,  W. — Born  Haverhill,  Mass.,  June 
19,  1877.  Pupil  of  Woodbury,  Tarbell, 
Pyle  and  Pape.     Member:   Salma.  C. 

CHASE,  Susan  Brown  (Mrs.  V.  O.  Chase), 
1811  Riggs  Place,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.  Pupil  H.  B. 
Snell,  C.  E.  Messer,  Bertha  Perrie,  R.  E. 
James.  Member:  Wash.  WCC; 
N.A.   Women   P.S. 

CHASE,  Wendell  W.,  9a  Park  Sq.,  Bos- 
ton, Mass.;  h.  10  Claflin  Road,  Brook- 
line,  Mass.;  summer,  Provincet'n,  Mass. 
P.,  E. — Born  Foxcroft,  Me.,  Mar.  4, 
1875.  Pupil  of  George  L.  Noyes  and 
Hawthorne.     Member:  Boston  WCC. 

CHATTERTON,  C(larence)  K.,  Vassar 
College,  Poughkeepsie,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Newburgh,  N.  Y.,  Sept.  19, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Henri,  Miller, 
Mora,  and  Du  Mond  in  New  York. 
Member:  Salma.C;  Chicago  WCC. 
Award  :  Isidor  prize,  Salma.C.  1913. 
Assistant  professor  in  art  at  Vassar 
College,   Poughkeepsie,   N.  Y. 

CHAVEZ,  Gilberto,  care  of  H.  Marquardt 
&  Co.,  35  South  William  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

CHEEVER,  W.  L.,  Box  22,  Glendale,  Cal. 
P.— M  ember:    Cal.   AC. 

CHEFFETZ,  Asa,  484  White  St.,  Spring- 
field, Mass.      (P.) 

CHENEY,  Mary  Moulton,  1912  Third  Ave., 
South;  200  East  25th  St.,  Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

D.,  T. — Born  Minneapolis,  Minn.  Pupil 
of  School  of  the  Musem  of  Fine  Arts; 
Denman  W.  Ross,  George  Elmer 
Browne.  Member:  Attic  C.  of 
Minneapolis.  Award:  Hon.  Men- 
tion, Minnesota  'State  Fair,  1917.  Di- 
rector, Minneapolis  School  of  Art. 

CHENEY,  Russell,  43  Hartford  Road, 
South  Manchester,  Conn. 
P. — Born  South  Manchester,  Conn.,  Oct. 
16,  1881.  Pupil  Kenyon  Cox,  Chase, 
Woodbury,  Walter  Palmer,  ASL  of  N. 
Y. ;  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member: 
Conn.   AFA. 

CHERRY,     Mrs.     Emma     Richardson,    608 

Fargo  Ave.,  Houston,  Tex. 
P.,T.,L.— Born  Aurora,  111.,  Feb.  28, 
1859.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y. ;  Julian 
Academy  and  of  Merson  in  Paris. 
Member:  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Denver  AA. 
Award  :  Gold  medal.  Western  Art 
Assoc,  Omaha.  Work:  In  Eliza- 
beth Ney  Museum,  Austin,  Tex.;  Soc. 
of  Civil  Engineers  Club,  New  York 
City;  San  Antonio  Art  League.  Direc- 
tor, Texas  Fine  Arts  Association. 

CHERRY,  Mrs.  K(athryn)  E.,  Marina 
Bldg.;  h.  4432  Washington  Ave.,  St. 
Louis,  Mo.;  summer,  East  Gloucester, 
Mass. 

P.,  T.— Born  Quincy,  111.,  April  27,  1880. 
Pupil  of  St.  Louis  Art  School,  New 
York  York  Art  School.   Richard   Miller, 


and  Hugh  Breckenridge.  Member: 
St.  Louis  AG;  Chicago  AC.  Award  : 
Hugo  Kohler  Landscape  Prize,  St.  L. 
AG,  1921.  "Inner  Harbor,"  and  "Nisbit 
Hills,"  in  St.  Louis  High  Schools. 
CHESNO,  Jacques  R.,  51  West  Tenth  St., 
New  York,   N.    Y.    (P.) 

CHILDS,  Lillian  E.,  85  Washington  PI., 
New    York,    N.    Y. ;    summer.    Magnolia, 

Min.'p.— Born  Little  Silver,  N.  J.  Pu- 
pil of  AIC;   Chase  in  New  York. 

CHILTON,  William  B(rent),  1961  Bilt- 
more  St.,  N.  W^.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.— Born  Washington,  D.  C,  Dec.  15, 
1856.  Pupil  of  Washington  ASL. 
Member:  S.  Wash.  A.;  Wash.  WCC; 
Wash.   AC. 

CHISOLM,  Mary  B.,  1337  Lexington  Ave., 
New  York,  N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember  :     S.Indp.A. 

CHITTENDEN,    Alice    B(rown),   2230   Pa- 
cific Ave.,  San  Francisco,  Cal.;  summer, 
Wiscasset,  Me. 
P.,   T.— Born  Brockport,   N.  Y.,  Oct.  14, 

1860.  Pupil  of  California  School  of  De- 
sign under  Virgil  Williams.  Instructor 
in  San  Francisco  Institute  of  Art  for 
fifteen  years.  Awards  :  Gold  medal 
for  flower  painting,  San  F.Exp,  of  Art 
and  industries,  1891;  silver  medals, 
Lewis-Clark  Exp.,  Portland,  1905; 
Alaska-Yukon  Exp.,  Seattle,  1909. 
Work:  Portrait,  Right-Reverend 
William  Ford  Nicholls,  Bishop  of  Cali- 
fornia, in  Episcopal  Divinity  School,  San 
Francisco;  six  portraits  for  California 
Society  of  Pioneers. 

CHITTENDEN,     Katherine     H.,     Pelham 
Manor,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:   New  Haven  PCC. 

CHOUINARD,  Nelbert  Murphy,  2606  West 
Eighth  St.,  Los  Angeles,  Calif. 
P.,  Des. — Pupil  of  Arthur  Dow,  Ernest 
Batchelder,  Ralph  Johonnot,  and  of 
Pratt  Institute.  Director  of  the  Choui- 
nard  School  of  Art  of  Los  Angeles. 

CHRISTIANSEN,     P.,     332    Wilson     Ave., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

CHRISTY,  Howard  Chandler,  Hotel  des 
Artistes,  1  West  67th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  summer,  "The  Barracks,"  Dun- 
can Falls,  O. 

I.— Born  Morgan  Co.,  O.,  Jan.  10,  1873. 
Pupil  of  NAD,  ASL,  and  Chase  in  New 
York.  M  e  m  b  e  r  :  SI  1915.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  hon. 
mention,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901. 
Illustrations  for  all  the  well  known  pub- 
lishers. 

CHURBUCK,    Leander    M.,    72    Glenwood 
Ave.,    Brockton,    Mass. 
P. — Born     Wareham,     Mass.,     Feb.     19, 

1861.  Pupil  of  Copley  S.  and  Bos- 
ton Art  Students'  Assoc.  Mem- 
ber: Copley  S.  1905.  Awards: 
Gold  medal,  Dallas  Exp.,  1903;  first 
prize  for  water  colors,  Denver  Exp., 
1909.  Work:  "On  the  Cape  Ann 
Shore,"  Municipal  Gallery,  Brockton, 
Mass. 


379 


CHURCH 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


CLARK 


CHURCH,    Charles    F.,    9244    South   Win- 
chester  Ave.,    Chicago,    111. 
P. — M  ember:    Chicago   SA. 

CHURCH,  F(rederic)  Edwin,  33  West  67th 
St..    New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  25,  1876. 
Pupil  of  Columbia  School  of  Architec- 
ture; painting  under  Twachtman,  F.  V. 
DuMond  and  others.  Member:  Salma. 
C;  MacDowell  C;  Alhed  AA.;  N.  Y. 
Arch.  Lg.  (asso.) ;  Lyme  AA.  Award  : 
Clark  prize,   NAD,   1916. 

CHURCH,  F(rederick)  S(tuart),  Carnegie 
Hall,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P., I., Etcher — Born  Grand  Rapids,  Mich., 
Dec.  1,  1842.  Pupil  of  Chicago  Academy 
of  Design;  L.  E.  Wilmarth,  Walter 
Shirlaw,  NAD  in  New  York.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1883,  NA  1885;  SAA 
1890;  AWCS;  SI  (hon.  1910);  Lotos  C; 
N.Y.Etching  C.  Work:  "The  Black 
Orchard"  and  "Circe,"  National  Gal- 
lery, Washington,  D.  C;  "Moonrise," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York;  "Fla- 
mingoes," Art  Museum,  Montclair,  N.J.; 
"Sirens,"  Hackley  Art  Gallery,  Muske- 
gon, Mich;  and  "Sirens,"  St.  Louis  City 
Art    Museum. 

CHURCHILL,  Alfred  V(ance),  Hillyer 
Gallery;  h.  38  Franklin  St.,  Northamp- 
ton,   Mass. 

P.,T.— Born  Oberlin,  O.,  Aug.  14,  1864. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  Union  Internationale  des 
Beaux- Arts;  College  AA.  Dir.  Art 
Dept.,  Iowa  College,  1891-93;  Dir. 
Art  Dept.,  Teachers  College,  Columbia 
Univ.,  New  York,  1897-1905;  lecturer, 
Johns  Hopkins  Univ.,  Baltimore,  1902- 
03;  University  of  Chicago,  1914,  1916 
and  1917;  Professor  of  the  History  and 
Interpretation  of  Art,  Smith  College, 
Northampton,  Mass.,  since  1907;  Direc- 
tor of  the  Hillyer  Art  Gallery  of  Smith 
College. 

CHURCHILL,  Francis  G(orten),  Canal- 
Commercial  Bldg.,  New  Orleans,  La. 
P.,  I.,  E.,  Arch. — Born  New  Orleans, 
La.,  Feb.  12,  1876.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati 
Academy;  Tulane  University,  New  Or- 
leans. Member:  New  Orleans 
AA;  La.  Chapter  AIA;  NAC.  Work 
in  McDermott  Memorial  Church  and 
Loyola  University,  and  Tulane  Univer- 
sity Stadium,  New  Orleans.  Author  of 
"Pen  Drawings  of  Old  New  Orleans." 

CHURCHILL,  Letha  E.,  3919  Wyandotte 
St.,   Kansas   City,   Mo.    (P.) 

CHURCHILL,  William  W.,  Fenway  Stu- 
dios,  Boston,   Mass. 

P. — Born  in  Boston.  Pupil  of  Bonnet 
in  Paris.  Member:  Boston  GA;  St. 
Botolph  Club.  Award  :  Hon.  men- 
tion, Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  hon. 
mention,   P. -P.   Exp.,    San  F.,   1915. 

CHURCHIMAN,  E(lla)  Mendenhall,  Union 
Lane,    Brielle,    N.    J. 

P. — Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
PAFA;  Tarbell  and  Benson  in  Boston. 
M  e  m  o  e  r  :  Fellowship  PAFA;  Plastic 
C;    S.Indp.A. 

CIAIVIPAGLIA,  Carlo,  care  of  the  Ameri- 
can Academy  in  Rome,  Rome,  Italy;  555 
Newark  St.,   Hoboken,  N.  J. 


P. — Born  in  Italy.  Award:  Ameri- 
can    Academy     in     Rome     Scholarship, 

1920. 

CIAVARRA,  Pietro,  207  North  64th  St., 
Philadelphia,   Pa. 

S. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  June  29, 
1891.  Pupil  of  Charles  Grafiy,  Gui- 
seppe  Donate,  Charles  T.  Scott.  Mem- 
ber:    Fellowship  PAFA. 

CIMIOTTI,  Gustave,  51  West  10th  St.; 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  New  York,  Nov.  10,  1875. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.  under  Mowbray, 
Cox,  J.  Alden  Weir  and  Robert  Blum; 
Constant  in  Paris.  Member:  Salma. 
C.   1908;  Ahed  AA. 

CLAGHORN,  J.  C,  3115  Hiatt  PI.,  N.  W., 
Washington,   D.   C.    (P.) 

CLAPP,  William  H(enry),  Oakland  Art 
lery.  Civic  Auditorium,  Oakland,  Calif. 
P.,  E.,  W.,  T.— Born  Montreal,  Canada. 
Pupil  of  Jean  Paul  Laurens.  Mem- 
ber: Royal  Canadian  Academy;  Cana- 
dian AC;  Pen  and  Pencil  C,  Columbus, 
O.;  Montreal  AC;  Oakland  AA;  San  F. 
AA.  Work  in  Canadian  National  Gal- 
lery, Montreal  Art  Gallery,  Oakland  Art 
Gallery,  and  landscape  owned  by  On- 
tario  Provincial   Government. 

CLARK,  Adele,  519  East  Franklin  St., 
Richmond,   Va. 

P.,  L.,  T.— Pupil  of  D.  J.  Connah,  Ken- 
neth Hayes  Miller,  Henri  and  Chase. 
Member:  Richmond  AC.  Work: 
"Portrait  of  R.  A.  Dunlop,"  Richmond 
Chamber  of  Commerce. 

CLARK,    Allan,    436   West   24th    St.,    New 
York,  N.   Y. 
S. — M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

CLARK,  Alson  Skinner,  Comfort  Island, 
Alexandria  Bay,  N.  Y.  1149  Wotkyns 
Drive,  Pasadena,  Calif. 
P.,I.,C.,T.— Born  Chicago,  March  25, 
1876.  Pupil  of  Simon,  Cottet,  Whistler, 
Mucha  and  Merson  in  Paris;  Chase  in 
New  York.  Member:  Paris  AAA; 
Chicago  SA;  Allied  AA;  Chicago 
AC;  S.  Indp.  A.;  Salma.  C;  Chicago 
Cliff  Dwellers;  Calif.  PM;  Calif.  AA. 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  Cahn  prize,  AIC,  1906; 
bronze  medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work:  Municipal  Commission  pur- 
chase: "The  Coffee  House,"  Art  Insti- 
tute of  Chicago;  lithographs  in  Hack- 
ley  Gallery,  Muskegon,  Mich.;  Vic- 
toria Museum,  London;  Union  League 
C,  University  C,  Chicago;  Municipal 
collection,  Watertown,  N.  Y. ;  State  Li- 
brary,  Calif. 

CLARK,  C.  H.,  432  Baldwin  St.,  Mead- 
ville.    Pa. 

P.,  T. — Pupil  of  Julian  and  Delecluse 
Academies    in    Paris. 

CLARK,  Eliot  C(andee),  Van  Dyck  Stu- 
dios, 939  Eighth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Ldscp.  P.,  T.,  W. — Born  New  York, 
March  27,  1883;  son  of  Walter  Clark. 
Member:  ANA,  1917;  NAC;  SPNY; 
Lg.  of  NYA;  AWCS;  Allied  AA;  Conn. 
AFA;  Salma.  C. ;  Int.Soc.A.L.;  MacD.C; 
A.Fund  S.;  NYWCC.     Award:    Third 


380 


CLARK 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


CLEMENT 


Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1912.  Work: 
"March,"  Maryland  Institute,  Balti- 
more; "Santa  Maria  del  le  Salute," 
Bloomington  (Ind.)  Art  Assoc;  "Roll- 
ing Country,"  owned  by  ex-President 
WoodroW  Wilson;  Teacher  Art  Stu- 
dents' League,  1912-1914.  Author 
"Alexander  Wyant,"  and  writes  for  art 
niiigazines. 

CLARK,  Elsie  Southwick  (Mrs.  C.  Water- 
bury  Clark),  Rodin  Studios,  200  West 
57th  St.;  h.  210  West  90th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  T. — Born  Providence,  R.  I.,  Dec.  31, 
1881.      Studied   in  Paris. 

CLARK,  Freeman,  107  West  64th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Holly  Springs,  Miss.  Pupil  of 
Chase;  Wiles;  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  N.  Y. 
School  of  Art.  Represented  in  River- 
side Branch  Public  Library,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

CLARK,  Harriette  A.,  27  West  67th  St., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 

Min.  P. — Born  Depere,  Wis.,  March  4, 
1876,  Pupil  of  Laurens,  Rov^t.  Baschet 
and  Mme.  Debillemont-Chardon  in 
Paris.  Work:  Miniatures  ex-Presi- 
dent Porfirio  Diaz  and  Madame  Diaz  at 
Pan-American  Bldg.,  Washington,  D.  C. 

CLARK,    Henry    Hunt,    15    Kirkland    Rd., 
Cambridge,  Mass. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence  AC. 

CLARK,  Herbert  Francis,  3034  R  St.,  N. 
W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.,  I.,  E. — Born  Holyoke,  Mass.,  Sept. 
18,  1876.  Pupil,  R.  L  School  of  Design, 
Providence;  Corcoran  Art  School. 
Washington,  D.  C.  Member:  Wash. 
SA;    Wash.    Landscp.    C. 

CLARK,  Homer,  1506  Forty-sixth  St., 
Southwest,  Seattle,  Wash.     (P.) 

CLARK,    Maud    J.,    392    West   Utica    St., 
Buffalo,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:   Buffalo  SA. 

CLARK,  Roy  C,  734  Seventh  St.,  N.  E., 
Washington,  D.   C. 

Landsp.  P. — Born  Sheffield,  Mass.,  April 
3,  1889.  Pupil  of  Edgar  Nye.  Mem- 
ber:    S.   Indp.   A. 

CLARK,  Sarah  L.,  523  Wilson  Bldg.,  15th 
and  Chestnut  Sts.;  h.  1228  Locust  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil 
of  Chase  and  Carlson.  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA.  Specialty,  pathological 
and  surgical  drawings. 

CLARK,  Vera  I.     See  Mrs.  V.  C.  Place. 

CLARKE,  Corneille  (Mrs.  C.  Irvine 
Clarke),  625  North  31st  St.,  Richmond, 
Va. 

D.,  T.— Pupil  of  Phila.  School  of  De- 
sign. Instructor  in  Applied  Arts,  John 
Marshall  High  School,  Richmond. 

CLARKE,     Fred     B.,    126     East    75th    St., 
New   York,   N.   Y. 
P. — Pupil  of  Augustus  Saint  Gaudens. 

CLARKE,  J.  F.  IVlowbray.  See  Mowbray- 
Clarke. 

CLARKE,  Rene,  46  Baylev  Ave.,  Yonkers, 
N.  Y.;  250  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.C. 


CLARKE,  Una  C.  See  Mrs.  Arthur  P. 
Hunt. 

CLARKSON,  Ralph  (Elmer),  410  South 
Micnigan  Ave.;  h.  225  Dearborn  St., 
Chicago,  111.;  summer,  Oregon,  111. 
Portrait  P.,  T. — Born  Amesbury,  Mass., 
Aug.  3,  1861.  Pupil  of  School  of  Boston 
Museum;  Julian  Academy  under  Le- 
febvve  J'nd  Boulanger  in  Paris.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :  ANA  1910;  Chicago  SA;  Municipal 
Art  Lg.  of  Chicago  (pres.);  NYWCC; 
Port. P.;  Chicago  WCC.  Member  of 
Municipal  Art  Commission  of  Chi- 
cago (pres.);  State  Art  Commission 
(chairman).  Instructor  AIC.  Awards: 
Cahn  prize,  AIC  1909;  hors  concours 
(jury  of  awards),  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F., 
1915.  Work:  "A  Daughter  of  Ar- 
menia,"  Art  Institute  of  Chicago. 

CLAUS,  May  Austin  (Mrs.  W.  A.  J. 
Claus),  410  Boylston  St.,  Boston,  Mass.; 
summer;  Provincetown,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Berlin,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  18,  1882. 
Pupil  of  School  of  Boston  Museum  and 
of  W.  A.   J.   Claus. 

CLAUS,  W(illiam)  A.  J.,  410  Boylston  St., 
Boston,  Mass.;  summer,  Provincetown, 
Mass. 

Port. P. — Born  Maintz,  Germany,  June 
14,  1862.  Pupil  of  Grundmann  in  Bos- 
ton; Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Work: 
"Old  Pioneer,"  Boston  Art  Club;  "Gov. 
Greenhalge,"  State  H'ouse,  Boston; 
"Carl  Faelten,"  Faelten  Hall,  Boston; 
"Dr.  Eben  Tourjee,"  N.E.  Conservatory 
of  Music,  Boston;  "Dr.  Stowell,"  Pres. 
Potsdam  College,  Potsdam,  N.  Y. ;  altar 
pieces  at  the  Church  of  St.  Francis  de 
Sales,  Boston;  portraits  of  prominent 
natives   painted   in   India,    1884   to   1887. 

CLAWSON,    Charles    Howard,    40    So.    8th 
St.,   Richmond,   Ind. 
P. — M  ember:    Cincinnati    AC. 

CLAWSON,  W.  R.,  Hotel  Emery,  Cincin- 
nati,  O. 
P. — M  ember:    Cincinnati    AC. 

CLAY,  Mrs.  Mary  F.  R.,  1734  Pine  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa.     (P.) 

CLAYTER,    Frederick,    3439    Fifth    Ave., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

CLELAND,  T(homas)  M(aitland),  70 
Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Scar- 
borough-on-Hudson,  N.  Y. 
Dec,  P.,  W.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y., 
Aug.  18,  1880.  Member:  Boston 
SAC;  Salma.  C;  Guild  of  Free  Lance 
A.  Awards:  Medal,  Boston  SAC, 
1920;  2  gold  medals  and  bronze  medal. 
Am.  Inst,  of  Graphic  A.,  1920.  Work: 
Altar  painting  in  Church  of  the  Mes- 
siah,  Glens  Falls,   N.  Y. 

CLEMENT,  Edward  H(enry),  324  Wash- 
ington St.;  studio,  733  Little  Bldg.,  Bos- 
ton,   Mass.;    h.    5    River    St.,    Concord, 

P.,W.* — Born  Chelsea,  Mass.,  April  19, 
1843.  Pupil  of  Boston  Art  Students' 
Assoc;  New  School  of  Design;  and  of 
Louis  Kronberg.  Editor  in  Chief  "Bos- 
ton   Transcript,"    1881    to    1906. 


381 


CLEMENTS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


COATS 


CLEMENTS,  Gabrielle  de  Veaux,  1748  N. 
St.,  Washington,  D.  C;  summer,  Lanes- 
ville,  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  1858. 
Pupil  of  Robert-Fleury  and  Bouguereau 
in  Paris.  Me  m  b  e  r  :  Fellowship  PA 
FA;  Wash.WCC;  S.Wash.A.  Award: 
Second  Toppan  prize,  PAFA;  Mary 
'Smith  prize,  PAFA  1895.  Work: 
Painting  in  St.  Patrick's  Church,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C.  Mural  paintings:  St. 
Paul's  Chapel,  Baltimore;  St.  Matthews 
Church,  Sparrow  Point,  Md.,  Etchings 
in  National  Museum,  Washington,  D.  C. 

CLEMENTS,  George  H.,  33  West  67th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Member:  NYWCC;  Boston  SW 
CP;  Boston  WCC;  Salma.C,  1904. 

CLEMENTS,  R(osalie)  Thomson,  107 
East  59th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  sum- 
mer, "Hiddenfield,"  Ogunquit,  Me. 
P. — Born  Washington,  D.  C,  Jan.  5, 
1878.  Pupil  of  E.  F.  Andrews  in  Wash- 
ington; F.  Luis  Mora  and  Thomas  Fo- 
garty  in  New  York.  Member:  NAC; 
NSC. 

CLEMENTS,  Ruth.  See  Mrs.  J.  A. 
Farrell. 

CLEPHANE,  Lewis  Painter,  1115  I  St.; 
1225  K  St.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.— Born  Washington,  D.  C,  Feb.  8, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Birge  Harrison;  Alex- 
ander Robinson  in  Holland.  Mem- 
ber: 'S.  Wash.  A.;  Wash.  WCC;  Wash. 
AC;  S.Indp.A.;  Wash.  SFA. 

CLERE,    Vera,    605   West   115th    St.,    New 
York. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

CLIME,  Winfield  Scott,  North  Chevy 
Chase,   Md. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Nov.  7,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Drexel  Inst.,  Philadelphia; 
Corcoran  Art  School,  Washington. 
Member:  S.  Wash.  A.;  Wash.  WCC; 
Wash.AC. 

CLINEDINST,  B(enjamin)  West,  137 
East  66th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h. 
Pawling,   N.   Y. 

I., P., T.— Born  Woodstock,  Va.,  Oct.  14, 
1859.  Pupil  of  Cabanel  and  Bonnat  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1894,  NA 
1898;  SAA  1891;  AWCS;  Century  Assoc. 
Awards:  Evans  prize,  AWCS  1900; 
silver  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  silver  medal,  Charleston  Exp,,  1902. 

CLIVETTE,    Merton,   1    Sheridan   Square, 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

CLOPATH,  Henriette,  Chalet  Art  Stu- 
dio; h.  1211  Boston  Ave.,  South,  Tulsa, 
Okla. 

P.,  W.,  L..,  T. — Born  Switzerland. 
Award:  Gold  medal,  University  of 
Okla.,  1916.  Writer  and  lecturer  on 
modern  painting. 

CLOSSON,  William  B(axter)  (Palmer), 
77  Newtonville  Ave.,  Newton,  Mass.; 
summer.  Magnolia,  Mass. 
P..  formerly  Wood  Engr. — Born  Thet- 
ford,  Vt.,  Oct.  13,  1848,  Pupil  of  Lowell 
Inst,  in  Boston;  traveled  in  Europe. 
Member:  Boston  AC;  Copley  S;  S. 
Wash.  A.;  Wash,  AC;  Conn.  AFA;  Al- 
lied  AA;   AI    Graphic   A;    Union   Inter- 


nationale des  Beaux-Arts  et  des  Let- 
tres;  NAC  (life).  Awards:  For 
wood  engraving:  Gold,  silver  and  bronze 
medals,  Mass.  Charitable  Mechanics 
Assoc. ;  third  class  medal,  Paris  Salon, 
1882;  silver  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1889; 
medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893; 
diploma,  Graphic  Arts  Exp.,  Vienna; 
silver  medal,  Pan-Am,  Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Proofs 
of  engravings  are  in  National  Gallery, 
Washington;  Boston  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts;  New  York  Public  Library; 
Worcester  Art  Museum;  Springfield 
(Mass.)  Public  Library;  Carnegie  Insti- 
tute, Pittsburgh;  Herron  Art  Institute, 
Indianapolis;  Albright  Art  Gallery,  Buf- 
falo. Painting  in  Evans  collection.  Na- 
tional Gallery  and  Gallaudet  College, 
Washington,  D.  C;  National  Arts  Club, 
New   York. 

CLOUGH,  Jane  B.,  1020  West  56th  St., 
Kansas  City,  Mo.   (P.) 

CLUSMANN,  William,  3831  West  Adams 
St.,   Chicago,  111. 

P, — Born  North  Laporte,  Ind,,  1859,  Pu- 
pil of  Benczur  at  Royal  Academy  in 
Munich,  Member:  Chicago  SA;  Chi- 
cago WCC.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention, 
Stuttgart,  Germany,  1884;  Grower  prize 
($100),  AIC,  1913;  Tuthill  prize  ($100), 
AIC,  1919, 

CLUTE,  Beulah  Mitchell  (Mrs.  Walter 
Marshall    Clute),    2614    Channing    Way, 

P.,I,,L.— Born*  Rushville,  111.  Pupil  of 
ASL  of  N.Y.;  AI  Chicago.  Member: 
Artists'  Guild,  Chicago;  AIC  Alumni 
Assoc;  Cal.  Book  Plate  Soc.  Designer 
for  The  Three  Redwoods  Studio,  Berk- 
ley.     Specialty,    bookplates. 

CLYMER,  Edwin  Swift,  Lanesville  P.  O., 
Gloucester,  Mass. 

P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  1871.  Pupil  of 
PAFA.  Member:  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Phila.Sketch  C;  Phila.WCC.  Work 
in    Reading,    Pa.,    Museum    of   Art. 

COALE,  Griffith  B(aily),  241  West  Biddle 
St.,    Baltimore,    Md.;    19    rue   Daguerre, 

P.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  May  21,  1890. 
Studied  with  M.  Heymann,  Munich; 
Richard  Miller  and  Laparra  in  Paris. 
and  in  Italy  and  Spain,  Work:  "Por- 
trait of  Cardinal  Mercier,"  Maryland 
Historical  Society, 

COAN,    Helen    E.,    204   North   Burlington 
Ave.,   Los  Angeles,   Cal. 
P.,   I.,    C,   W.,    T.— Born   Byron,    N.   Y. 

Pupil  of  aSL  of  N.  Y.,  Frederick  Freer 
and  William  M,  Chase,  Member: 
California  Art  C,  Award:  Medals  for 
oil  and  water  color,  Alaska-Yukon-Pa- 
cific Exposition,  Seattle,  1909;  medal 
and   diploma,    San   Diego   Exp.,    1915. 

COAST,  Oscar  R.,  Santa  Barbara,  Cal.; 
Salmagundi  Club,  45  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Salem,  O.,  1851.  Studied  in 
Paris  and  Rome.  Member:  Salma. 
C,1897.      Specialty,    landscapes. 

COATS,  Randolph  Lasalle,  care  of  the 
Art  Museum,  Cincinnati,  O.   (P.) 


382 


COBB 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


COLE 


COBB,  Ethelyn  Pratt,  213  Bryant  St., 
Buffalo.    N.    Y.    (P.) 

COCHRAN,  Allen  D.,  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Oct.  23,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Kenyon  Cox  and  Birge  Harri- 
son.    Member:    Salma.C. 

COCKCROFT,  Edith  Varian  (Mrs.  Chas. 
L.  Wevand,  17  East  39th  St.;  h.  33  E]ast 
61st  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Ogunquit,  Me. 

P.,  C,  D.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  1881. 
Member:  N.  A.  "Women  PS;  Con- 
temporary; Salon  d'Automne,  Paris. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention  Inter.  Art 
Union,  Paris,  1909  and  1910;  Saltus  prize, 
N.  A.  Women  PS,  1916.  Specializes  in 
batik  costumes  and  decorations. 

COCKRELL,  Dura  (Brokaw)  (Mrs.  E.  R. 
Cockrell),  Texas  Christian  Univ.,  Ft. 
Worth,    Texas. 

P  C.  W.,  Tv..  T. — Born  Tiscomb.  Iowa, 
Feb.  16,  1877.  Pupil  of  William  M. 
Chase  and  Kenneth  Hayes  Miller. 
Member:  Ft.  Worth  AA;  Ft.  Worth 
Painters  Club.  Award  :  Bronze 
medal.  Woman's  Forum,  Dallas,  Tex., 
1919. 

CODMAN,     Edwin     E.,    166    Ontario    St., 
Providence,    R.    I. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence  AC. 

COE,  Ethel  Louise,  care  of  Art  Institute, 
Chicago,  111.;  h.  1223  Elmwood  Ave., 
Evanston,   111. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Chicago,  111.  Pupil  of 
AIC;  Hawthorne  and  Sorolla.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SA;  Chicago  AC; 
Cordon  C.  Award:  Young  Fort- 
nightly prize,  AIC  1911.  Work:  In 
Sioux  City  Art  Museum.  Instructor 
AIC;   also  University  of  Chicago. 

COFFIN,     Mrs.     Esther     L.,     234    Central 
Park   West,    New   York,    N.    Y. 
P.— M  ember:    NYWCC. 

COFFIN,  Sarah  Taber  (Mrs.  William  H. 
Coffin),  Chestnut  Hill,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Vassalboro,  Me.,  June  1,  1844. 
Pupil  of  Dr.  Rimmer,  R.  Swain  Gifford. 
W.  Sartain,  Frank  Duveneck  and 
Charles  Woodbury;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under 
C.  Y.  Turner,  and  Ross  Turner  in  Bos- 
ton. Member:  Copley  S.,  1899. 
Work:  In  Moses  Brown  School, 
Providence,   R.   I. 

COFFIN,  W.  Haskell,  80  West  40th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Studied  at  Corcoran  School  of  Art, 
Washington,   and  in  Paris. 

COFFIN,    William    A(nderson),    58    West 

57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Ldscp.P.,W. — Born  Allegheny,  Pa.,  Jan. 
31,  1855.  Pupil  of  Bonnat  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1898,  NA  1912;  SAA 
1886;  N.  Y.  Arch  Lg.,  1888;  Lotos  C; 
'Soc.  des  Artistes  Francais  (hon.,  1915); 
Soc.  National  des  Beaux-Arts  (hon., 
1915);  Fraternity  des  Artistes  (hon. 
pres.  1916);  AFAS;  Century  Asso.  Di- 
rector of  Fine  Arts,  Pan-Am.  Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901.  Aw  a  r  d  s  :  Second 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD,  1886;  bronze 
medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1889;  Webb  prize, 
SAA,  1891;  gold  medal,  AC  Phila., 
1898:  silver  medal.  Charleston  Exp., 
1902;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 


Chevalier,  Legion  of  Honor,  France, 
1917;  chairman,  American  Artists'  Com- 
mittee of  One  Hundred,  French  Soldier- 
Artists  War  Relief  Fund,  1914-22;  spe- 
cial testimonial  gold  medal,  Societe  des 
Artistes  Frangais,  1916;  plaquette  de  la 
Fraternite  des  Artistes,  1916;  president 
exhibition  committee  of  American  paint- 
ings and  sculpture  by  invitation  of 
French  Government  at  Luxembourg 
Museum.  Paris.  October  and  November, 
1919.  Work:  "The  Rain"  and  "A  De- 
cember Night,"  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York;  "At  Break  of  Day,"  Buffalo 
Fine  Arts  Academy;  "September,"  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Washington.  D.  C. ;  "A 
Maple  in  Spring."  Municipal  Gallery, 
Venice,  Italy;  "Oaks — October,"  Munic- 
ipal Art  Gallery,  Montclair,  N.  J.;  "A 
Thunderstorm"  and  "October  Morning." 
Brooklyn  Institute  Museum;  "Central 
Park  and  the  Plaza."  Brooks  Memorial 
Art  Gallery,  Memphis,  Tenn.;  "Septem- 
ber Morning,"  Yale  School  of  Fine 
Arts. 
COHEN,  Evelyn,  465  West  End  Ave., 
New    York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

COHEN,  George  W.,  16  East  87th  St.,  New 
York.  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:    Salma.C,    1899. 

COHEN,  Isabel,  83  Irving  PL,  New  York, 
N.  Y.      (P.) 

COHEN,  Nessa,  2094  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

S.— Born  New  York.  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
James  E.  Eraser.  Member:  N.  A. 
Women  PS:  Lg.  of  NYA;  S.Indp.A. 
Work:  "Sunrise,"  Havana.  Cuba; 
Groups  of  Indians  of  Southwestern 
United  States,  Am.  Museum  of  Natural 
Hist.,    New  York. 

COHEN- KIRK,    Frank,    251    South    Fifth 
St.,  Philadelphia,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

COLBURN,  Eleanor  Ruth  (Mrs.  Joseph 
Elliott  Colburn),  3028  Michigan  Ave., 
Chicago,   111. 

P.— Born  Dayton,  O.,  1866.  Pupil  of 
AIC.  Member:  Chicago  SA; 
(assoc);  Chicago  WCC.  Award:  Mu- 
nicipal AL  Prize  purchase,  AIC  1908. 
Work:  "An  Offshore  Wind,"  Art  In- 
stitute  of  Chicago. 

COLBY,  Eugene  C,  29  Rutgers  St.,  Roch- 
ester.  N.  Y. 
P.,   T.— M  ember:   Rochester  AC. 

COLBY,  Frank  A.,  70  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

COLBY,  Josephine  Wood  (Mrs.  Franklin 
G.  Colby).  The  Tamaracks,  Andover, 
N.  J. 

P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  26, 
1862.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  NAD; 
Will  Low,  Carroll  Beckwith,  William 
Sartain,  John  W.  Alexander.  Mem- 
ber: NYWCC:  NYSoc.C;  NAC:  SPNY. 
Work  in  Pennsylvania  Academy  of 
the  Fine  Arts,  Phila.;  Walker  Gallery, 
Liverpool,  England;  Manchester  Art 
Gallery,    England. 

COLE,     Alphaeus     P(hilemon),     33     West 
67th   St.,   New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — Born    Jersey    City    Heights,    N.    J., 
July    12,    1876.      Pupil    of   Constant    and 


383 


COLE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


COLMAN 


Laurens  in  Paris.  Member  :  Conn. 
APA;  NYWCC;  Salma.C.  Award: 
Hon.  mention,  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;   hon.   mention.   Conn.  AFA.    1919. 

COLE,  Annie  Elizabeth  (Mrs.  Myron  Asa 
Cole),  The  Christiana,  1829  California 
St.,  Washington,  D.  C, 
P.— Born  Providence,  R.  I.,  Dec.  9,  1880. 
Pupil  of  Henry  W.  Moser,  Edgar  Nye, 
and  Bertha  E.  Perrie.  Member* 
Wash.   WCC. 

COLE,    IVIrs.    Bianche    Dugan,    1109    Mag- 
nolia  Ave.,    Los   Angeles,    Cal. 
P.— M  ember:    Cal.   AC. 

COLE,    Emily    Beckwith,   220   Beacon   St., 
Hartford,    Conn. 

S.,  T. — Born  New  London,  Conn.,  Jan. 
2,  1896.  Pupil  of  Louis  Gudebrod. 
Member:     Hartford  ACC. 

COLE,  Gladys,  6207  Brooklyn  Ave.,   Seat- 
tle, Wash.    (P.) 

COLE,    IVIrs.    Jessie    (Duncan)    Savage,    81 

Wickes  Ave.,   Nepperham,   Yonkers,    N. 

Y. 

P. — Born  Pass  Christian,  Miss.,  May  25, 

1858.     Pupil  of  Wyatt  Eaton;    John   La 

Farge. 

COLE,    Margaret    W..    33    West    67th    St., 
New  York,   N.    Y.    (P.) 

COLE,  Thomas  Casilear,  154  West  55th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Christ 
Church  Rectory,  Hudson,  N.  Y. 
Port.  P. — Born  Staatsburgh-on-Hudson, 
N.  Y.,  July  23,  1888.  Pupil  of  Tarbell, 
Benson  and  Hale  in  Boston;  Julian 
Academy  under  Baschet  and  Laurens  in 
Paris. 

COLE,     Timothy,     Ferris    Lane,     Pough- 
keepsie,   N.  Y. 

Wood  Engr. — Born  London,  England, 
April  6,  1852;  brought  to  United  States 
In  1857;  settled  in  Chicago.  Pupil  of 
Bond  and  Chandler  in  Chicago.  M  e  m- 
ber:  ANA  1906,  NA  1908;  Nat.  Inst. 
AL;  Society  of  Painters,  Sculptors  and 
Gravers,  London  (hon.);  Guild  of 
Craftsmen,  London  (hon.);  AI  Graphic 
A.  Awards:  Gold  medal  and  di- 
ploma, Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893: 
gold  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  gold 
medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
grand  prize,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  gold 
medal,  NAC,  1916.  Work:  "Italian 
Masterpieces";  Dutch,  Flemish,  Eng- 
lish, Spanish  and  French  masters; 
"Masterpieces  in  American  Galleries." 
Represented  in  Carnegie  Institute,  Pitts- 
burgh, and  City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis; 
Chicago  Art  Inst.,  Metropolitan  Museum, 
Boston  Art  Museum,  Washington  Na- 
tional Gallery,   etc. 

COLEMAN,  C(harles)  C(aryl),  Villa  Nar- 
cissus, Island  of  Capri,  Italy;  and  "The 
Players,"  16  Gramercy  Park;  and  58 
West  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  1840.  Studied 
in  Paris  and  Rome.  Member:  ANA 
1865;  Players  C;  NAC;  London  AC. 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  silver  medal,  Pan- 
Am.     Exp.,     Buffalo,     1901.       Work: 


"Early  Moonlight— Capri,"  "The  Anti- 
quary," and  "The  Capri  Girl,"  Buffalo 
Fine  Arts  Academy;  "Vesuvius  from 
Pompeii,"  Detroit  Institute;  "Oil  Press, 
Anacapri-Capri,"  Fine  Arts  Academy, 
Buffalo. 

COLEMAN,  Glenn   O..  154  East  Park  St., 
Long  Beach,  L.  L,  N.  Y. 
P.,    I.,    T.— Born    Springfield,    O.,    July 
18,    1887.      Pupil    of    Henri    and    Chase. 
Member:    S.Indp.A. 

COLEMAN,    Ralph    P(allen),    524    Walnut 

St.;  h.  311  East  Dorset  St.,  Philadel- 
phia,  Pa. 

I.— Born  Philadelphia,  June  27,  1892. 
Pupil  of  Philadelphia  School  of  Ind. 
Art.  Illustrated  "The  Man  with  Three 
Names"  and  "Drums  of  Jeopardy"  by 
McGrath;  "Nobody's  Man"  by  Oppen- 
heim,  etc.,  and  illustrates  for  many 
magazines. 

COLES,  Ann  Cadwailader,  164  Waverly 
PI.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Saluda, 
N.  C. 

P.,  L,  C— Born  Columbia,  S.  C,  Aug.  4, 
1882.  Pupil  of  C.  A.  Whipple,  A.  V. 
Tack  and  F.  Luis  Mora.  Member: 
Alliance;  S.Indp.A.  Work:  "Gen.  M. 
C.  Butler,"  Confederate  Museum,  Rich- 
mond,  Va. 

COLLES,  Gertrude,  939  Eighth  Ave.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

Port. P. — Born  Morristown,  N.  J.,  Aug. 
20,  1869.  Pupil  of  Laurens  in  Paris; 
George  de  Forest  Brush  and  B.  R. 
Fitz  in  New  York.  Work:  Former 
Senator  Jacob  Miller,  State  House, 
Trenton,  N.  J. 

COLLETTE,    Maurice,    381    Fourth    Ave., 
New    York.    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

COLLINS,  Mrs.  Corinne  Cunningham, 
2012  O  St.,  TVashington,   D.  C.      (P.) 

COLLINS,  Frank  H.,  500  Park  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  T. — Director  of  drawing,  elementary 
public  schools  of  New  York. 

COLLINS,  Marjorie  S.,  701  Nottingham 
Road,  Wawaset,  Wilmington,  Del.  (Min. 
P.) 

COLLVER,  Ethel  Blanchard  (Mrs.  Leon 
Collver),  Fenway  Studios;  125  Common- 
wealth Ave.,  Boston,  Mass. 
Port.  P.,  C,  T.— Born  Boston.  Mass. 
Pupil  of  Tarbell,  Benson,  and  Hale  In 
Boston;  Academic  Colarossi,  Nnudin, 
Guerin,  in  Paris.  Member:  Copley 
S.,  1901. 

COLMAN,  R.  Clarkson,  Studio-by-the- 
Sea,  Laguna  Beach.  Calif. 
P.— Born  Elgin,  111.,  Jan.  27.  1884. 
'Studied  in  Chicago,  and  with  Laurens 
and  Julian  in  Paris.  Member:  Ten 
Painters  Club  of  Calif.;  Calif.  AC;  San 
Diego  Art  Guild;  Laguna  Beach  Art 
Asso.  Award:  Texas  Cotton  Palace 
Exposition,  1910;  gold  medal.  Riverside 
Fair,  1917;  popular  prize,  Laguna  Beach 
Asso.,  1920;  cash  prize,  Sacramento 
State  Fair,  1920.  Represented  in  Pub- 
lic Library,  Ajo,  Arizona;  Public 
Library.  Waco,  Texas;  Santa  Monica 
Woman's   Club. 


384 


COLSON 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


CONN  AWAY 


COLSON,  Frank  V.,  198  Dartmouth  St., 
Boston,  Mass.;  summer,  Mansfield, 
Mass. 

P.,  I.,  E.,  T. — Born  Boston,  Oct.  24, 
1894.  Pupil  of  Benson,  Hale,  Bosley, 
William  James  and  Paxton.  Mem- 
ber:    Boston    SE. 

COLT,   Morgan,  New  Hope,   Pa. 

P.,  C. — Born  'Summit,  N.  J.,  Sept.  11, 
1876.  Pupil,  Scliool  of  Arch.,  Col.  Uni- 
versity, and  W.  L.  Lathrop.  Mem- 
ber:    Salma.C;   Rochester  AC. 

COLTMAN,  Ora,  10714  Deering  Ave., 
Cleveland,  O. 

P., S.— Born  Shelby,  O.,  1860.  Pupil  of 
ASL  of  N.Y. ;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris; 
Magidey  Schule,  Munich.  Member: 
Cleveland  So.   of  Artists   (vice-pres.). 

COLTON,  Mary  Russell  Ferrell,  Llanfair 
&  Wister  Roads,  Ardmore,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Louisville,  Ky..  Mar.  25,  1889. 
Pupil  of  Eliot  Uaingerfield.  Member: 
Phila.  WCC;  Plastic  C;  Wash.  WCC; 
Phila.   Alliance. 

COLWELL,  Elizabeth,  1373  East  57th  St., 
Chicago,  111. 

I.,Etcher,C. — ^^Born  in  Michigan,  May  24, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Vanderpoel  and  Olson- 
Nordfeldt  in  Chicago.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SE;  N.  Y.  SE. ;  Chicago  Cordon  C. 
Award:  Hon.  mention,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Represented  in  Print 
Dept.,    Chicago   Art   Institute. 

COMAN,  Charlotte  B(uell)  (Mrs.  J.  B. 
Coman),  20  West  75th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

lidscp.P.— Born  Waterville,  N.  Y.,  1833. 
Pupil  of  James  R.  Brevoort  in  New 
York;  Harry  Thompson  and  Emil  Ver- 
nier in  Paris.  Member:  ANA  1910; 
NYWCC;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  SPNY;  Art 
Workers'  C.  Awards:  Bronze  medal, 
California  Mid-Winter  Exp.,  San  Fran- 
cisco, 1894;  prize,  N.Y. Woman's  AC; 
Shaw  memorial  prize,  SAA  1905;  second 
prize.  S.Wash.A.  1906;  Burgess  prize, 
N.Y. Woman's  AC,  1907;  McMillin  prize, 
N.Y.  Woman's  AC,  1911.  Work: 
"Early  Summer,"  National  Gallery, 
Washington,  D.  C;  "Clearing  Off," 
Metropolitan  Museum,   New  York. 

COMBS,    Frances    Hungerford,   The  Well- 
ington,   Washington,    D.    C. 
P. — M  ember:    Wash.  WCC. 

COM  INS,  Alice  R.  (Mrs.  F.  B.  Comins), 
care  Old  Colony  Trust  Co.,  222  Boylston 
St.,   Boston,  Mass.      (P.) 

COMINS,  Eben  F.,  203  Fenway  Studios, 
30  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  summer. 
East  Gloucester,  Mass. 
Port.P.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Boston,  Mass. 
Pupil  of  Beaux-Arts  in  Paris  and  Den- 
man  Ross  in  Boston.  Member: 
Calif.  AC;  Boston  AC;  Copley  S. 
Award  :  Hon.  mention,  Conn.  AFA, 
1919;  first  prize,  Hartford  Exhibition, 
1921. 

COMSTOCK,  Enos  B(enjamin),  178  High- 
wood  Ave.,  Leonia,  N.  J. 
P..  I.,  W. — Born  Milwaukee,  Dec.  24, 
1879.  Pupil  John  H.  Vanderpoel,  Fred- 
erick W.  Freer.  Author  and  Illustrator 
of  "Tuck-Me-In  Stories,"  "When 
Mother   Lets   Us    Tell    Stories,"    "Fairy 


Frolics."  etc.  Illustrated  "She  and  Al- 
lan," "When  the  World  Shook,"  "The 
Ancient  Allan,"   etc. 

COMSTOCK,  Frances  Bassett,  178  High- 
wood  Ave.,  Leonia,  N.  J. 
P.,  S.,  I.— Born  Elyria,  O.,  Oct.  16, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Gari  Melchers,  Frederick 
W.  Freer  and  John  Vanderpoel.  Mem- 
ber:    NYWCC 

CONANT,  Arthur  P.,  520  East  Fourth  St., 
Cincinnati,    O.     (P.) 

CONANT,  Marjorie,  129  East  10th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Duxbury,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Sept.  14.  1885. 
Pupil  of  Hale,  Benson  and  Tarbell. 
Member:  Concord  AA;  Duxbury  AA; 
Lg.    of  NYA;   N.A.WomenP.S. 

CONARD,  Grace  Dodge,  Art  Institute, 
Chicago;  h.  297  Keystone  Ave.,  River 
Forest,    111. 

P..  C.  T.— Born  Dixon,  HI.,  Apl.  10, 
1885.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  Chi- 
cago ASL;  Chicago  AG.    Instructor  AIC. 

CONE,   Mrs.  Grace  C,  194  East  McMillan 
St.,    Mt.   Auburn,    O. 
P. — M  ember:    Cin.  Woman's  AC. 

CONGDON,  Adairene  Vose  (Mrs.  Thomas 
R.  Congdon),  Villa  Vose  Studios,  Camp- 
bell,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  ASL  of 
N.Y.;  I/'hermitte  and  Collin  in  Paris. 
Frank  Brangwyn  i,i  London.  Mem- 
ber: Paris  A. Woman's  AA.;  Chicago 
SE.  Work  in  Petit  Palais,  Paris;  Li- 
brary of  Congress,  Washington,  D.  C; 
New   York   Public   Library. 

CONKLING,  Mrs.  Mabel,  26  West  8th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Burleigh 
Hill,   Boothbay,   Me. 

P..  S.— Born  Boothbay,  Me.,  Nov.  17, 
1871.  Pupil  of  A.  Saint  Gaudens,  F. 
MacMonnies,  A.  Injalbert;  Collin  and 
Whistler.  Member  :  Amer.  Numismat- 
ic S.;  Art  Workers'  Club;  N.  A.  Women 
PS.  Work:  In  Chicago  AI  and  Plas- 
tic C.  Phila.  Specialties — Portraits  and 
sculpture. 

CONKLING,  Paul,  5  McDougal  Alley;  26 
West  8th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer, 
Boothbay,   Me. 

P.,  S.— Born  New  York,  Oct.  24,  1871. 
Pupil  of  Falguiere,  MacMonnies. 

CON  LEY,  Sarah  Ward,  2104  TVest  End 
Ave.,  Nashville,  Tenn. 
P.,  S.,  I.,  A.,  C,  W.,  T..— Born  Nash- 
ville, Tenn.,  Dec.  21,  1861.  Pupil  of 
Bouguereau,  Julian  and  F.  A.  Bridg- 
man  in  Paris;  Ferrari  in  Rome.  Mem- 
ber: Nashville  Art  Association. 
Work  :  AVoman's  Building,  Centen- 
nial Exp..  Nashville,  Tenn.;  mural  dec- 
orations  in   Battle   Creek   Sanitarium. 

CON L ON,  George,  1230  St.  Paul  St.;  15 
West  Eager  St.,  Baltimore,  Md. 
S. — Born  in  Maryland.  Pupil  of  Injal- 
bert and  Bartlett  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Char.C  Award  :  Rlnehart 
Scholarship,  1911-1915. 

CONNAWAY,      Jay,      20      Rue     Durantln. 
Paris,    France;    h.    1649    North    Alabama 
St..    Indianapolis,    Ind. 
P.— Born    Liberty,    Ind.,    Nov.    27,    1893. 


385 


CONNELL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


COOK-SMITH 


Pupil  of  Chase  in  New  York,  and  Wm. 
R.  Reese,  and  studied  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber:    ASL  of  N.  Y. 

CONNELL,  Edwin  D.,  56  Rue  de  Sevres, 
Clamart,    France. 

P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Sept.  3, 
1859.  Pupil  of  Bouguereau,  Robert- 
Fleury  and  Julien  Dupre  in  Paris. 
Member:  Societe  Internationale  des 
Beaux- Arts;  Paris  AAA.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1899;  medal, 
second  class,  Orleans  Exp.,  1905;  first 
class  medal,  Toulouse  Exp.,  1908;  silver 
medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work: 
"Cattle,"  Toledo  Museum  of  Art. 

CONNELLY,    Eugene    L.,   Davis   Theatre, 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

CONNELLY,    Marc,    1591/2    East    83rd    St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
I. — M  ember:     SI. 

CONNER,     Jerome,    322     North     Carolina 
Ave.,    S.   E.,   Washington,    D.    C. 
S.— Born  in  Ireland,  Oct.  12,  1875.     Self- 
taught.     Member:    S.Wash.A. 

CONNER,  J(ohn)  R(amsey),  Bryn  Athyn, 
Pa. 

P.— Born  Radnor,  Pa.  Pupil  of  PAFA. 
Award:  Bronze  medal,  P.-P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Work:  "The  Fisher- 
man," Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the 
Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia;  "Under  the 
North  Light,"  Des  Moines  Asso.  of 
Fine  Arts;  "A  Cottage  Interior,"  Cal- 
ifornia C,  Los  Angeles. 

CONNICK,  Charles  J.,  9  Harcourt  St., 
Boston,  Mass.;  h.  157  Webster  St.,  West 
Newton,  Mass. 

C,  D. — Born  in  Springboro,  Pa.,  Sept. 
27,  1875.  Studied  in  Pittsburgh,  Bos- 
ton, England  and  France.  Member: 
Mural  P.;  Boston  SAC;  Boston  Arch. 
C;  Copley  S.;  Boston  AC.  Award  : 
Gold  medal,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,'l915; 
Logan  medal,  1917;  Soc.  of  Arts  and 
Crafts  medal,  Boston,  1920.  Stained 
glass  window  in  Fourth  Presbyterian 
Church,  Chicago;  Chapel  and  Synod 
House,  St.  John  the .  Divine  Cathedral, 
New  York;  Boston  University  Chapel; 
Asylum  Hill  Congregational  Church, 
Hartford,  Conn.;  St.  Mark's  Church, 
Minneapolis;  Princeton  University;  St. 
James  Cathedral,  Seattle,  Wash;  All 
Saints'  Church,  Peterborough.  N.  H. ; 
Christ  Church,  Glendale,  Ohio;  First 
Presbyterian   Church,   Greensburgh,  Pa. 

CONOVER,  Kate,  60  Clairmont  Ave., 
Detroit,    Mich.    (P.,    T.) 

CONREY,  Lee  F.,  644  Riverside  Drive, 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

I.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  Sept.  11,  1883. 
Pupil  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts. 
Member:  SI.  Illustrations  for 
"Cosmopolitan,"  "McClure's,"  "Mun- 
sey's"    Magazines. 

CONROW,    Wilford    S(eymour),    30    East 
57th    St.,    New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — Born  South  Orange,  N.  J.,  June  14, 
1880.       Pupil     of     Jean-Paul     Laurens, 

Morisset,  P.  Tudor-Hart,  Hambidge. 
Member:  Lg.  of  NYA;  Salma.C; 
Wash.  AC.  Work:  "Portrait  of 
Cephas    Brainerd,"    Y.    M.    C.    A.,    New 


York  City;  "Portrait  of  Henry  Clay 
Cameron,"  Whig  Hall,  Princeton  Uni- 
versity, Princeton,  N.  J.;  Portraits  of 
Major  E.  Alexander  Powell,  Miss  Clara 
J.  Gordon,  Dr.  Wm.  H.  Dull,  mural 
painting  of  George  Washington,  Na- 
tional Gallery  of  Art,  Washington,  D. 
C;  Portrait  of  Prof.  Wm.  N.  Goodyear, 
Cosmos  Club,  Washington. 

CON  ROY,  George  I.,  793  Gravesend  Ave., 
Brooklyn,    N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

CONVERSE,    Lilly  S.,   10   Rue  Desbordes, 
Valmore,    Paris,    France. 
P.— Born      Petrograd,      Oct.      14,      1888. 
Pupil  of  Kenneth   Hayes   Miller. 

CONWAY,  John  S.,  P.  O.  Box  231,  Tena- 
fly,   N.   J. 

P.,  S.— Born  Dayton,  O.,  Feb.  21,  1852. 
Pupil  of  Conrad  Diehl,  Jules  Lefebvre, 
Boulanger,  A.  Millet.  Me  m  b  e  r  :  N. 
Y.  Arch.  Lg.,  1892;  NSS.  Work: 
"Soldiers'  Monument,"  mural  decoration, 
Chamber  of  Commerce,   Milwaukee. 

CONWAY,  William  John,  1394  Lincoln 
Ave.,  St.  Paul,  Minn. 

P.,  S.— Born  St.  Paul,  Oct.  26,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Colarossi  Academy  under  Col- 
lin, Courtois  and  Prinet  in  Paris. 
Member:  Whistler  Club;  Art  Work- 
ers' Guild;  Minnesota  State  Art  Soc; 
Artists*  Soc,   St.  Paul  Inst.   (pres.). 

COOK,  Daniel,  104  Saunders  St.,  Cincin- 
nati, Ohio;  summer,  Dayton,  Ohio. 
P.— Born  Cincinnati,  May  15,  1872. 
Pupil  Nicholas  Gysis,  Cincinnati  Art 
Academy.  Member:  Munich  Art 
Club;  Cincinnati  AC.  Instructor  at 
University  of  Cincinnati.  Works  : 
"A  Rainy  Day,"  University  of  Cincin- 
nati; mural  decorations  Cincinnati 
Music   Hall. 

COOK,  l(sabel)  Vernon  (Mrs.  Jerome 
Cook),  39  West  67th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of  ASL 
of  N.  Y.  and  Chase;  Blanche  and  Si- 
mon in  Paris.  Member:  N.  A.  Wom- 
en PS. 

COOK,  John  A.,  16  Savward  St.;  h.  8 
Highland  St.;  summer,  67  E.  Point 
Road,  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Gloucester,  Mass.,  March  14, 
1870.  Pupil  of  DeCamp,  E.  L.  Major 
and  Douglas  Volk.  Member:  'S. 
Indp.  A. 

COOK,  May  Elizabeth,  1550  Clifton  Ave.; 
h.  1546  Richmond  Ave.,  Columbus,  O. 
S.— Born  Chillicothe,  O.,  Dec,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Paul  Bartlett;  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts  and  Colarossi  Academy  in 
Paris.  Member  :  Columbus  Lg.  of 
Artists;  Am.  Ceramic  Soc.  (assoc. ); 
Plastic  C;  Union  Internationale  des 
Beaux-Arts  et  des  Lettres,  Paris.  Rep- 
resented in  Carnegie  Library,  Colum- 
bus, O.;  Ohio  State  University,  Colum- 
bus,  O. 

COOK-SMITH,  Jean  Beman,  Shelton  Ho- 
tel, Jamaica,  Long  Island,  N.  Y. 
P..  S.,  I.— Born  New  York,  Mar.  26, 
1865.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Chase;  studied  in 
Holland.  France  and  Italv.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS.  Work:  "The  Maya 
Frieze",    San    Diego   Museum,    Calif. 


386 


COOKE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


COPELAND 


COOKE,  Abigail  W.,  15  Pitman  St.,  Prov- 
idence, R.  I.  ,  „  ^  . 
P.— Pupil  of  R.  I.  School  of  Design, 
George  W.  Whittaker  and  Sydney  R. 
Burleigh.  Member:  Providence  AC; 
Providence  WCC.  Work  in  Provi- 
dence AC. 

COOKE,    CHARLES    H.,    1841    Kenilworth 
Ave.,   Chicago,   111. 

P.— Born  Toledo,  O.  Pupil  of  AIC. 
Member:  Palette  and  Chisel  C. ; 
AIC   Alumni  Asso.;    S.   Indp.   A. 

COOKE,  Edna,  care  of  Arts  and  Crafts 
Guild,  235  South  11th  St.;  h.  4049  Locust 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
I.— Born  Philadelphia,  June  19,  1891. 
Pupil  of  Hugh  Breckenridge  and 
Henry  McCarter.  Member:  Phila. 
Alliance;  Fellowship  PAFA.  Illustrated 
stories  by  Mrs.  J.  H.  Ewing,  and  stories 
for  many  magazines. 

COOKE,  Jessie  Day,  1841  Kenilworth 
Ave.,    Chicago,    111. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Atchison.  Kan.,  May  16, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Vanderpoel,  Freer, 
Pauline  Dohn.  Member  :  Alumni 
Asso.  AIC. 

COOLEY,  Blanche  Marshall.  See  Ratliff, 
Mrs.  Walter  B. 

COOLIDGE,  Bertha,  133  East  40th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

Min.  P.— Born  Lynn,  Mass.,  Aug.,  1880. 
Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School  under 
Tarbell  and  Benson;  Bourgois  in  Paris; 
Grueber  in  Munich.  Member:  G. 
Boston  A.;  Soc.  de  la  Miniature,  Paris; 
Pa.Soc.    of   Min. P. 

COOLIDGE,    Georgette    E.    (Mrs.    Walter 
G.  Coolidge),  Lyndon,  Vt. 
P. — Born    Brooklyn,    N.    Y.,    March    17, 
1850.     Pupil  of  Mrs.  A.  Van  Clef  Dodg- 
shun  and  Robert  Rascovitch. 

COOLIDGE,  John,  826  California  Bldg.; 
h.  3459  S.  Arlington  St.,  Los  Angeles, 
Calif. 

P.,  I.,  W.— Born  Pennsylvania,  Dec.  6, 
1882.  Pupil  Chase,  Cecilia  Beaux,  T.  P. 
Anshutz.      Member  :     Calif.   AC. 

COOLIDGE,  (Mary)  Rosamond,  307  Fen- 
way Studios,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  206  Bel- 
mont St.,  Watertown,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Watertown,  Mass.,  May  18, 
1884.  Pupil  of  W.  D.  Hamilton  and 
E.  C.  Tarbell  in  Boston.  Member: 
N. A. Women  PS. 

COOLIDGE,  Mountfort,  126  Pennsylvania 
St.,  Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  sum- 
mer, Ogunquit,  Me. 

P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  June  12,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Robert  Henri. 

COON,    Howard    A.,    Westerly,    R.    I. 
P. — M  ember:       Providence    AC. 

COONAVALE,      Robert,      637      Vanderbilt 
Ave.,  Brooklyn,   N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:      S. Indp. A. 

COONSMAN,  Nancy,  6171  Delmar  Blvd., 
St.    Louis,    Mo. 

S..  A.,  T.— Born  St.  Louis,  Aug.  28,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Zolnay  and  Grafly.    Member: 


St.  Louis  AG.  Award:  Bronze  medal, 
Missouri  State  Fair;  Bridge  prize,  St. 
Louis  AG,  1919;  Ives  prize,  St.  Louis 
AG,  1920.  Work:  Kincaid  Fountain, 
St.  Louis  Public  Library;  "Maiden- 
head," City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis; 
Toledo  Museum  of  Art. 
COOPER,  Colin  Campbell,  222  West  59th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  Santa  Barbara, 
Calif. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of  PAFA; 
Julian  and  Delecluse  Academies  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1908,  NA  1912; 
NYWCC;  AC  Phila.;  Phila.WCC; 
AWCS;  Fellowship  PAFA;  Lotos  C; 
SPNY.  S  p  e  c  i  a  1 1  y — Street  scenes. 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  Atlanta 
Exp.,  1895;  Wm.  T.  Evans  prize,  AWCS, 
1903;  Sesnan  prize,  PAFA,  1904;  gold 
medal,  ACP,  1905;  silver  medal,  Buenos 
Aires  Exp.,  1910;  Beal  prize,  NYWCC, 
1911;  gold  medal  for  oil  painting  and 
silver  medal  for  water  colors,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Hudnut  prize, 
NYWCC,  1918;  Lippincott  prize,  PAFA, 
1919.  Work:  "Broad  Street,  New 
York,"  Cincinnati  Museum;  "The  Flat- 
iron,  New  York,"  Dallas  (Tex.)  Art  As- 
sociation; "Grand  Basin,  World's  Fair," 
and  "The  Plaza,  New  York,"  St.  Louis 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts;  "Basilika,  Que- 
bec," Boston  Art  Club;  "Procession  at 
Bruges,"  Art  Club  of  Philadelphia; 
"The  Rialto,"  Lotos  Club,  New  York; 
"Broadway  in  War  Time,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts,  Philadel- 
phia; "Fifth  Avenue,  New  York," 
owned  by  the  French  Government. 
COOPER,  F.  G.,  425  Tremont  Ave.,  West- 
field,   N.   J. 

I. — Born  McMimville,  Ore.,  Dec.  29, 
1883.  Member:  SI.  1910;  Salma.C; 
AI  Graphic  A. ;  Guild  of  Free  Lance 
Artists.  Illustrations  for  "Autobiogra- 
phy of  Methusaleh,"  "Collier's,"  "Life," 
Keith's,  Proctor's  (theater  posters), 
posters  for  Food  Administration. 
COOPER,    Mrs.    J.    H.,    1215    Eighth   Ave., 

West.  Seattle,  Wa.sh.  (P.) 
COOTES,  F.  Graham,  1947  Broadway; 
h.  50  West  67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P., I.— Born  Staunton,  Va.,  Apr.  6,  1879. 
Pupil  of  Kenneth  Hayes  Miller,  Robert 
Henri  and  F.  V.  Du  Mond  in  New 
York.  Member:  SI  1910.  Illustra- 
tions for  "The  Shepherd  of  the  Hills," 
etc.  Designs  covers  for  magazines. 
COPELAND,  Charles,  Studio  Bldg.,  110 
Tremont  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  53  Gray 
Cliff  Road,  Newton  Centre,  Mass.;  sum- 
mer,  Thomaston,  Me. 

P., I. — Born    Thomaston,    Me.,    Sept.    10, 
1858.     Member:   Boston  AC;    Boston 
SWCP. 
COPELAND,    Joseph     Frank,    320     South 
Broad  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  h.,  58  For- 
rest Ave..  Drexel  Hill,  Pa. 
P..C.,T.— Born    St.    Louis,    Mo.,    Feb.    21, 
1872.       Member:      Phila.Sketch     C; 
Phila.WCC.       Instructor     Pennsylvania 
Museum    School   of   Industrial  Art. 
COPELAND,    M.    Baynon,    Comptoir    Na- 
tional,     2      Place     de      I'Opera,      Paris, 
France. 

Port.P. — Born  El  Paso,   Tex.     Pupil  of 
Kenyon  Cox  in   New   York;    Ferdinand 

387 


COPPEDGE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


COTTON 


Humbert  and  R.  Miller  in  Paris;  Shan- 
non in  London. 

COPPEDGE,  Mrs.  Fern,  4011  Baltimore 
Ave.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer,  Glou- 
cester, Mass. 

P.— Born  Decatur,  111.,  July  28,  1888. 
Pupil  of  William  M.  Chase,  John  Carl- 
son, and  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  AIC;  PAFA. 
Member:  N. A. Women  PS;  Plastic 
C. ;  Phila.  Alliance;  Fellowship  PAPA; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Awards:  H.  O.  Dean 
prize.  Artists  of  Kansas  City  and  vicin- 
ity, 1917;  E.  Shield  prize,  1918.  Work: 
"The  Thaw,"  Detroit  Institute  of  Art; 
"Winter  on  the  Schuylkill,"  Pennsyl- 
vania State  Capitol. 

COPPINI,  Pompeo,  7444  Blackstone  Ave., 
Chicago,  111. 

S.— Born  Florence,  Italy,  May  19,  1870. 
Pupil  of  Augusto  Rivalta  in  Florence; 
came  to  America  in  1896;  citizen  of 
United  States  since  1901.  Represented 
in  the  United  States  by  29  public  monu- 
ments, 16  portrait  statues  and  about  75 
portrait  busts,  and  in  Mexico  City  by 
the  Washington  Statue,  gift  from 
Americans   to   Mexico. 

CORBETT,  Bertha.     See  Mrs.  Melcher. 

CORBETT,  Gail  Sherman  (Mrs.  Harvey 
Wiley  Corbett),  443  West  21st  Street, 
New  York,   N.  Y. 

S. — Born  Syracuse,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
Augustus  Saint  Gaudens.  Member  : 
NSS  1907;  Am.Numismatic  'Soc. 
Award  :  Hon.  mention  for  sculpture, 
and  bronze  medal  for  medals  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Work:  Hamilton  White 
Memorial  and  Kirkpatrick  Fountain, 
Syracuse,  N.  Y. ;  bronze  doors,  Audito- 
rium and  Municipal  Building,  Spring- 
field, Mass.;  Springfield  medal,  Boston 
Museum. 

CORNELL,  Grace,  33  Alsop  St.,  Jamaica, 
L.    I.,    N.    Y. 
P. — ^M  ember:     N.A.Women  PS. 

CORNER,  Thomas  C(romwell),  260  West 
Biddle  St.,  Baltimore,  Md. ;  h.  20  Merry- 
mount  Rd.,  Roland  Park,  Md. 
P.— Born  Baltimore,  Feb.  2,  1865.  Pupil 
of  Weir  and  Cox  in  New  York;  Lefebvre 
and  Constant  in  Paris.  Member: 
Charcoal  C. 

CORNOYER,  Paul,  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P., T.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  1864.  Pupil 
of  Lefebvre,  Constant  and  Louis  Blanc 
In  Paris.  Member:  ANA  1909; 
Salma.C.  1902;  Allied  AA;  NAC  (life). 
Awards  :  First  prize,  Paris  AAA 
1892;  gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Assoc,  of 
Painters  and  Sculptors  1895;  Evans 
prize,  Salma.C.  1905;  Inness  prize, 
Salma.C. 1906;  Shaw  purchase,  Salma.C. 
1908;  hon.  mention,  Phila.  AC,  1917. 
Work:  "After  the  Rain,"  Brooklyn 
Institute  Museum;  "Madison  Square," 
fi^Tt  Association,  Dallas,  Tex.;  St.  Louis 
A.rt  Museum;  "Rainy  Day,  Columbus 
Circle,"   Newark  Art  Assoc. 

CORNWELL,  Dean,  1931  Broadway,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Provincetown, 
Mass. 

L— Born  Louisville,  Ky.,  Mar.  5,  1892. 
Pupil  of  Harvey  Dunn.  Member:  SI. 
Awards  :    1st  Illustration  prize,  Wil- 


mington SFA.,  1919  and  1921.  Illus- 
trated: "Torrent,"  "Kindred  of  the 
Dust,"  "Rivers  End,"  "Valley  of  Silent 
Men,"    "Find   the  Woman,"    etc.. 

CORNWELL,  Martha  J(ackson),  Virginia 

Ave.,  West  Chester,  Pa. 
P.,  S.— Born  West  Chester,  Jan.  29, 
1869.  Studied  at  Phila.  School  of  De- 
sign, and  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  and  with  Saint 
Gaudens,  H.  Siddons  Mowbray  and  Geo. 
deForest  Brush.  Member:  ASL  of 
N.  Y.;  Fellowship  PAFA.  Specialty, 
portrait  bronzes. 

CORNWELL,  William  Caryl,  26  East  8th 

St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Lyons,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  19,  1851. 
Pupil  of  Lefebvre,  Boulanger,  and  Ju- 
lian Acad.,  Paris.  Member:  Salma.C; 
NAC.     Inventor  of  Cornwell  luminos. 

CORSON,  Katherine  Langdon  (Mrs. 
Walter  Heilner  Corson),  Corson's,  Pa.; 
P.  O.  Plymouth  Meeting,  Pa. 
Ldscp.  P.,  I. — Born  Rochdale,  England. 
Pupil  of  Emil  Carlsen,  H.  Bolton  Jones 
and  F.  C.  Jones  in  New  York.  Mem- 
ber: N.  A.  Women  PS;  Fellowship 
PAFA;  Plastic  C.  Award:  Medal. 
Atlanta  Exp.,  1895.  Work:  "A^cross 
the    Cove,"    Hamilton    Club. 

CORTRIGHT,  Hazel  Packer,  St.  Martin's, 
Philadelnhia,  Pa.;  Saunderstown,  R.  I. 
P.— M  ember:   Plastic  C  . 

CORWIN,  Charles  Abel,  Salmagundi  Club, 
45  Fifth  Ave;  2486  Grand  Concourse, 
New    York,    N.    Y. 

P. — Born  Newburgh,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  6, 
1857.  Pupil  of  Frank  Duveneck. 
Member:  Chicago  SA;  Salma.C. 
1905.  Awards  :  Cahn  prize,  AIC 
1900;  hon.  mention,  Chicago  SA;  partici- 
pant in  Fine  Arts  Bldg.  prize,  AIC  1914. 
Work  in  Piedmont  Gallery,  Berkeley, 
Cal. 

CORY,  F.  v.,  Canyon  Ferry,  Mont.  (P.,  L) 

CORY,  Kate  T.,  Prescott,  Arizona. 
P. — Born  in  Illinois.  Pupil  of  Cooper 
Union  and  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS;  S.  Indp.  A.  Repre- 
sented by  collection  of  pictures  in  the 
Smithsonian  Institute,  Washington, 
D.  C. 

COSTELLO,  Val,  518  West  54th  St.,  Los 
Angeles,    Cal. 
P.— M  ember:     Calif.   AC. 

COSTIGAN,  John  E.,  Orangeburg,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:         AWCS;       NYWCC; 
Salma.  C.     Award:     Third  Hallgarten 
prize,  NAD,  1920;  Isador  prize,  Salma.  C, 
1920. 

COTHARIN,   Kate  Leah,  657  Bovlston  St., 
Boston;  summer,  Rockport,  Mass. 
P.— Born    Detroit,    Mich.,    Oct.    27,    1866. 
Pupil  of  J.  M.  Dennis  in  Detroit.     Spe- 
cialty   pastel    landscapes    in    miniature. 

COTTON,  John  W(esley),  1137  San  Rafael 
Ave..  Glfindale,  Calif. 
P.,  I.,  E.,  C. — Born  Ontario,  Canada, 
Oct.  29,  1868.  Pupil  of  E.  Marsden  Wil- 
son in  London;  AI  Chicago.  Mem- 
ber: Ontario  SA;  Chicago  SE;  ANA, 
1916;  Calif.  PM;  Calif.  AC;  Calif.  WCC. 
A  wa  r  d  s  :  DeWolf  prize,  Chicago  SE, 
1915;   hon.   mention   for   etchings,    P.-P, 


388 


COTTON 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


COWDERY 


Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Etchings:  In 
New  York  Public  Library,  Congres- 
sional Library,  Washington;  Art  Insti- 
tute of  Chicago;  National  Gallery, 
Ottawa;   Art  Museum,   Toronto. 

COTTON,  William,  132  East  19th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Newport,  R.  I. 
P.— Born  Newport,  July  22,  1880.  Pupil 
of  Cowles  Art  School  in  Boston;  Julian 
Academy  under  Laurens  in  Paris. 
Member:  Mural  P.;  Port.  P.;  ANA, 
1916.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  AC. 
Philadelphia.,  1905;  first  Hailgarten 
prize,  NAD,  1907;  meda],  Dallas,  Tex., 
1909;   purchase  prize,   Boston  AC,   1916. 

COUARD,   Alexander   P(ernot),   R.   D.    42, 

Norwalk,  Conn. 

P.— Born  New  York,  Sept.  6,  1891.  Pupil 
of  Homer  Boss,  George  Bridgman,  F.  V. 
Du  Mond.  Member:  S.  Indp.  A. ; 
Brooklyn  WCC. 

COUCH,  Frank  B.,  St.  Lawrence  Co., 
Pierrepont,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

COULTER,  Mary  J.  (Mrs.  F.  J.  Coulter), 
628  Montgomery  St.,  San  Francisco, 
Cal. 

P.,  E.,  C. — Born  Newport,  Ky.  Pupil 
of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy  under  Duve- 
neck,  Nowottny  and  Meakin,  AI  Chi- 
cago; Lionel  Walden  and  C.  W.  Haw- 
thorne; studied  in  Florence,  Italy. 
Member:  San  F.  AA;  Provincetown 
AA;  Chicago  SE;  Calif.  SE.  A  w  a  r  d  s  : 
Silver  medal  for  pottery  and  overglaze 
at  the  Lewis  and  Clark  Exp.,  Portland, 
Ore.,  1905;  Atlan  Ceramic  prize,  AI 
Chicago,  1909;  bronze  medal  for  porce- 
lain; bronze  medal  for  jewelry  and 
hon.  mention  for  textiles,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,    1915. 

COUPER,  Mrs.  B.  King,  Pine  St.,  Spar- 
tansburg,  S.  C;  summer,  Marietta,  Ga. 
P.,  S.— Born  Augusta,  Ga.,  Feb.  23,  1867. 
Pupil  of  Chase,  Daingerfleld,  Du  Mond 
and  Cox.  Member:  Mississippi  AA; 
Atlanta  AA.     Prize:  Atlanta  Exp.,  1895. 

COUPER,  William,  105  Upper  Mountain 
Ave.,  Montclair,  N.  J. 
S.— Born  Norfolk,  Va.,  Sept.  20,  1853. 
Pupil  of  Thomas  Ball  and  Cooper  Inst, 
in  New  York;  studied  in  Munich  and 
Florence,  where  he  lived  twenty-two 
years.  Member:  NSS;  N.  Y.  Arch. 
Lg.  A  w  p.  r  d  :  Bronze  medal.  Pan- 
Am.Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901.  Work:  "A 
Crown  for  the  Victor,"  Art  Museum, 
Montclair,   N,   J. 

COUSE,  E(anger)  Irving,  58  West  57th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Taos, 
New    Mexico. 

P.— Born  Saginaw,  Mich.,  Sept.  6,  1866. 
Pupil  of  NAD  in  New  York;  Bouguereau, 
Robert-Fleury  and  Ecole  des  Beaux- 
Arts  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA  1902, 
NA  1911;  -NYWCC;  AWCS;  Salma.C; 
Lotos  C.  (hfe);  NAC  (life);  Taos  SA; 
Allied  AA;  SPNY.  Awards:  Shaw 
prize  for  black  and  Vvhite  at  Salma.C, 
1899;  second  Hailgarten  prize,  NAD 
1900;  Proctor  prize,  Salma.C. 1900;  hon. 
mention,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  hon.  men- 
tion, Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo.  1901;  first 
Hailgarten  prize,  NAD  1902;  Osborne 
competition     prize     ($500),     1903;     two 


bronze  medals,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
Lotos  C.  purchase  prize,  1910;  Isidor 
gold  medal,  NAD  1911;  Carnegie  prize 
($500),  NAD  1912;  silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Altman  prize,  NAD, 
1916;  Isidor  prize  ($100),  Salma.C.  1917; 
Ranger  Fund  purchase  price,  NAD, 
1921;  Lippincott  prize,  PAFA,  1921. 
Specialty,  Indians.  Work  :  "Elkfoot," 
Nat'l  Gallery,  Washington;  "The  Forest 
Camp,"  Brooklyn  Institute  Museum; 
"Medicine  Fires."  Dallas  (Tex.)  Museum; 
"Under  the  Trees,"  Smith  College, 
Northampton  Mass.;  "The  Tom  Tom 
Maker,"  Lotos  Club,  New  York;  "Sheep 
at  Evening,"  St.  Paul  (Minn.)  Mu- 
seum; decoration,  "Adoration  of  the 
Shepherds,"  Grace  Church,  Harrisburg, 
Pa.;  "Shappanagons  Chippewa  Chief," 
and  "San  Juan  Pottery,"  Detroit  Insti- 
tute; "Song  of  the  Flute,"  National 
Arts  Club,  New  York;  "Indian  Court- 
ship," Art  Museum,  Montclair,  N.  J.; 
"Indian  Love  Song,"  Brooklyn  Institute 
Museum;  "Making  Pottery,"  Ft.  Worth 
(Tex.)  Museum;  "The  Peace  Pipe," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York,  N. 
Y. ;  "A  Vision  of  the  Past,"  "Making 
Medicine"  and  "The  Water  Shrine," 
Youngstown  CO.)  Museum;  "Wild  Tur- 
key Hunters,"  Santa  Barbara  (Calif.) 
Museum;  "Shrine  of  the  Rain  Gods," 
Toledo  Museum;  "Apache  Water  Bot- 
tle,"  Nashville,    Tenn.,   Museum. 

COUTTS,  Gordon,  406  Pacific  Ave.,  Pied- 
mont, Calif. 

P.,  T.— Born  Aberdeen,  Scotland,  Oct.  3, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Lefebvre,  Robert-Fleury, 
and  Dechenaud  in  Paris.  Work:  "Too 
Late,"  Art  Gallery,  Adelaide,  Australia; 
"Portrait  of  Sir  I.  Reid,  Premier  of  New 
South  Wales,"  National  Art  Gallery, 
Sydney,  Australia;  "Portrait  of  Sir 
James  Patterson,  Premier  of  Victoria," 
Melbourne,  Australia,  Art  Gallery. 

COVE,   Mrs.  John  Alfred,  99  Taber  Ave., 

Providence,  R.  L 

P. — M  ember:    Providence   AC. 
COVERT,  John  R.,  15  West  29th  St.,  New 

York,  N.  Y. 

P. — M  ember:     Pittsburgh  AA. 

COVEY,  Arthur   (Sinclair),  163  West  23rd 

St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer.  Rock- 
port,   Mass. 

E.,  P.— Born  Bloomington,  111.,  June  13, 
1877.  Pupil  of  Vanderpoel,  Karl  Marr, 
Frank  Brangwyn.  Member:  N.Y.SE; 
Chicago  SE;  Salma.C;  Mural  P.;  Arch. 
Lg.  of  N.Y.;  P-G.  Awards  :  First, 
second  and  third  Shaw  prizes,  Salma.C, 
1910,  1911,  1912;  bronze  medal  for  etch- 
ing, P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Works: 
"The  Spirit  of  the  Prairies"  and  three 
mural  panels.  "Wichita  Public  Library; 
"The  Great  Wheel,"  etching  in  Library 
of  Congress;  mural  decorations.  Orange 
Hospital. 

COWAN.  Sarah   E.,  35  West  10th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

Min.  P.— M  ember:  N.  A.  Women  PS; 
Am.   S.  Min.  P. 

COWDERY,  Corene,  232  East  Pearson  St., 
Chicago,   111. 
P.— M  ember:      S. Indp. A. 


389 


CO  WELL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


CRAMER 


COWELL,  Joseph  G(oss),  221  Columbus 
Ave.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  Urentham, 
Mass. 

P.— Born  Peoria,  111.,  Dec.  4,  1886.  Pupil 
of  Bricigman,  DuMond,  Tarbell  and 
Benson;  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member: 
Boston  AC,  Boston  Arch.  C.  Murals  jn 
St.  Mary's  Cathedral,  Universalist 
Church.  Y.  M.  C.  A.,  Peoria,  111.;  the- 
ater, Holyoke,  Mass.;  theaters  in  Bos- 
ton. Stained  glass  windows,  St.  Mary's 
Cathedral,    Peoria,   111. 

COWEN,     A.      Marian,     Chatham     Hotel, 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

COWEN,  Pare  E.,  Chilmark,  Martha's 
Vineyard,   Mass.      (I.) 

COWLES,   Cornelia.     See  Mrs.  Vetter. 

COWLES,  Edith  V.,  152  West  57th  St., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  I.,  C,  T. — Born  Farmington,  Conn., 
May  17,  1874.  Pupil  of  John  T.  Nie- 
meyer;  Bruneau  and  Mme.  Laforge  in 
Paris.  Illustrated:  "House  of  Seven 
Gables,"  by  Hawthorne;  "Old  Virginia," 
by  Thomas  Nelson  Page;  "Friendship," 
by  Emerson.  Has  five  stained  glass 
windows  in  St.  Michael's  Church, 
Brooklyn.  Director  of  Craft  Work  at 
the    "Lighthouse   for  the   Blind." 

COWLES,  Genevieve  A(lmeda),  152  West 
57th  St..  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,I.,C.,T. — Born  Farmington,  Conn., 
Feb.  23,  1871.  Pupil  of  Niemeyer  at 
Yale  Art  School;  Robert  B.  Brandegee 
at  Farmington.  Specialty,  mural  deco- 
rations and  stained  glass  windows. 
Work:  "Charge  to  St.  Peter," 
chapel  of  Conn.  State  Prison  (wax 
mural). 

COWLES,     IVIildred,     152    West     57th     St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

COWLES,     Russell,     44     Gramercy    Park, 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Algona,  la.,  Oct.  7.  1887. 
Member:  NAC;  Mural  P.  A  w  a  r  d  : 
American  Academy  in  Rome  Fellow- 
ship,  1915-1920. 

COX,  Allyn,  130  East  67th  St.,  New  York, 
N. 'Y. 

P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  June  5, 
1896.  Pupil  of  his  father,  Kenyon  Cox; 
NAD;  George  Bridgman.  Member: 
N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg. ;  Mural  P.  Awarded 
Fellowship  American  Academy  in  Rome, 
1916.  Work:  Overmantel  in  Public 
Library,  Windsor,   Vt. 

COX,  Eva,  North  Union  St.,  Kokomo,  Ind. 
(P.) 

COX,  Louise  (Howland  King)  (Mrs. 
Kenyon  Cox),  130  East  67th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Windsor,  Vt. 
P. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  June  23, 
1865.  Pupil  of  NAD;  ASL  under  Ken- 
yon Cox  in  New  York.  Member: 
ANA  1902;  SAA  1893;  Mural  P.  1919. 
Awards  :  Third  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD,  1896;  bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp., 
1900;  silver  medal.  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  Shaw  Memorial  prize,  SAA, 
1903;     silver     medal,     St.     Louis     Exp., 


1904.  Specialty,  children's  portraits. 
Work  :  "May  Flowers,"  National 
Gallery,  Washington. 

COX,    Nancy.      See   Mrs.    McCormack. 

COXE,  R(eginald)  Cleveland,  1320  Fifth 
Ave.,    Seattle,   Wash. 

P.,  E.,  W..  T.— Born  Baltimore,  Md., 
July  21,  1855.  Pupil  of  Bonnat  and 
Gerome    in    Paris. 

COY,  Anna,  118  No.  Main  St.;  h.  127  No. 
3d   St.,   Rockford,   111. 

P.,  T.— Born  Rockford.  111.  Pupil  of 
Chase,  F.  V.  Du  Mond,  Henri  and  Alex- 
ander Robinson,  Gallery  director,  Rock- 
ford  Art   Guild. 

COY,  C.  Lynn,  245  W^est  North  Ave.,  Chi- 
cago.  111. 

S.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Oct.  31,  1889. 
Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  Palette  and 
Chisel  C;  Alumni  AIC;   Chicago   SA. 

COYNE,  Will(iam),  123  East  88th  Street, 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P..  I.,  E.— Born  New  York,  Feb.  14, 
1896.  Pupil  of  John  Sloan.  Member: 
S.Indp.A.;  Soc.  of  N.  Y.  Artists;  Beaux- 
Arts  Institute.  Illustrations  for  "New 
York  Evening  Post,"  "New  York  Call," 
"The  Bookman." 

CRAIG,  Anna  Belle,  Dilworth  Hall,  Penn- 
sylvania College  for  Women;  h.  6202 
Walnut  St..  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Mar.  13,  1878. 
Pupil  of  Pittsburgh  Sch.  of  Design; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.,  Chase,  Shirlaw,  Henry 
G.  Keller,  Martin  G.  Borgard,  and 
Howard  Pyle.  Member:  Pittsburgh 
AA.  Illustrates  in  "Harper's,"  "St. 
Nicholas,"  "Metropolitan,"  and  books 
for  children. 

CRALG,  Charles,  Colorado  Springs,  Colo. 
P. — Born  on  farm,  Morgan  Co.,  O.,  Nov. 
1,  1846.  Pupil  PAFA.  Specialty,  In- 
dians and  cowboys. 

CRAIG,  Netta,  3125  O  St.,  Washington, 
D.  C;  summer.  Washington  Grove,  Md. 
P. — Pupil  of  Corcoran  School  of  Art 
and  PAFA.     Member:  Wash.  S. A. 

CRAIG,  Thomas  B(igalow),  337  Montrose 
Ave.,  Rutherford,  N.  J. 
P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Feb.  14, 
1849.  Self-taught.  Member:  ANA 
1897;  Salma.C.1902;  A.Fund  S.;  Chicago 
WCC.  Specialty,  landscape  with  cat- 
tle. Work:  "Evening,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy,    Philadelphia. 

CRAM,  Allan  G(ilbert),  care  of  Marble- 
head   P.   O.,   Mass. 

P.,I.,E.,T.— Born  Washington,  D.  C, 
Feb.  1,  1886.  Pupil  of  Woodbury,  Chase 
and  Shurtleff.  Award  :  First  Bur- 
gess prize,   Newport  WCC   1914. 

CRAMER,  Florence  Ballin  (Mrs.  Konrad 
Cramer),  163  East  72d  St.;  summer. 
Woodstock,    N.    Y. 

P.,  C,  T.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.  Pupi! 
of  Du  Mond,  Brush  and  Harrison. 
Member:     N.  A.  Worn  en    PS. 

CRAMER,  Konrad,  163  East  72nd  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Woodstock, 
N.    Y. 

P.,  E.,  C,  L.,  T.— Pupil  of  Bolton 
Brown  and  studied  in  Europe.  Direc- 
tor of  Woodstock  School  of  Applied  Art. 


390 


CRAMOND 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


CRISE 


CRAMOND,    Mrs.    Virginia    Gruner,    2038 
Weyer   Ave.,    Norwood,    O. 
P. — M  ember:     Cincinnati     Woman's 
AC. 

CRAMPTON,  R(ollin)  McN(eii),  52  West 
36th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Madison,    Conn. 

P.,  I. — Born  New  Haven,  Conn.,  Mar. 
9,  1886.  Pupil  of  Thomas  Benton,  Yale 
Art  School,  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Work: 
"Portrait  of  Frau  Busnell"  in  Union 
League   Club. 

CRANE,  Ann  (Mrs.  Bruce  Crane),  Studio 
Arcade,    Bronxville,    N.    Y. 
P. — Born     New     York     City.       Pupil     of 
Twachtman    in    New    York;    Merson    in 
Paris.     Member:    N.   A.   Women  PS. 

CRANE,  A.  Wilbur,  North  Pelham,  N.  Y. 
(P.) 

CRANE,  Bruce,  Studio  Arcade,  Bronx- 
ville,  N.   Y. 

Ldscp.P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Oct. 
17,  1857.  Pupir  of  A.  H.  Wyant. 
Member:  ANA  1897,  NA  1901;  SAA 
1881;  AWCS;  A.Fund  S.;  Salma.C.1888; 
Lotos  C;  Union  Internationale  des 
Beaux-Arts  et  des  Lettres.  Awards: 
Webb  prize,  SAA  1897;  bronze  medal, 
Paris  Kxi).,  1900;  Inness  medal,  NAD 
1901;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  silver  medal,  Charleston  Exp., 
1902;  gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
third  prize,  C.I.Pittsburgh  1909;  Saltus 
medal,  NAD  1912;  silver  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Shaw  prize  ($500), 
Saima.C,  1917;  Ranger  Purchase  Fund, 
NAD,  1919.  Wo  r  k  :  "Autumn  Up- 
lands," Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  "November  Hills,"  Carnegie  In- 
stitute, Pittsburgh;  "Autumn,"  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Washington;  "March," 
Brooklyn  Institute  Museum;  "Autumn 
Hills,"  Montclair  (N.  J.)  Gallery; 
"Springtime,"  Peabody  Institute,  Balti- 
more; "November  Hillsides,"  Corcoran 
Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C;  "Last  of 
Winter,"  Fort  Worth  (Tex.)  Museum; 
"Autumn  Meadowland,"  Hackley  Art 
Gallery,  Muskegon,  Mich.;  "December 
Uplands,"  Syracuse,  N.  Y.,  Museum  of 
Art, 

CRANFORD,  Kenneth,  Tompkins  Cove, 
N.   Y.    (P.) 

CRANK,  James   H.,  Interlaken,  N,  J,    (I.) 

CRANMER,  Frances.  See  Mrs.  F.  C. 
Greenman. 

CRAVEN,   Laura.     See  Mrs.  L.   C.  Lewis. 

CRAWFORD,  Arthur  R(oss),  2028  Lin- 
com  St.,  Evanston,  111. 
P.,  C,  Dec— Born  Marilla,  Manistee  Co., 
Mich.,  July  29,  1885.  Pupil  of  Chicago 
Academy  of  Fine  Arts  under  W.  J. 
Reynolds  and  W.  P.  Henderson.  M  e  m- 
ber:   ASL   of   Chicago    (life). 

CRAWFORD,  Brenetta  Hermann  (Mrs. 
Earl  Stetson  Crawford),  "The  En- 
closure," Nutley,  N.  J. 
P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Toledo,  O.,  Oct.  27,  1875. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Colarossi 
and  Carmen  Academies  in  Paris, 
Member:  Port.  P.  Professor  of  life 
drawing  and  composition  at  School  of 
Applied  Design  for  Women,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 


CRAWFORD,  Dorsey  Gibbs,  3709  Ross 
Ave.,    Dallas,    Texas.        (P.) 

CRAWFORD,  Earl  Stetson,  "The  Enclo- 
closure,"  Nutley,  N.  J.;  care  of  the 
Salmagundi  Club,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I.,  W. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  June 
6,  1877.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  in  Paris  at 
Academic  Delecluse,  Academie  Julian 
and  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts.  Member: 
Paris  AAA;  SI  1911;  T.Sq.C;  Port.P. 
(sec.-treas.);  Societe  des  Arts  et  Let- 
tres; Les  Amis  des  Artistes;  Saima.C. 
Mural  decorations  in  United  States 
Court,  San  Francisco.  Author,  "Gent- 
ler   Side    of    Whistler." 

CRAWFORD,  Esther  Mabel,  716  North 
Avenue  66,  Los  Angeles,  Calif. 
P.,  C,  T.— Born  Atlanta,  Ga.,  Apl.  23, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Whistler,  Dow,  Beck. 
Member:  San  F.  AA;  Calif.  AC; 
Calif.  P.M.  Award  :  Bronze  medal, 
San  Diego  Exp.,  1915. 

CRAWFORD,  Isabel,  89  South  10th  St., 
Minneapolis,   Minn. 

P.,  I. — A  ward:  Commercial  art  prize 
($25),   Minneapolis   Inst.,   1915. 

CRAWLEY,  Ida  J.,  31  Park  Ave.,  Ashe- 
viile,   N.    C. 

P.,  W.,  L. — Born  Pond  Creek,  London 
Co.,  E.  Tenn.,  Nov.  15,  1867.  Pupil  of 
Corcoran  Art  School;  Johannes  Oertell 
in  Germany;  Sir  Frederic  Massi  in  Paris. 
Member:  Amer.  A.  Union,  Paris. 
Awards  :  Gold  medal,  Appalachian 
Exp.,  Knoxville;  silver  medal,  East 
Tenn.  Art  Assoc.  Works:  15  paint- 
ings, First  National  Bank,  Champaign, 
111.;  two  paintings  in  Gayosa  Hotel, 
Memphis,  Tenn. ;  painting  in  University 
School,  Memphis;  two  paintings.  Uni- 
versity,   Fayetteville,   Ark. 

CRENIER,  Henri,  Shore  Acres,  Mamaro- 
neck,  N.  Y. 

S.— Born  Paris,  France,  Dec,  1873. 
Member:  NSS,  1912;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg. 
1913.  Award:  Hon.  mention,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work:  "Boy 
and  Turtle,"  Metropolitan  Museum; 
pediments  and  caryatides  of  City  Hall, 
San  Francisco,   Cal. 

CRESSWELL,  Charles  T.,  10  So.  18th  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P. — M  ember:  Phila.AC;  Fellowship 
PAFA. 

CRESSY,  Bert,  Compton,  Calif. 
P.— M  ember:   Calif.  AC;  Los  Angeles 
Modern  AS. 

CRESSY,  Meta,  Compton,  Calif. 
P. — M  ember  :   Calif.  AC;  Los  Angeles 
Modern    AS. 

CRILEY,  Theodore,  Carmel-by-the-Sea, 
Cal. 

P. — Born  Lawrence,  Kan.,  March  26, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Menard,  Lucien  Simon, 
in   Paris. 

CRISE,  Stewart  Stroud,  123  East  29th 
St.;  h.  138  East  31st  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P.,  I. — Born  Winona,  Minn.,  June  20, 
1S86.  Pupil  of  Kenneth  Hayes  Miller. 
Member:  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  NAC ;  S. 
Indp.A.;  League  of  N.  Y.  Artists; 
NYWCC. 


391 


CRISP 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


CRUIKSHANK 


CRISP,     Arthur,     1947     Broadway,     New 

York,   N.   Y. 

Mural  P. — Born  Hamilton,  Canada,  Apr. 
26,  1881.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.  Mem- 
ber: N.Y.Arch.Lg.l911;  Mural  P.; 
Players'  C;  NYWCC;  AWCS;  Allied 
AA.  Award  :  Collaborative  prize, 
N.Y.Arch.Lg.,  1914;  bronze  medal, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  first  Hallgar- 
ten  prize,  NAD,  1916;  gold  medal,  N.  Y. 
Arch.  Lg.,  1920.  Work:  "Ham- 
let," "As  You  Like  It,"  "Taming  of 
the  Shrew,"  and  four  Allegorical  paint- 
ings in  Belasco  Theatre,  New  York; 
two  allegorical  lunettes,  The  Play- 
house, New  York;  two  mural  paintings 
in  Robert  Treat  Hotel,  Newark,  N.  J.; 
picture  in  National  Gallery,  Ottawa, 
Canada;  mural  decoration  for  auditori- 
um of  Greenwich  House,  New  York,  N. 
Y. ;  wall  hanging  for  Hotel  Du  Pont, 
Wilmington,  Del.;  picture  for  Canadian 
War  Records;  mural  paintings.  Houses 
of  Parliament,  Ottawa,  Canada.  In- 
structor,  ASL   of   N.    Y. 

CRISSEY,  Thomas  Henry,  Powers  St., 
New  Canaan,  Conn. 

P.,  C— Born  Stamford,  Conn.,  May  26, 
1875.  Pupil  of  George  Bridgman, 
Walter  Florian,  Edward  Dufner.  Mem- 
ber:     S.Indp.A.;    N.Y.    Soc.   of  Artists. 

CRITCHER,     Catherine     C(arter),     3     St. 

Matthews'  Alley;  h.  1727  K  St.,  N.  W., 
Washington,   D.    C. 

P.,T. — Born  in  Westmoreland  Co.,  Va. 
Pupil  of  Richard  Miller  and  Charles 
Hoffbauer  in  Paris.  Member:  S. 
Wash.  A.;  Wash.  WCC;  N.  A.  Women 
PS.  Award  :  Bronze  medal.  Wash. 
SA  1914. 

CROCKER,  Marion  E.,  136  Cypress  St., 
Brookline,  Mass. 

P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.  Pupil  of  Tar- 
bell  in  Boston;  Kenyon  Cox  in  New 
York;  Constant  and  Laurens  in  Paris; 
George  Hitchcock  in  Holland.  Mem- 
ber:   Copley    S.,    1888. 

CROCKER,  W(illiam)  H.,  50  Hamilton 
Terrace,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Lyme,   Conn. 

P.— Born  New  York  City,  Aug.  25, 
1856.  Pupil  of  Robert  Vonnoh  and 
Charles  Rosen.  Member':  Salma. 
C,  1900.  Editor,  "The  American  Archi- 
tect"; Associate  Editor,  "Building 
Age." 

CROCOV,    P.    G.,    17   Gist   St.,   Pittsburgh, 
Pa. 
P. — M  em  b  e  r  :     Pitts.  AA. 

CROM,     Lillian      Hobbes,     Schwenksville, 
Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Fellowship    PAFA. 

CROiMENWETT,   Clare,   641  O'Farrell   St., 
San  Francisco,  Caiif. 
E.— M  ember:     Calif.   PM. 

CROOKS,  Forrest  C,  Carversville,  Pa. 
I.— Born  Goshen,  Ind.,  Oct.  1,  1893. 
Pupil  of  George  Sotter  and  Arthur 
Sparks.  Illustrates  for  "Scribner's," 
"Pictorial  Review,"  "Collier's  Weekly," 
"Woman's  Home  Companion,"  "Cen- 
tury,"   etc. 

CROOKS,  John   Marion,  Astoria,  Ore.  (P.) 


CROSBY    Katharine    V(an)     R(ensellaer), 

103  East  75th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
summer,  Tuxedo  Park,  N.  Y. 
S.,  T. — Born  Colorado  Springs,  Colo., 
Sept.  1,  1897.  Pupil  of  Jess  M.  Lawson. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  S. 
Indp.   A. 

CROSBY,  Raymond   Moreau,  252  Boylston 
St.,    Boston,    Mass.;    h.    Yarmouthport, 

I.— Born  Grand  Rapids,  Mich.,  1877. 
Studied  in  Italy  and  France.  Mem- 
ber: SI  1904;  Players'  C;  Century 
Assoc;  St.  Botolph  C.  On  staff  of 
Life. 

CROSS  Amy,  Hotel  Grenoble,  7th  Ave. 
and  56th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T. — Born  Milwaukee.  Wis.,  April  5, 
1856.  Pupil  of  Cooper  Inst.,  R.  Swain 
Gifford.  WilUam  Sartain  and  ASL  of  N. 
Y.;  Hague  Academy  in  Holland  under 
Jacob  Maris  and  Albert  Neuhiiys;  Julian 
Academy        in        Paris.  Member: 

NYWCC.  Awards  :  Silver  medal  at 
Hague  Academy,  1893;  silver  medal, 
Atlanta  Exp.,  1895;  bronze  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,   1902. 

CROSS,  Anson  K(ent),  Ashland,  Mass. 
P.,T.,W. — Born  Lawrence,  Mass.,  Dec.  6, 
1862.  Pupil  of  Mass. Normal  Art  School. 
Member:  Boston  AC;  Copley  S. 
Awards:  Bronze  medal,  Mass. Char- 
itable Mechanics  Assoc,  Boston,  1892. 
Member  of  Faculty,  Boston  Museum 
School  since  1891.  Received  medal, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915,  for  method  of 
teaching  drawing  and  painting.  Author 
of  several  books  on  art  education. 

CROSS,     Sally,     120     Riverway,     Boston, 
Mass. 

P.,T. — Born  Lawrence,  Mass.  Pupil  of 
De  Camp  and  Ross  Turner  in  Boston. 
Member:  Pa.S.Min.P.;  NYWCC;  Aiti. 
S.  Min.  P.;  G.  Boston  A.  Award: 
Silver  medal  for  miniatures,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,   1915. 

CROSSMAN,   Abner,   658  Woodland  Park, 
Chicago,    111. 

P. — Born  St.  Johnsbury,  Vt.,  June  14, 
1847.  Pupil  of  William  Hart  in  New 
York;  F.  W.  Moody  in  London.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :   Chicago  WCC. 

CROSSMAN,    William    H(enry),    64    West 

55th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  E.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  7, 
1896.  Pupil  of  Henri,  Lie,  Bridgman 
and  Hawthorne.  Member:  Salma. 
C. ;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Work:  mural 
painting,  "Brig"  in  Harvey  School,  New 
York  City. 

CROUCH,  Emily  H.,  102  George  St.,  Prov- 
idence,  R.   I. 
P. — M  ember:  Providence  WCC. 

CROWELL,    Margaret,   Avondale,   Pa. 
I.,  P.,  S.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.     Pupil 
of     PAFA.        Member:  *  Fellowship 
PAFA. 

CROWLEY,    Mrs.    Gray   Price.      See   Mrs. 

Gray  Price  Merrels. 

CRUIKSHANK,    Helen".      See   Mrs.    H.    C. 
Davis. 


392 


C  RUMMER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  AUT 


CURRIER 


CRUMMER,    Mary,   302   Suffolk  St.,   Guil- 
ford,   Baltimore,    Md. 
P.,  E.,  C. — Born  Baltimore,  Md.    Mem- 
ber: Baltimore  WCC   (treas.). 

CRUMP,    Leslie,    801    Ocean    Ave.,    Brook- 
lyn,   New   York,    N.    Y. 
P.— M  ember:  NYWCC. 

CRUNELLE,  Leonard,  6016  Ellis  Ave.; 
h.  2034  East  73d  St.,  Chicago,  111. 
S.— Born  Lens,  France,  July  8,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Lorado  Taft  and  AIC.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SA;  Cliff  Dwellers  Club; 
State  Art  Commission.  Awards  : 
Medal  and  diploma,  Atlanta  Exp.,  1895; 
special  prize,  AIC  autumn,  1904;  bronze 
medal  and  diploma,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  Chicago  SA  medal;  AIC  1911. 
Work:  "Squirrel  Boy,"  Art  Insti- 
tute of  Chicago. 

CUCUEL,  Edward,  5  Klarstrasse,  Munich, 
Bavaria;  16  Kreuzplatz,  Zurich,  Switz- 
erland; 19  Rue  Vavin,  Paris,  France. 
P., I. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  Aug.  6, 
1875.  Pupil  of  Constant,  Laurens  and 
Gerome  in  Paris;  Leo  Putz  in  Munich. 
Member:  Soc.Nat.des  Beaux-Arts 
(Assoc),  Paris;  Isaria  and  Ausstelier- 
Verbund  Munchner  Kunstler,  Munich. 
Award  :  Silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915. 

CULBERTSON,  Linn,  1131-22d  St.,  Des 
Moines,   la. 

P.,  T. — Born  Princeton,  la.,  Sept.  29, 
1890.  Pupil  of  Charles  Atherton  Gum- 
ming. Member:  Iowa  AG.  Award  : 
First  prize  ($100),  Des  Moines  Women's 
Club,   1914. 

CULBERTSON,      Queenie,      4120     Forest 
Ave.,    Norwood,    Cincinnati,    Ohio. 
P.,    I.,    W.— Born    San    Angelo,    Texas. 
Pupil  of  Frank  Duveneck.     Member: 
Cincinnati  Woman's  AC;  Three  AC. 

CULIN.  Alice  Mumford   R.     See  Roberts. 

CULTER,    Richard,   211    Secor  Lane,    Pel- 
ham    Manor,    N.    Y. 
I.— M  ember:     SI. 

CUMMING,  Charles  Atherton,  City  Li- 
brary; h.  680  Eighteenth  St.,  Des 
Moines,   la. 

P.,  L.,  T.— Born  in  Illinois,  March  31, 
1858.  Pupil  of  Boulanger,  Lefebvre  and 
Constant  in  Paris.  Founder  and  in- 
structor, Gumming  School  of  Art,  Des 
Moines;  and  head  of  department  of 
Graphic  and  Plastic  Arts,  State  Uni- 
versity, Iowa  City,  la;  founder,  Iowa 
Art  Guild.  Work:  Mural  painting, 
"Departure  of  the  Indians  from  Fort 
des  Moines,"  in  Polk  County  Court 
House;  portraits  in  the  State  Histori- 
cal Gallery,   Des  Moines,   la. 

CUMMINGS,   E.   E.,  107  Bedford  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

CUNEO,  Rinaldo,  Ross,  Marin  Co.,  Calif. 
P.,  T. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  July 
2,  1877.  Member:  San  F.  AA. 
Work:  "Belle  Vue,  France,"  Memo- 
rial Museum,  San  Francisco;  "A  Sum- 
mer Day,"  Palace  of  Fine  Arts,  San 
Francisco. 


CUNNING,  John,  64  West  104th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

CUNNINGHAM,   Corinne.     See   Mrs.   Col- 
lins. 

CUPRIEN,  F(rank)  W.,  The  Viking  Stu- 
dio, Laguna  Beach,  Cal. 
P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  1871.  Pupil 
of  Carl  Weber  in  Philadelphia;  studied 
in  Munich,  Dresden,  Leipzig  and  Paris. 
Member:  Leipzig  AA;  Fort  Worth 
AA;  California  AC;  Laguna  Beach  AA. 
Awards  :  Gold  medal,  Berliner  Aus- 
stellung;  first  prize,  Cotton  Carnival, 
Galveston,  Tex.,  1913;  silver  medal,  San 
Diego  Exp.,  1915;  silver  medal,  San 
Diego  Exp.,  1916;  hon.  mention.  Phoe- 
nix (Ariz.)  State  Fair,  1916;  bronze 
medal,  Sacramento  State  Fair,  1918; 
prize,  Sacramento  Fair,  1920;  popular 
prize,  Laguna  Beach  Art  Asso.,  1921. 
Work:  "Homeward  Bound,"  del 
Vecchio  Gallery,   Leipzig. 

CURRAN,  Charles  C(ourtney),  39  West 
67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Hartford,  Ky.,  Feb.  13,  1861. 
Pupil  of  Cincinnati  School  of  Design; 
ASL  and  NAD  in  New  York;  Julian 
Academy  under  Constant,  Lefebvre  and 
Doucet  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA 
1888;  NA  1904;  NYWCC;  AWCS;  SAA 
1888;  Salma.C;  Lotos  (life).  Awards  : 
Third  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD,  1888; 
hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1890;  Clark 
prize,  NAD,  1893;  medal,  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago.  1893;  second  Hallgarten 
prize,  NAD,  1895;  silver  medal,  At- 
lanta Exp.,  1895;  hon.  mention,  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am.  Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901;  Carnegie  prize,  SAA, 
1904;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  first  Corcoran  prize,  S.  Wash.  A. 
1905;  first  prize  ($500),  Osborne  com- 
petition, 1905;  Altman  prize  ($1,000), 
NAD,  1919.  Work:  "Perfume  of 
the  Roses,"  National  Gallery.  Wash- 
ington; "The  Breezy  Day,"  Pennsyl- 
vania Academy,  Philadelphia;  "The 
Golden  Hour,"  Museum  of  Art,  Colum- 
bus; "Building  the  Dam,"  Art  Associa- 
tion, Richmond,  Ind.;  "The  Jungfrau" 
and  "The  Swimming  Pool,"  Toledo 
(O.)  Museum  of  Art;  "Children  Catch- 
ing Minnows,"  Buffalo  (N.  Y.)  Fine 
Arts  Academy;  "Imprisoned  Jewel," 
Art   Museum,    Montclair,    N.    J. 

CURRIER,     C(yrus)     B(ates),    2134    Ivar 
Ave.,    Hollywood,    Calif. 
P.,  L— Born  Marietta,   O.,  Dec.  13,   1868. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy,  Paris.     Me  m  - 
b  e  r  :     Salma.   C. 

CURRIER,    George     H.,    18    Vesta    Road, 
Dorchester  Centre,  Ma^s. 
P. — M  ember:   Boston  AC. 

CURRIER,  Walter  Barron,  R.  D.  1,  Box 
490,  San  Gabriel,  Calif. 
P.,  E.,  A.,  C,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Spring- 
field, Mass.,  May  3,  1879.  Pupil  of  Dow, 
Eben  Comins,  Kenyon  Cox.  Mem- 
ber: Calif.  AC;  Calif.  PM.;  Laguna 
Beach  AA.  Work:  "The  Land  of 
the  Afternoon"  and  "Dalton  Canyon," 
Lincoln  High  School,  Los  Angeles; 
"Sunset  Glow  from  Bigbear,"  "The 
Phantom,"     "Sunrise    in    San    Leandro 


393 


CURRY 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


DAGGETT 


Hills,"  Exposition  Park  Galleries,  Los 
Ang-eles.  Writer  and  lecturer  on  Art 
Education.  Head  of  Fine  and  Voca- 
tional Art  Depts.,  Lincoln  High  School, 
Los  Angeles,    Calif. 

CURRY,  Noble,  care  of  C.  I.  Brobeck, 
893   Locburne  Ave.,   Columbus,    O.    (P.) 

CURTIS,  Constance,  Van  Dyck  Studios, 
939  Eighth  Ave.;  h.  331  West  76th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

Port.  P.,  T. — Born  Washington,  D.  C. 
Pupil  of  ASL  and  William  M.  Chase  in 
New  York.  Member:  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
A.  Workers  C.  (pres.);  N.  A.  Women 
PS;  Alliance. 

CURTIS,    Elizabeth,  399  Park  Ave.,  New 

York,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born    New    York,    N.    Y.      Pupil    of 

Twachtman  and  Chase. 

CURTIS,  George  V.,  5  West  16th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  at  Southampton,  England,  in 
1859.  Pupil  of  Legros,  Benjamin  Con- 
stant. Member:  S.Indp.A.  Award: 
First  medal,  1910,  Societe  des  Artistes 
Francais  de  Seine  et  Marne.  Repre- 
sented in  Musee  de  Melun;  large  mural 
paintings  in  the  Church,  Villemomble. 

CURTIS,  Ida  Maynard,  care  Back  Bay 
Branch  of  Old  Colony  Trust  Co.,  Boston, 
Mass. ;  summer,  Carmel,  Calif. 
P.— Born  Lewisburg,  Pa.,-  Jan.  12,  1860. 
Pupil  of  Hawthorne,  Ross,  Maynard, 
Simon,  Jolley.  Member:  Copley 
S.;    Calif.    AC;    Provincetown    AA. 

CURTIS,  Nathaniel  Cortiandt,  706  Title 
Guaranty  Bldg.;  h.  5305  Camp  St.,  New 
Orleans,  La.;  summer,  Auburn,  Ala. 
P.,  Arch.,  W.,  L.,  T. — Born  Southport, 
N.  C,  Feb.  8,  1881.  Pupil  of  William 
R.  Ware.  Member:  AIA;  N.  O.  AA; 
Arts  and  Crafts  Club  of  N.  O.  De- 
signed buildings  for  Alabama  Polytech- 
nic Inst.,   Auburn,  Ala. 

CURTIS,     Sidney     W.,      112     Hicks     St., 

Brooklyn,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.C. 

CURTIS,  William  Fuller,  331  West  76th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Ash- 
field,    Mass. 

P.,I.,C.— Born  Staten  Island,  N.  Y.,  Feb. 
25,  1873.  Pupil  of  Julius  Rolshoven,  Le- 
febvre  and  Robert-Pleury  in  Paris. 
Member:  Wash.  WCC.  Awards  : 
Third  Corcoran  prize,  S.  Wash.  A., 
1902;  first  Corcoran  prize,  Wash.  WCC, 
1903;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 
Work:  Panels  for  altar  for  Church 
of  St.  Michael  and  All  Angeles,  Gene- 
seo,  N.  Y. ;  decorative  panels.  Cosmos 
Club,   Washington,   D.   C. 

CUSHMAN,  Alice,  919  Pine  St.,  Philadel- 
phia,  Pa. 

Ldscp.P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Sept.  27, 
1854.  Pupil  of  NAD  in  New  York.  Ross 
Turner  in  Boston.  Member:  Plastic 
C;  Phila.  WCC;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Fel- 
lowship PAFA  (assoc).  Award  : 
Woman's  Exposition  of  the  Carolinas, 
1897.     Specialty,  water  colors. 

CUSHMAN,  Lillian  S.  See  Mrs.  Charles 
Lyman  Brown. 


CUSTER,  E.  A.,  4045  Baltimore  Ave., 
Philadelphia,   Pa.    (P.) 

CUSTIS,   Eleanor  Parke,  626  East  Capitol 
St.,   Washington,   D.   C. 
P. — Born    ^Vashington,    D.    C,    July    28, 
1897.       Pupil    of    Corcoran    Art    School. 
Member:     Wash.    WCC. 

CUTLER,  Carl  Gordon,  Fenway  Studios, 
Boston,  Mass.;  h.  24  Central  Ave.,  New- 
tonville,  Mass. 

P. — Born  Newtonville,  Mass.,  Jan.  3, 
1873.  Pupil  of  Constant  and  Laurens  in 
Paris.  Member:  Boston  AC;  Cop- 
ley  S. 

CZERWINSKI,  K.  G.,  548  East  136th  St., 
New  York,   N.  Y.    (P.) 

DABO,  Leon,  28  West  63d  St.,  Manhattan; 
h.  72  Columbia  Heights,  Brooklyn,  New 
York,    N.   Y. 

Ldscp.  and  Mural  P.,  L. — Born  Detroit, 
Mich.,  July  9,  1868.  Pupil  of  Daniel 
Vierge,  Pierre  Galland,  Ecole  des  Beaux- 
Arts  and  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  Pastelists;  Hopkin  C.  of 
Detroit;  NAC  (life);  Allied  Artists,  Lon- 
don, England;  Royal  Society  of  Arts  and 
Sciences,  London,  England;  Les  Mireil- 
les,  Avignon,  France;  Les  Amis  des 
Arts,  Aries,  France;  Societe  des  Amis 
du  Louvre,  Paris,  France;  School  Art 
League  of  N.  Y.  Art  Director,  Arbuckle 
Institute,  Brooklyn,  New  York.  Work: 
"Moore  Park,"  Luxembourg  Museum, 
Paris;  "The  Cloud,"  Metropolitan  Mu- 
seum, New  York;  "The  Hudson,"  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C;  "The 
Ocean,"  Imperial  Museum  of  Art,  Tokyo, 
Japan;  "Gray  Cloud,"  National  Gallery, 
Ottawa,  Canada;  "Hudson  in  Winter," 
Museum  of  Art,  Boston;  "Lawn  Party," 
Art  Institute,  Chicago;  "Silver  Light," 
Brooklyn  Institute  Museum,  New  York; 
"Rondout,"  Herron  Art  Institute,  In- 
dianapolis; "Dawn,"  City  Art  Museum, 
St.  Louis;  "Sea  Shore,"  Institute  of  Arts, 
Detroit;  "Woodstock,"  Museum  of  Art, 
Toledo;  "Sun  and  Mist,"  Museum  of  Art, 
Montclair,  N.  J.;  "The  Hudson,  Even- 
ing," Poland  Springs  (Me.)  Museum; 
"The  Ocean  at  Nassau,"  Art  Associa- 
tion, Milwaukee;  "Dawn,  the  Hudson," 
Art  Association,  Muncie,  Ind.;  "Nassau 
Beach,"  Hackley  Art  Gallery,  Muskegon, 
Mich.;  "After  the  Storm,"  Art  Associa- 
tion, Saginaw,  Mich.;  "Cooper's  Lake," 
National  Arts  Club,  New  York;  "The 
Spring,"  Arbuckle  Institute,  Brooklyn, 
New  York;  "The  Storm,"  Museum  Avig- 
non, France;  "Dawn,  St.  Andrews," 
Montreal  (Can.)  Art  Association; 
"June,"  Tuskogee  Institute,  Ala.;  "Be- 
fore the  Storm,"  Museum  of  Lyons, 
France.  Mural:  "Ascension,"  ceil- 
ing-triforium  gallery  (16  panels)  and 
altar  (4  panels)  Church  of  St.  John  the 
Baptist,  Brooklyn,  New  York;  ten  his- 
torical paintings,  Flower  Memoiial  Li- 
brary,   Watertown.    N.    Y. 

DAGGETT,  Grace  E.,  449  Edgewood  Ave., 
New   Haven,    Conn. 
S.— M  ember:     N.  H.  PCC. 

DAGGETT,     Maud,     530     South     Orange 
Grove;   h.   Columbia  Hill,    South  Pasa- 
dena, Cal. 
S. — Born    Kansas    City,    Mo.,    Feb.    10, 


394 


DAGGY 


WHO*S  WHO  IN  ART 


DANIELL 


1883.  Pupil  of  Lorado  Taft.  Mem- 
ber: Cal.  AC.  A  w  a  r  d:  Silver  medal, 
Pan.-Cal.  Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915. 
Work:  Fountain,  Hotel  Raymond, 
Pasadena;  drinking  fountain;  Medal- 
lion and  Memorial  Fountain,  "Castelar 
St.  Creche"  Building,  City  of  Los  An- 
geles. 

DAGGY,    Augustus,    179    Grumman    Ave., 
Norwalk,  Conn. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

DAHLER,  Warren,  625  West  127th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Helena,  Mont.,  1887.  Pupil  of 
N.  Y.  School  of  Art  and  NAD. 
Member:  Mural  P.  Award: 
Prize  collaborative  competition,  N.  Y. 
Arch.  Lg.,  1915.  For  three  years 
director  of  painting  at  the  Herter 
Looms,  New  York. 

DAHLGREEN,  Charles  W.,  409  North 
Cuyier  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
Ldscp.P.,E.,T.— Born  Chicago,  Sept.  8, 
1864.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  ASL 
of  Chicago;  Chicago  SA;  Art  Service 
League.  Award  :  Hon.  mention, 
P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Rosenwald 
and  Carr  prizes,  AIC,  1919;  Chicago 
Municipal  Art  Lg.  purchase  prize,  1920. 
Represented:  Library  of  Congress, 
Washington,  D.  C;  Chicago  AG;  inter. 
Soc.  AL.  and  New  York  Public  Library. 

DAINGERFIELD,  Elliott,  222  West  59th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  T.,  W.,  L. — Born  Harper's  Ferry, 
Va.,  March  26,  1859;  came  to  New  York 
in  1880.  Studied  in  New  York.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1902,  NA  1906;  NYWCC; 
SAA  1903 ;  Lotos  C. ;  NAC.  Awards  : 
Silver  medal,  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  Clarke  prize,  NAD,  1902.  Work: 
"Christ  Stilling  the  Tempest,"  and 
"Slumbering  Fog,"  Metropolitan  Mu- 
seum, New  York;  "Storm  Breaking 
Up,"  Toledo  Museum;  "The  Child  of 
Mary,"  National  Gallery,  Washington; 
"The  Midnight  Moon,"  Brooklyn  Insti- 
tute Museum;  mural  decorations  in 
Lady  Chapel  of  Church  of  St.  Mary  the 
Virgin,  New  York;  "An  Arcadian  Hunt- 
ress" and  "Swirling  Mists,"  City  Art 
Museum,  St.  Louis;  "The  Valley  of  the 
Dragon,"  Chicago  Art  Institute. 

DALAND,  Katharine  Maynadier,  17  Ray 
St.,  Waterbury,  Conn. 
1.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  April  28,  1883. 
Pupil  of  Vesper  Lincoln  George  in  Bos- 
ton. Member:  Copley  S.  1 1 1  u  s  - 
t  r  at  e  d  :  "Ballads  of  the  Be-Ba-Boes," 
"Lyrics  of  Eliza,"  etc. 

DALLAM,  Elizabeth  Forbes,  715  Pine 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer,  Chester 
Springs,    Pa. 

P.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Feb.  9. 
1879.  Pupil  of  Anshutz,  Breckenridge 
and  McCarter.  Awards:  Two  Eu- 
ropean  travelling  scholarships,   PAFA. 

DALLIN,  Cyrus  E(dwin),  69  Oakland 
Ave.,  Arlington  Heights,  Mass. 
S.,  T.,  W.— Born  Springville,  Utah,  Nov. 
22,  1861.  Pupil  of  Chapu  and  Dampt  in 
Paris.  Member:  NSS  1893;  ANA  1912; 
N.  Y.Arch.Lg.;ACPhila.l895;  Boston  AC; 
St.  Botolph  C.1900;  Royal  Soc.of  Arts, 
London;   Boston   GA.     Instructor,   Mass. 


Normal  Art  School.  Awards  :  Gold 
medal  American  Art  Assoc,  New  York, 
1888;  hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1890; 
first  class  medal  and  diploma,  Columbian 
Exp,,  Chicago,  1893;  silver  medal,  Mass. 
Charitable  Mechanics  Assoc,  1895; 
silver  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  silver 
medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
third  class  medal,  Paris  Salon,  1909; 
gold  medal,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work:  "Signal  of  Peace,"  Lincoln 
Park,  Chicago;  "Sir  Isaac  Newton," 
Library  of  Congress,  Washington; 
"Pioneer  Monument,"  Salt  Lake  City; 
"Medicine  Man,"  Fairmount  Park, 
Philadelphia;  "Soldiers'  and  Sailors' 
Monument,"  Syracuse,  N.  Y.;  "Appeal 
to  the  Great  Spirit,"  and  marble  relief 
"Julia  Ward  Howe,"  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts,  Boston;  "The  Hunter,"  Arlington, 
Mass.;  "Alma  Mater,"  Washington 
University,  St.  Louis,  Mo.;  "The 
Scout,"  Kansas  City,  Mo.;  "Captured 
but  Not  Conquered,"  Cleveland  School 
of  Art,  etc 

DALY,  Matt.  A.,  4166  Forest  Ave.,  Nor- 
wood,  O. 

P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Jan  13,  1860. 
Pupil  of  Duveneck,  Noble  and  Nowattny. 
Member:  Cincinnati  AC. 

DAMIANAKES,  Cleo,  327  Lenox  Ave., 
Oakland,   Calif. 

P.,  E.— Born  Berkeley,  Calif.  Mem- 
ber: Calif.  SE,  Chicago  AG.  Work: 
Mural  decorations,  Berkeley  High 
School  Auditorium. 

DAMROSCH,     Helen    T(herese),    154    W. 

55th  St.;  h.  181  West  75th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Seal  Harbor,  Me. 
P.,  I.,  C,  T.— Born,  New  York,  N.  Y., 
May  26,  1893.  Pupil  of  George  de  For- 
est Brush  and  Jonas  Lie. 

DANA,  W(iliam)  P(arsons)  W(inches- 
ter),  57  Onslow  Gardens,  London,  S.W., 
England. 

P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Feb.  18,  1833. 
Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  in 
Paris  under  Picot  and  Le  Poittevin. 
Member:  ANA  1862,  NA  1863. 
Awards  :  Third  class  medal,  Paris 
Exp.,  1878;  bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp., 
1889.  Has  lived  in  Europe  since  1870. 
Work:  "Off  the  French  Coast— Moon- 
light Effect,"  Pennsylvania  Acadeni^^ 
Philadelphia, 

DAN  DO,    Susie     May,    126    Brooks    Ave., 

p..  T.— Born  Odell,  111.,  Sept.  6,  1873. 
Pupil  of  William  L.  Judson  in  Cali- 
fornia. Member:  Cal.  AC.  Award: 
Silver  medal,  Panama-Cal.  Exp.,  San 
Diego,   1915. 

DANFORTH,   Marie.     See  Mrs.  Page. 

DANIEL,    Mell,   175  Claremont  Ave.,   New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

DANIELL,  William  Swift,  2620  Manitou 
Ave.,  Los  Angeles,  Calif.;  summer,  La- 
guna   Beach,    Calif. 

P.— Born  San  Francisco,  April  26,  1865. 
Pupil  of  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member: 
Calif.  AC. 


395 


DANIELS 


WHO*S  WHO  IN  ART 


DAVIDSON 


DANIELS,   J.    B.,   1805   Young   St.;   h.    619 
Walnut  St.,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P.— Born     New     York,     N.     Y.,     May    2, 
1846.      Pupil    of   Lindsay.      Member: 
Cincinnati    AC. 

DANIELS,  Julia,  105  East  117th  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

DAN  NAT,  William  T.,  45  Avenue  de 
Villiers,  Paris,  France. 
P.— Born  New  York,  1853.  Pupil  of 
Munich  Academy  and  of  Munkacsy. 
Member:  Paris  SAP  (pres.);  Nat. 
Inst.A.L.  Awards:  Third  class  medal, 
Paris  Salon,  1883;  gold  medal,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901.  Legion  of  Honor 
1889.  Officer  1897.  Commander  1901. 
Work:  "The  Woman  in  Red"  and 
"The  Contrabandist,"  Luxembourg  Mu- 
seum, Paris,  France;  "A  Quartette," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York;  "In 
a  Sacristy  in  Aragon,"  Art  Institute, 
Chicago;  "Eva  Haviland,"  Boston  Mu- 
seum. 

DARLING,  George  Channing,  204  Lexing- 
ton Ave.,   Providence,  R.  L 
P. — M  ember:  Providence  AC. 

DARLING,    Jay    Norwood    (J.    N.    Ding), 
2320  Terrace  Rd.,  Des  Moines,  la. 
I.— Born  Norwood,  Mich.,   Oct.  21,   1876. 
Member:    NAC;    Cartoonist    for    Des 
Moines  Register  and  New  York  Tribune. 

DARLINGTON,  Mary  O'Hara,  809  Devon- 
shire St.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

DARRAGH,  Marion,  257  South  13th  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa.    (Min.  P.) 

DART,  Harry  G(rant),  Amsden  Studio, 
Cleveland,    O. 

P.,  L,  W. — Born  Williamsport,  Pa.,  Nov. 
3,   1870.     Member;   SL 

DASBURG,  Andrew   (Michel),   428  Lafay- 
ette   St.,    New    York,    N.    Y, ;    summer, 
Taos,   N.   M. 
P.,  T.— Born  Paris,  France,  May  4,  1887. 

Pupil  of  Cox.  Member:  Modern 
Artists   of  America. 

D'ASCENZO  Myrtle  Goodwin  (Mrs. 
Nicola  D'Ascenzo),  425  West  Price  St., 
Germantown,    Pa. 

P. — Born  North  Tunbridge,  Vt.,  Dec.  31, 
1864.  Pupil  of  Pennsylvania  School  of 
Industrial  Art.  Member:  Phila. 
WCC;   Plastic  C. 

D'ASCENZO,  Nicola,  1602  Summer  St.; 
h.  425  West  Price  St.,  Germantown,  Pa. 
P.,C. — Born  Torricella,  Italy,  Sept  25, 
1871.  Pupil  of  Mariani  and  .Jacovacci  in 
Rome.  Member:  Fellowship  PAFA; 
T  Sq.C;  Phila.Sketch  C;  N.Y.Arch. 
Lg.l902;  Mural  P.;  AC  Phila.;  Phila.A. 
Crafts.G.;  NAC;  Friends  of  Medallion, 
Awards  :  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago, 
1893;  gold  medal,  T.Sq.C;  prize  Amer- 
icanization through  Art  Exhib.,  Phila., 
1916.  Work:  Stained  glass,  Chapel 
of  the  Intercession,  New  York;  mural 
decoration.  Municipal  Buildings,  Spring- 
field, Mass.;  stained  glass,  Washington^ 
Memorial  Chapel,  Valley  Forge;  Mosaic 
frieze.  Cooper  Library,  Camden,  N.  J. 
Specialty,  mural  decoration  and  stained 
glass. 


DASCHBLACH,  A.  C,  Cornell  Ave.,  Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

DATZ,  Abraham,  530  West  186th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

DAUGHERTY,  James  (Henry),  59  South 
Washington  Sq.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  L,  E.,  T.— Born  Ashville,  N.  C, 
June  1,  1886.  Pupil  of  Frank  Bran- 
gwyn ;  PAFA.  Member:  Mural  P. ; 
Modern  Artists  of  America;  N.  Y.  Arch. 
Lg.  Work:  Murals  in  State  Theatre, 
Cleveland;  decoration  in  Safety  Insti- 
tute, New  Xork;  recruiting  posters  for 
U.   S.   Navy. 

DAUGHERTY,      Nancy      L.,      Kittanning, 
Pa. 
P.— M  ember:   Pittsburgh  AA. 

DAUTEL,     John     Daniel,     52     Ridgewood 
Road,  South  Orange,  N.  J. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

DAVENPORT,  E(dith)  Fairfax,  Zellwood, 
Orange  Co.,  Fla.;  h.  220  Olive  St.,  Kan- 
sas  City,    Mo. 

P.— Born  Kansas  City,  July  13,  1884. 
Pupil  of  Collin,  Laurens  and  Ecole  des 
Beaux  Arts  in  Paris.  Awards  : 
Medal  of  Queen  Elizabeth  of  Belgium 
for  war  poster. 

DAVENPORT,  Henry,  114  East  84th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Wainscott, 
L.  L,  N.  Y. 

P.,  L„  T.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  April  1, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux  Arts, 
Dechenaud,  Charles  Hawthorne,  George 
Elmer  Browne.  Member:  Paint 
and  Clay  Club;  S.  Indp.  A.  Assistant 
professor,  History  of  Art,  Yale  School 
of  Fine  Arts. 

DAVEY,   Clara,   Santa  Fe,   N.   M.      (P.) 

DAVEY,  Randall,  Santa  Fe,  N.  M. 
P.— M  ember:  Port.  P.;  S.  Indp.  A. 
Awards  :  Second  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD  1915;  hon.  mention,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Work  :  "Flowers,"  and 
"Portrait  of  a  Young  Lady,"  Art  Insti- 
tute of  Chicago;  "Old  Sea  Captain," 
Corcoran  Gallery,  Wash.,  D.  C. 

DAVIDSON,  Clara  D.       See  Mrs.  Simpson. 

DAVIDSON,  George,  11  East  14th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Butka,  Russian  Poland,  May 
10,  1889.  Pupil  of  F.  C.  Jones  and  Doug- 
las Volk.  Award  :  American  Acad- 
emy in  Rome  scholarship,   1913-1916. 

DAVIDSON,     Harry,    320    West    18th    St., 

New   York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 
DAVIDSON,     Jo.,     23     Macdougal    Alley, 

New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Port  Washington, 

L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

S.— Born   in   New   York.    Mar.    30,    1883. 

Pupil  of  Brush  and  jviaciNeil. 

DAVIDSON,    John    M.,    234   East    2nd    St.. 

Xenia,    Ohio. 

P.— Born    Hamilton,    O.,    Apr.    20,    1876. 

Pupil  of  Chase  and  Du  Mond.     Mem- 
ber:   Cincinnati    AC. 
DAVIDSON,    Oscar    L.      Died    January    3, 

1922. 

P.— Born    Fithian,    111.,    March    2.    1S75. 

Member:   Indiana  Illustrators'   Club. 


396 


DAVIES 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


DAVIS 


DAVIES,  Arthur  B.,  53  AVest  39th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Rockland  Lake, 
N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Utica,  N.  Y  ,  Sept.  26,  1S62. 
Pupil  of  Dwif^iit  William '^  .at  iJtica; 
studied  in  New  York  and  Chicago. 
Member:  NYWCC;  Am. PS  (pres.). 
Award  :  Silver  medal,  Pan- Am. Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901;  hon.  mention,  Carnegie 
Inst.,  Pittsburgh,  1913;  first  W.  A. 
Clark  prize  ($2,000),  and  Corcoran  gold 
medal,        1916.  Work:        "Dream" 

and  "Girdle  of  Aries,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  "Maya,  Mirror 
of  Illusions,"  Art  Institute,  Chicago; 
"Night's  Overture"  and  "Spring  in  a 
Valley,"  Minneapolis  Institute  of  Art; 
San  Francisco  Art  Institute;  "Every 
Saturday,"  "Autumn  Landscape,"  "The 
Place  of  the  Mothers"  and  "Children  of 
Yesterday,"  Brooklyn  Institute  Museum; 
"Recall  of  Spring,"  R.  I.  School  of  De- 
sign, Providence. 

DAVIESS,  Maria  Thompson,  1894  Acklen 
Ave.,  Nashville,  Tenn. 
P.,  C,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Harrodsburg, 
Ky.,  Nov.  25,  1872.  Pupil  of  Blanche, 
Mucha,  L'hermitte,  Delecluse.  Mem- 
ber:    Nashville  Art   Club;   NAC. 

DAVIS,  -Cecil  Clark,  19  East  Pearson  St.; 

h.  847  North  Michigan  Ave.,  Chicago, 
111.;  summer,  Marion,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Chicago,  July  12,  1877.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SA;  Chicago  AC. 
\.  w  a  r  d  :  Portrait  prize.  Municipal  AL, 
1918;  gold  medal.  Salon,  Rio  de  Janeiro, 
1920. 

DAVIS,  Charles  H(arold),  Mystic,  Conn. 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Amesbury,  Mass.,  Jan. 
7,  1856.  Pupil  of  Otto  Grundmann  and 
Boston  Museum  School;  Boulanger  and 
Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Member:  SAA 
1886;  ANA  1901,  NA  1906;  Copley  S;  Lo- 
tos C;  NAC.  Awards:  Gold  medal, 
American  Art  Assoc,  New  York,  1886; 
hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1887;  $2,000 
prize,  American  Art  Assoc,  New  York, 
1887;  silver  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1889; 
hors  concours,  Paris  Salon;  Palmer 
prize,  AIC  1890;  medal,  Mass.  Char- 
itable Mechanics  Assoc,  Boston,  1890; 
medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893; 
grand  gold  meaal,  Atlanta  Exp.,  1895; 
bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  Lip- 
pincott  prize,  PAFA  1901;  silver  medal, 
Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  second 
Corcoran  prize,  S.Washington  A,  1902; 
silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
Harris  bronze  medal  ($300),  AIC  1914; 
gold  medal,  P.  P.Exp.,  San  F.,_1915;  Alt- 
man  prize  (.n.OOU),  NAD  191* ;  Sesaan 
gold  medal,  PAFA,  1919;  second  W.  A. 
Clark  prize  ($1,000),  and  Corcoran  sil- 
ver medal,  Corcoran  Gallery,  Washing- 
ton, 1919;  Saltus  medal,  NAD,  1921. 
Work:  "August"  and  "Evening," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
"The  Deepening  Shadows,"  Corcoran 
Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C;  "Moonrise 
at  Twilight,"  Carnegie  Institute,  Pitts- 
burgh, Pa.;  "Clouds,"  Museum  of 
Fin'e  Arts,  Boston,  Mass.;  "At  Sunset," 
Art  Museum,  Worcester,  Mass.;  "Sum- 
mer," National  Gallery,  Washington, 
D.     C;      "The     Brook,"      Pennsylvania 


Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia, 
Pa.;  "Close  of  Day"  and  "Twilight," 
Art  Institute,  Chicago,  111.;  "In  April," 
Hackley  Art  Gallery,  Muskegon,  Mich.; 
"Early  Summer,"  Minneapolis  Institute 
of  Arts;  "Clouds  and  Hills,"  City  Art 
Museum,  Sc.  Louis,  Mo.;  "The  Time 
of  the  Red  Winged  Blackbird,"  'Syra- 
cuse  Museum   of  Art. 

DAVIS,    C(harles)     H(enry).        Died    De- 
cember 27,   1921. 

Ldscp.P. — Born  Cambridge,  Mass.,  Aug. 
28,  1845.  Member:  Wash.WCC; 
Newport  AA.  Rear  Admiral  U.  S. 
Navy,    retired. 

DAVIS,  Charles  Percy,  City  Art  Museum, 
St.    Louis,   Mo. 

P.,  I.,C.,T.— Born  Iowa  City,  la.  Pupil 
of  Chase  and  Beckwith  in  New  York; 
Bouguereau,  Ferrier  and  Robert-Fleury 
in  Paris.  Member:  Boston  SA  Crafts 
(master  craftsman);  2x4  Soc.  Cura- 
tor, City  Art  Museum  since  1914. 

DAVIS,    Earl    R.,   P.   O.   Box   1532,   Provi- 
dence,  R.  I. 

P.— Born  Jan.  17,  1886.  Member: 
Providence  AC;  Providence  WCC;  S. 
Indp.    A. 

DAVIS,  Harry,  Davis  Theatre,  Pittsburgh, 
Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

DAVIS,     Helen     S.,    Clinton    Hotel,    East 
Orange,  N.  J. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 

DAVIS,    Irene    Ewing,    25    West    Roy    St., 
Seattle.    W^ash.    (P.) 

DAVIS,    Leonard    M.,   15   Gramercy   Park, 
New    York,    N.    Y. 

Ldscp.  P. — Born  Winchendon,  Mass., 
May  8,  1864.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
Julian  Academy  under  Laurens,  Lefeb- 
vre and  Benjamin-Constant,  and  of 
Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: NAC;  Salma.C.  Specialty,  since 
1898,  Alaska  scenes.  Award  :  Silver 
medal  for  127  Alaska  paintings  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work:  "David- 
son Glazier,"  "The  Charm  of  the  Yu- 
kon" and  "Autumn  Cottonwood,"  Wash- 
ington State  Art  Association  Museum, 
Seattle,  Wash.;  "Peril  Straits,"  Mu- 
nicipal Art  Gallery,  Seattle,  Wash.; 
"The  Aurora  Borealis,"  Museum  of 
New  Mexico,  Santa  Fe,  N.  M. 

DAVIS,  Stuart,  care  of  Whitney  Studio 
Club,  4t}i  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer, East  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P.,  I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Dec.  7,  1892. 
Pupil  of  Robert  Henri.  M  e  m  b  e  r  : 
S.   Indp.   A. 

DAVIS,  Warren   B.,  7  West  42d  St.,  New 
York,    N.   Y. 

P. — A  wards:  Inness  prize  1905,  Evans 
prize,  1906  and  1916,  and  Isidor  prize, 
1911,  at  Salma.C.  Mem  b  e  r  :  Sal- 
ma.C. 

DAVIS,    William    Steeple,    Orient,    L.    I., 
N.    Y. 

Marine  P..  E..  W.— Born  Orient,  N.  Y., 
May  7,  1884.  Member:  Brooklyn  SA. 
Work:  Etchings  in  print  collection 
of  the   Toledo   Museum   of  Art. 


397 


DAVIS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


DE  BOY ED ON 


DAVIS,   W(illiam)    Triplett,   3521-13th   St., 
N.  W.,  Washington,  D.   C. 
P., I.— Born  Washington,  D.  C.     Pupil  of 
Corcoran  Gallery  School  of  Arts  and  of 
Lucien  Powell.     Member:  S.Wash.A. 

DAVISON,  E.  L.,  Commercial  Bank, 
Wichita,    Kan.       (P.) 

DAVISSON,.  H(omer)  G(ordon),  Fort 
Wayne,   Ind. 

P.,  T. — Born  in  rcandolph  Co.,  Indiana, 
1866.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Corcoran  School 
of  Art  in  Washington;  AS'L  of  N.  Y.; 
studied  three  years  in  Europe.  Director 
Fort    Wayne   School  of  Art,   1911-17. 

DAVOL,  Joseph  B.,  Ogunquit,  Me. 
Marine  P.,  T.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Aug. 
25,  1864.  Pupil  of  Benjamin-Constant 
and  Laurens  in  Paris,  Member:  Sal- 
ma.C;  Fellowship  PAFA.  Award: 
Silver  medal,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 

DAWES,  Edwin  M.,  Reno,  Nevada, 
P.— Born  Boone,  la.,  April  21,  1872.  Self- 
taught.  Member:  Minneapolis  SFA; 
Attic  C,  Minneapolis;  Calif,  AC, 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention  1909,  gold 
medal  1913,  second  award  1914,  all  given 
by  Minnesota  State  Art  Society;  bronze 
medal,  St.  Paul  Institute  of  Art,  1915. 
Works:  "By  the  River,"  State  Art 
Society,  St,  Paul,  Minn.;  "Dawn  in 
Sweet  Grass  Mountains,"  Public  Library, 
Owatonna,  Minn.;  "Channel  to  the 
Mills,"    Minneapolis   Institute. 

DAWLEY,  Herbert  M.,  Chatham,  N.  J. 
S.,  W,— Born  Chillicothe,  0„  March  15, 
1880,  Pupil  of  ASL  of  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 
M  ember:  Buffalo  SA.  Award  : 
Fellowship  prize,   1915,  Buffalo  SA. 

DAWSON,  George  Walter,  Dept.  of  Ar- 
chitecture, University  of  Pennsylvania; 
h..  University  Dormitories,  West  Phila- 
delphia,  Pa. 

P.,T. — Born  Andover,  Mass.,  March  16, 
1870.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art  School 
in  Boston;  PAFA,  Member:  Phila, 
WCC  (pres.);  Phila,  Alliance;  T.  S'q. 
C;  NYWCC;  Chicago  WCC.  Professor 
of  drawing  at  Univ.  of  Pa.  Specialty, 
landscapes  and   flowers. 

DAWSON-WATSON,  San  Antonio,  Tex. 
P.,  Engr.,  T, — Born  London,  England, 
July  21,  1864;  came  to  U,S.  in  1893;  set- 
tled in  St,  Louis  1904,  Pupil  of  Mark 
Fisher  in  London;  Carolus  Duran,  Char- 
tran,  Collin,  Aime  Morot  and  Leon 
Glaize  in  Paris,  Member:  St. 
Louis  AG;  St.  Louis  AL;  2x4  Soc, 
Awards  :  Silver  medal,  Lewis  and 
Clark  Exp.,  Portland,  Ore.,  1905;  silver 
and  gold  medals,  Sedalia,  Mo.;  three 
first  prizes  and  one  second,  Illinois 
State  Fair,  1916.  Work:  "Light 
Breeze,"  painting  and  also  mezzo- 
tint. City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis; 
"The  Open  Book,"  decorative  panel, 
Wichita  High  School;  "Rainbow  in 
Winter,"  Central  High  School  and  Barr 
Branch  Library,  St.  Louis;  Oakland 
(Cal.)  Museum;  Library,  Houston,  Tex.; 
"The  Wheatfield,"  'Springfteld  (111.)  Art 
Assoc,  Teacher  in  St,  Louis  School  of 
Fine  Arts,  1904-1915.  Author  and  di- 
rector of  pageant  at  Brandsville,  Mo., 
1916,  Director,  San  Antonio  Art  Guild, 
1918-19. 


DAY,   Bertha   C.     See  Mrs,  D.   M.  Bates. 

DAY,  Francis,  West  Stockbridge,  Mass. 
P,— Born  LeRoy,  N,  Y„  Aug.  12,  1863, 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y,;  Ecole  des  Beaux- 
Arts,  Hebert  and  Merson  in  Paris, 
Member:  SAA  1891;  ANA  1906; 
Salma.C,1888.  Award:  Third  Hall- 
garten  prize,  NAD  1895,  Work: 
"Fairyland,"  Art  Museum,  Montclair, 
N,    J, 

DAY,  Hallie,  220  West  Hardin  St,,  Find- 
lay,    O, 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

DAY,  Helena,  Swarthmore,  Pa, 
P. — M  ember:    Phila.   WCC. 
DAY,   iVlrs.   Howard.     See  Martha  Willson, 
DAY,   Mrs.    Mabel    K.,  5206  Woodlawn  PL, 
Pittsburgh,  Pa, 
P,— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

DAY,    Mary    Barker,    158    Whitney    Ave., 
New  Haven,   Conn. 
P. — M  ember:   New  Haven  PCC. 

DAYTON,    F.    E.,  259  W^est  11th  St.,   New 
York,    N.    Y. 
I. — M  ember:     SI, 

DAYTON,     Mrs.     Helena,    259    West    11th 

St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
I.— M  ember:     SI. 

DEAN,  Elizabeth  M.  (Mrs.  Samuel  B, 
Dean),  107  Winthrop  St,,  Roxbury, 
Mass. 

P. — Born  Cambridge,  Mass,  Pupil  of 
Ludovici  in  London  and  Lazar  in  Paris; 
Duveneck  and  H,  D,  Murphy  in  Boston. 
Member:      Copley    S„    1896. 

DEAN,  Grace  Rhoades,  x683  Indiana  Ave., 

Toledo,    O, 

P, — M  ember:  N,  A,  Women  PS. 
DEANE,     Lillian     Reubena,    1446    Stanley 

Ave.,    Los   Angeles,    Caiif. 

Min.P.— Born    Chicago,    Sept.    24,    1881. 

Pupil   of   AIC;    J.    Wellington   Reynolds 

and   Virginia  S.   Reynolds. 
DEANE,     Lionel,    96    Fifth    Ave.;    h,     320 

Lexington  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  Arch. — Born  in  Canada,  July  9,  1861. 

Pupil  of  Rimmer,   San  Francisco  School 

of  Design,   Ernest  Narjot. 

DEBEREINER,    George,   347  Wood  Ave,, 
Clifton,    Cincinnati,    O. 
P,,C,— Born     Germany,     1860,       Studied 
AIC;    Holland    and    Germany.      Mem- 
ber:  Cincinnati  AC. 

DE    BEUKELAER,    Mrs.    Laura    Halliday, 

1346  College  Ave.,  Topeka,  Kan. 
S.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  1885.  Pupil  of 
Cincinnati  Art  Academy;  St.  Louis  Sch. 
of  Fine  Arts.  Member:  Cincinnati 
Woman's  AC.  Work  in:  State  Nor- 
mal School,  Geneseo,  N.  Y.;  Y.  W.  C.  A., 
Newark,  N.  J.;  Washburn  College,  To- 
peka,  Kan. 

DE    BOUTHILLIER,    Guy,    18    Story    St., 
Cambridge,   Mass. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

DE    BOYEDON,    O(scar)     H(ugh),    Mont- 
rose,  N.   Y. ;   summer,    19   Quai   Voltaire, 
Paris,   France. 
S.,  C. — Born  Porto  Alegre,  Brazil,  June 


398 


DE  CAMP 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


DE  KRUIF 


13,  1882.  Pupil  of  Bourdelle  in  Paris. 
Member:  L'Union  Internationale 
des  Beaux- Arts,  Paris;  Lg.  of  N.  Y.  A. 

DE  CAMP,  Joseph  (Rodefer),  120  River- 
way  Studios,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  Med- 
ford,  Mass.;  summer,  North  Haven,  Me. 
P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Nov.  5,  1858.  Pu- 
pil of  Duveneck  at  Cincinnati  Academy; 
Royal  Academy  in  Munich.  Member: 
Ten  American  Painters;  Nat. Inst. AL; 
AC  Phila.;  Port.  P.;  Boston  GA.  In- 
structor School  of  Boston  Museum  of 
Fine  Arts.  Awards  :  First  prize.  City 
Hall  decorative  competition,  Philadel- 
phiru;  Temple  gold  medal,  PAFA,  1899; 
hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  gold 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  second 
Clark  prize,  Corcoran  AG  1909;  Beck 
medal,  PAFA,  1912;  gold  medal,  AC 
Phila.  1915;  Lippincott  prize,  PAFA, 
1920.  Work:  "The  New  Gown," 
Wilstach  Gallery,  Philadelphia;  "Woman 
Drying  Her  Hair,"  Cincinnati  Mu- 
seum; "The  Guitar  Player,"  Boston 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts;  "Sally,"  Worces- 
ter Museum;  "Dr.  Horace  Howard  Fur- 
ness"  and  "Little  Hotel,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy,  Philadelphia;  "Frank  Du- 
veneck," Cincinnati  Museum;  "Daniel 
Merriman,"   Worcester  Museum. 

DECAMP,  Rena,  2821  Reading  Rd.,  Avon- 
dale,    Cincinnati,    O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

DECKER,  Mrs.  E.  Bennett,  2106  O.  St., 
N.  W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
Min.P.,  I. — Born  Washington,  D.  C,  Feb. 
28,  1869.  Pupil  of  William  H.  Whitte- 
more.  Member:  Wash.FAS;  Wash. 
AC.  Microscopic  drawings  for  Smith- 
sonian  Institution. 

DECKER,    Harold,    505   William   St.,    East 
Orange,   N.    J. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

DE  CORDOBA,  Mathilde,  The  Rem- 
brandt, 152  West  57th  St.;  h.  1190  Mad- 
ison Ave..  New  Yoik,  N.  Y. 
P.,  E.— Born  New  York  City.  Pupil  of 
Whittemore,  Cox  and  Mowbray  in  New 
York;  Aman-Jean  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: N.  A.  Women  PS;  Barnard  C, 
Graver-Printers  of  London;  Cercle  In- 
ternational des  Arts,  Paris.  Work: 
Prints  in  Luxembourg,  Paris,  and  Li- 
brary  of  Congress,   Washington,    D.   C. 

DECOTO,  Sarah  (Horner),  Irvington, 
Calif. 

P. — Born  Irvington,  Calif.,  Aug.  12, 
1863.      Studied   in   Paris. 

DE  FOE,  Etheilyn  Brewer  (Mrs.  Louis 
De  Foe),  250  West  88th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

Min.P. — Born  in  New  York  City.  Pupil 
of  Whittemore  and  Mowbray  in  New 
York.  Member:  N,  A.  Women  PS; 
Barnard   Club. 

DE  FOREST,  Lockwood,  1815  Laguna  St., 
Santa   Barbara,    Calif. 

P..  Arch..  W.— Born  New  York,  .Tune  23, 
1850.  Pupil  of  Corrodi  in  Rome;  F.  E. 
Church  in  New  York.  Member:  ANA 
1891,  NA  1898  (treas.  1899-1907) ;  A.Fund 
S;  Artists'  Aid  S;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg. ;  N.  Y. 
Soc.  C;  Boston  SAC;  Century  Assoc; 
NAC.     Founded  Associated  Artists  with 


L.  C.  Tiffany  and  Mrs.  C.  Wheeler, 
1878.  Awards  :  Medal,  for  carv- 
ings. Colonial  Exp.,  London,  1886; 
medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893; 
bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 
Specialty,  landscapes,  also  interior 
decorator,  and  founded  workshops  at 
Ahemedabad,  India.  for  revival  of 
woodcarving.  Work:  "The  Rameseum 
Thebes,"  Smith  College,  Northampton. 
Mass.;  "Mission  Canyon,  Santa  Bar- 
bara," Herron  Art  Institute,  Indianap- 
olis. Published  "Indian  Domestic  Ar- 
chitecture." 1SS5;  "Illustrations  of  De- 
sign."  1912. 

DE  FRANCHVILLE,  Mrr.e.  A.  L.,  53  West 
39th    St.,    New   York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

DE  FRANCISCI,  Anthony,  24  West  60th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  in  Italy,  June  13,  1887.  Pupil 
of  George  T.  Brewster  and  A.  A.  Wein- 
man in  New  York.  Member:  YS ; 
NSS;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  (asso.);  Ameri- 
can Numismatic  Soc.  (asso.).  Repre- 
sented: Cincinnati  Museum,  Numis- 
matic Soc.  Galleries.  Teacher  in  Beaux 
Arts   Inst. 

DE  GROOT,  Adriaan  M(artin),  92  Fifth 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Port.  P.— Born  S'liedrecht.  Holland,  Aug. 
10,  1870.  Studied  in  Holland  and  Ger- 
many. Member:  S.Indp.A.;  Lg.  of 
NYA.  Works  :  "Portrait  of  Col. 
Roosevelt,"  owned  by  "The  Outlook"; 
"We  Have  Room  for  but  One  Flag," 
Girls  High   School,   Brooklyn. 

DE  HAVEN,  Elizabeth,  257  West  86th 
St.,    New   York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

DE  HAVEN,  Franklin,  257  West  86th  St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 

Ldscp.P.— Born  Bluffton,  Ind.,  Dec.  26, 
1856.  Pupil  of  George  H.  Smillie  in 
New  York.  M  e  m  b  e  r  :  ANA,  1902 ;  NA, 
1920.  Salma.C.  1899;  NAC.  Awards: 
Tnness  prize,  Salma.C,  1900;  Shaw  prize, 
Salma.C.  1901;  hon.  mention,  Pan- 
Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  silver  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Vezin  prize,  1916; 
silver  medal,  NAC,  1921.  W  o  r  k  :  "The 
Gloaming"  and  "Indian  Camp  near 
Custer,"  Brooklyn  Institute  Museum; 
"Castle  Creek  Canyon,  South  Dakota," 
National  Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C. 

DE  KOSENKO,  Stepan,  33  West  67th  St.; 
h.  18  East  40th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.,  D. — Born  in  Tiflis,  Caucasus,  Rus- 
sia, 1865.  Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Art  Dec- 
orative, Paris.  Member:  Phila.  AC; 
NAC;  Arch.  Lg.  of  N.  Y.  Designer 
in  decorative  art. 

DE   KRAFFT,   Marjorie,  22  Berkeley  Rd., 

Merion,    Pa. 

P. — M  ember:   Plastic  C. 

DE  KRUIF,  Henri  G(ilbert),  Cyress  <«: 
Magnolia  Aves.,  Laguna  Beach,  Calif.; 
627  San  Fernando  Bldg.,  Los  Angeles, 
Calif. 

P.,  E. — Born  Grand  Rapids,  Mich.,  Feb. 
17,  18S2.  Pupil  of  Gifford  Beal,  F.  Luis 
Mora,  Frederick  Richardson  and  Ernest 
Haskel.  Member:  Calif.  AC;  Los 
Angeles  Modern  AS;  Laguna  Beach  A  A; 
ASL  of  N.   Y.     Calif.   PM.;   Calif.   WCS. 


399 


DEKRYZANOVSKY 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


DENNY 


DE  KRYZANOVSKY.  Roman,  48  Adams 
Ave..  West.  Detroit,  Mich. 
P. — Born  Balta,  Russia,  Jan.  22,  1885. 
Pupil  of  E.  Renard,  E.  Tournes,  P. 
Gouzguet.  Member:  Scarab  C,  De- 
troit. Awards  :  Rolshoven  prize, 
1915,  and  Frank  Scott  Clarke  prize,  1918, 
Detroit  Institute  of  Arts.  Work: 
"Kismet,"   Detroit   Institute   of  Arts. 

DE    LACY,    Eva.,    43   West   60th    St.,    New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

DE  LAMOTTE,  Caroline  J(ones),  (Mrs. 
Octave  John  De  Lamotte),  McNary,  La. 
P.,  T.— Born  Pikesville,  Md.,  Sept.  3, 
1889.  Pupil  of  C.  Y.  Turner,  Ephraim 
Keyser,  Charles  H.  Webb.  Member: 
S.Indp.A.  Awards  :  First  prize  for 
charcoal  drawing  and  first  prize  for 
water-color,  La.  State  Fair,  Shreve- 
port,  La.,  1917;  first  prize  for  charcoal 
portrait;  first  prize  for  origmal  design 
and  first  prize  for  water-color  collec- 
tion at  Donaldsonville,  La.,  1917. 
Work:  In  M.  E.  Church,  Le  Compte, 
La. 

DE  LAND  Clyde  Osmer,  603  Baker  Bldg., 
1520  Chestnut  St.;  h.  22  N.  St.  Bernard 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
L,  P.— Born  Union  City,  Pa.,  Dec.  27, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Drexel  Inst,  under  How- 
ard Pyle  in  Philadelphia.  Work  : 
Painting,  "First  American  Flag,"  City 
of  Somerville,  Mass.;  "First  Continen- 
tal Congress,"  Carpenters'  Hall,  Phila- 
delphia; illustrated,  "The  Count's 
Snuff-Box,"   etc. 

DE  LESLIE,  Paul,  246  Fulton  St.,  Brook- 

klyn,   N.   Y. 

I. — Born  Moscow,   Russia,   Dec.   14,   1892. 

Member:      Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 
DELGADO,     O.     Colon,     Arccileo,     Porto 

Rico. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

de    LIMON    de   ARCE,    Mrs.    A.,   Arrcileo, 
Porto  Rico,   Cuba. 
P. — M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

DELLFANT,    Max,    610    Quinnipiac    Ave., 
New   Haven,    Conn. 
S.— M  ember:    N.  H.  PCC. 

DEL   MAR,   Francesca,  39  West  67th  St., 

New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  T.,  W.,  L.— Born  Washington,  D.  C. 
Pupil  of  Collin,  Fleury  and  Bouguereau 
in  Paris;  Rolshoven  in  London.  Work: 
Mural  decorations  at  Caroline  Rest 
(hospital)  Hartsdale,  N.  Y. ;  paintings 
of  New  Zealand  and  South  Sea  Islands 
for  the  American  Museum  of  Natural 
Histx)ry. 

DE     MELERO,     Elviro     M.    Calle    H.    No. 
148,  Vedado,  Havana,  Cuba. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

DEL  MUE,  M(aurice)  (August),  563  South 
41st  Ave.,  San  Francisco,  Calif.;  sum- 
mer, Susie  Lake,  Fallen  Lake  P.  O., 
Calif. 

P. — Born  Paris,  France,  Nov.  4,  1878. 
Member:  San  F.  AA.  Award  : 
Silver  medal  Panama-Pacific  Exp.,  San 
Francisco,  1915.  Work  :  "Late  After- 
noon    in      the      Sierras",      Comparative 


Museum  of  Art;  "West  Winds",  Golden 
Gate  Park  Museum,  San  Francisco, 
Calif. 

DE  MAINE,  Harry,  160  W.  13th  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

P. — Born  Liverpool,  England.  Dec.  23, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Castellucho  in  Paris; 
F.  V.  Burridge  in  London.  Member: 
Salma.    C. 

DE  MANCE,  Henri,  332  East  69th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  West  Hur- 
ley, Ulster  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Hamburg  Germany,  Oct.  5, 
1871.  Pupil  of  Lenbach.  Member: 
S.Indp.A.;  Lg.  of  NYA.  Work: 
"Portrait  of  a  Man,"  "Grapes  of  the 
Hudson,"    Schiller  Museum,   Marbach. 

DE  MAR,  John  L.,  1954  N.  31st  St.,  Phil- 
adelphia,  Pa. 

I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Sept.  22,  1865. 
Cartoonist  on  "Philadelphia  Record" 
since   1903. 

DE    MARIS,    Walter,   Westwood,    N.    J. 
I.— Born  Cetlarville,  N.  J.,  Aug.  24,  1877. 
Pupil  of   ASL   of   N.    Y. 

DE  METRICS,  George,  201  South  Elev- 
enth St.,   Philadelphia,   Pa.    (S.) 

DEMING,  Adelaide,  Litchfield,  Conn. 
Ldscp.P.,  C,  T. — Born  Litchfield,  Conn., 
Dec.  12,  1864.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.; 
Pratt  Inst.,  Chase,  Lathrop  and  Snell. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  New 
Haven  PCC;  NYWCC;  Conn.  AFA, 
Awards:  Beal  prize,  NYWCC  1908; 
Burgess  prize,  N.  Y.  Woman's  AC  1908. 
Represented  in  Litchfield  Public  Library. 

DEMING,  E(dwin)  W(illard),  Cosmos 
Club,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.,  S.,  I. — Born  Ashland,  O.,  Aug.  26, 
1860.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.;  Lefebvre 
and  Boulanger  in  Paris.  Member: 
N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1902;  Mural  P.;  S.Wash. 
A.;  Wash.  AC;  NAC.  Specialty  In- 
dian and  animal  subjects.  Awards  : 
Silver  medal,  AAS  1892;  bronze  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  bronze  medal  for 
sculpture,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work:  Two  mural  paintings,  Morris 
High  School,  New  York  City;  "Brad- 
dock's  Defeat"  and  "Discovery  of  Wis- 
consin," mural  decorations,  Wis.  His- 
torical Soc,  Madison,  Wis.;  "The 
Fight"  and  "Mutual  Surprise,"  two 
bronzes,  Metropolitan  Museum.  New 
York;  "The  Watering  Place,"  "Pueblo 
Buffalo  Dance"  and  "Sioux  War 
Dance,"  Art  Museum,  Montclair,  N.  J.; 
"Mourning  Brave,"  National  Museum, 
Washington,   D.   C. 

DEMUTH,  Charles,  care  of  Daniel  Gal- 
lery, 2  West  47th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
(P.) 

DENNIS,  Charles  W(arren),  323  Cottage 
St.,  New  Bedford,  Mass.;  summer. 
South  Brewster,  Mass. 
P.— Born  New  Bedford,  Feb.  25,  1898. 
Pupil  of  Harold  Brett,  Howard  E.  Smith, 
Frederick  Bosley.  Member:  S.  Indp. 
A.;    Lg.    of  N.Y.A. 

DENNY,  Milo  B.,  380  Eighth  Ave.,  West 
Cedar  Rapids,  la.;  summer,  Wapil  View 
Place,    Waubeek,    la. 

P.— Born  Waubeek,  la..  Apl.  21,  1887. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  N.  Y.  ASL. 


400 


DENSLOW 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


DEWEY 


DENSLOW,  Dorothea  Henrietta,  3  Sum- 
ner St.,  Hartford,  Conn.;  summer, 
Camp  Yokum,  Becket,  Mass. 
S._Eorn  New  York  City,  Dec.  14,  1900. 
Pupil  of  H.  C.  Denslow.  M  ember: 
Conn.  AFA. 

DEREMEAUX,   Irma,  Van  Dyck  Studios, 
939  Eighth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.— M  e  m  b  e  r  :    SI    1912    (assoc). 

DERRICK,  William  R(oweil),  58  West 
57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  C. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.  Pupil 
of  Bonnat,  Boulanger  and  Lefebvre  in 
Paris.  Member:  NAC;  Conn,  AFA; 
Lotos  C. ;  Chicago  AG:  SPNY.  Award: 
Prize  ($100),  Conn.AFA,  1916.  Work  : 
"The  Plaza,"  National  Gallery,  Wash- 
ington. 

DESCH,  Frank  H.,  222  West  23rd  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer  Province- 
town,    Mass. 

P.,  I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
Chase  and  Hawthorne.  Member  : 
F'ellowship  PAFA;  Salma.  C. ;  Province- 
town   AA. 

DESERENS,       Alma,       "The      Wilhelm," 
Avondale,   Cincinnati,   O. 
P. — M  ember:      Cincinnati     Woman's 
AC. 

DESSAR,  Louis  Paul,  27  West  67th  SL, 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Becket  Hill, 
Lyme,   Conn. 

P. — -Born  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  Jan.  22, 
1867.  Pupil  of  NAD  in  New  York;  Bou- 
guereau,  Robert-FIeury  and  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts  in  Paris.  Member:  SAA 
1898;  ANA  1900,  NA  1906;  Salma.C.1895; 
Lotos  C;  A.Fund  S.  Awards:  Third 
class  medal,  Paris  Salon,  1891;  medal, 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  hon. 
mention,  C.I.Pittsburgh,  1897;  second 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1899;  first  Hall- 
garten  prize,  NAD  1900;  bronze  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902.  Work:  Re- 
turn to  the  Fold"  and  "The  Watering 
Place,"  National  Gallery,  Washington; 
"Wood-Cart."  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York;  "Early  Morning"  and  "Eve- 
ning at  Longpre,"  Art  Museum,  Mont- 
clair,    N.    J. 

DESVARREUX-LARPENTEUR,  James, 
19  Rue  de  Sevres,  Paris,  France. 
P.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Oct.  20,  1847. 
Pupil  of  Van  Marcke  and  Ecole  des 
Beaux-ArLs  in  Paris.  Award  :  Gold 
medal,  Alaska-Yukon  Exp.,  1909.  Spe- 
cialty,  landscapes   with   cattle   or   sheep. 

DETHLOFF,  Peter  H(ans),  130  South  9th 
St.,  East,  Salt  Lake  City,  Utah;  h.  5509 
Lexington  Ave.,  Hollywood,  Calif. 
P. — Born  Barnsdorf,  Germany,  Sept.  8, 
1869.  Pupil  of  William  Gaethe  and 
Christian  von  Schneidau.  Awarded 
three  first  prizes  at  Utah  State  Fair 
Association.  W  o  r  k  :  Fresco  ceiling, 
St.  Mary's  Academy  Chapel,  Salt  Lake 
City,  Utah. 

DE  THULSTRUP,  TlTure,  33  West  67th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.,  P.— Member:  SI  1901  (hon.); 
AWCS;  Century  Assoc.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention  for  drawings,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901. 


DETWILLER,        F(rederick)        K(necht), 

Carnegie  Hall,  56th  St.  and  7th  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Noank, 
Conn. 

P.,  I.,  E.,  A.— Born  Easton,  Pa.,  Dec.  31, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux  Arts, 
Paris;  Instituto  di  Belle  Arti,  Florence; 
Columbia  Univ.,  New  York.  Mem- 
ber: Paris  Ame.  Students  C;  Paris 
AAA;  Brooklyn  WCC;  A. Aid  S. ;  Brook- 
lyn Soc.  Artists;  Con.  AFA;  Guild  of 
Amer.  Painters;  Phila.  Print  C;  Salma. 
C;  S.Indp.A.;  Brooklyn  SE.  Award  : 
Shaw  prize  for  etching,  Salma. C,  1920. 
Represented  in  the  National  Gallery, 
Washington,  D.  C;  Impei'ial  War  Mu- 
seum,  London. 

DEVINE,  Bernard,  Willard,  Me. 
P.— Born  Portland,  Me.,  Oct.  19,  1884. 
Pupil  of  George  Bridgman  and  Robert 
MacCameron  in  New  York;  Laurens 
and  Lionel  Walden  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber:  Paris  AAA. 

DeVOLL,  F.  Usher,  19  Arcade  Building, 
Providence,  R.  I. 

P. — Born  Providence,  R.  I.,  Dec.  15, 
1873.  Pupil  of  R.  L  School  of  Design; 
Chase,  Mowbray,  Hawthorne  and  Henri; 
Laurens  in  Paris.  Member:  Provi- 
dence AC;  Salma. C;  Providence  WCC; 
Conn.AFA;  Inter.Soc.AL;  Lg.  of  NYA. 
Award  :  Silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Work:  "Autumn  Land- 
scape," R.  I.  School  of  Design,  Provi- 
dence; "Spring,"  Art  Club,  St.  Johns, 
New  Brunswick;  "Winter  in  New  Eng- 
land," Delgado  Museum,  New  Orleans, 
La.;  "Winter  in  the  Berkshires,"  New- 
comb  College,  New  Orleans,  La.  Spe- 
cialty,   landscape. 

DEWEY,     Alfred     J.,    34    West    39th     St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
I.— M  ember:     SI. 

DEWEY,  Charles  M(elville),  222  West 
23d  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Lowville,  N.  Y.,  July  16, 
1849.  Pupil  of  Carolus-Duran  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1903,  NA  1907;  Nat. 
Inst. A. L.;  Lotos  C.  Awards:  Silver 
medal  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 
Work  :  "Edge  of  the  Forest,"  Corco- 
ran Gallery,  Washington;  "The  Grey 
Robe  of  Twilight,"  Fine  Arts  Academy, 
Buffalo;  "The  Harvest  Moon"  and  "The 
Close  of  Day,"  National  Gallery,  Wash- 
ington; "Old  Fields,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy,  Philadelphia;  "Amagansett 
from  the  Fields,"  "Evening  Landscape" 
and  "November  Sunset,"  Brooklyn  In- 
stitute Museum;  "The  A^alley  Road," 
Art  Museum,  Montclair,  N.  J.;  "Home- 
ward," Minneapolis  Institute  of  Arts; 
"The  Sun  Shower,"  Metropolitan  Mu- 
seum of  Art. 

DEWEY,  Charles  S.,  2708  Lake  View 
Ave.,   Chicago,  111. 

P.— Born  Cadiz,  O.,  Nov.  10.  1S80.  Self, 
taught.     Member:  Chicago  SA. 

DEWEY,  Julia  Henshaw  (Mrs.  C.  M. 
Dewey),  222  West  23d  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Batavia,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
Charles  Melville  Dewey.  Member: 
N.   A.   Women  PS;   NAC. 


401 


DEWING 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


DIETERICH 


DEWING,    Maria    Oakey    (Mrs.    Thomas 

W.  Dewing),  12  West  8th  St.,  New 
York,    N.   Y. 

P.— Born  New  York,  Oct.  27,  1845. 
Pupil  of  NAD  and  John  La  Farge  in 
New  York;  Couture  in  Paris. 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  bronze  medal, 
Pan-Am. Exp.,    Buffalo,    1901. 

DEWING,  T(homas)  W(ilmer),  12  West 
8th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Boston,  May  4,  1851.  Pupil 
of  Boulanger  and  Lefebvre  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1887,  NA  1888;  Ten 
American  Painters;  Nat. Inst. A. L.  Spe- 
cialty, small  figures.  Awards  : 
Clarke  prize,  NAD  1887;  silver  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1889;  gold  medal,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;-  gold  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  gold  medal.  Interna- 
tional Exp.,  Munich,  1905;  Lippincott 
prize,  PAFA,  1906;  first  medal,  C.I.Pitts- 
burgh, 1908.  Work:  "Summer,"  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Washington;  twenty-two 
oil  paintings,  two  screens,  one  silver 
point,  a  pastel,  Freer  Collection,  National 
Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C;  "The  Reci- 
tation," and  "Lady  in  Green  and  Gray," 
Art  Institute,  Chicago;  "The  Letter," 
"Tobit  and  the  Angel,"  and  "Girl  at 
Desk,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  "Lady  with  a  Mask,"  Corcoran 
Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C;  "Writing  a 
Letter,"  Toledo  Museum;  "Lady  with  a 
Macaw,"  Fine  Arts  Academy,  Buffalo; 
"Lady  in  Gold,"  Brooklyn  Institute  Mu- 
seum; "Lady  in  Gray,"  R.  I.  School  of 
Design,  Providence;  "Lady  in  Yellow," 
"Lady  in  Green,"  and  "Lady  with 
Lute,"  City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis; 
"Lady  in  Black  and  Rose,"  Carnegie 
Institute,  Pittsburgh;  "A  Musician," 
Luxembourg  Museum,  Paris. 

DE  WITT,  Jerome  Pennington,  Clinton 
Studios,  253  W.  42d  St.,  New  York,  N.Y. 
P.,  I.,  C,  L.,  T. — Born  Newark,  N.  J., 
May  27,  1885.  Pupil  of  Pratt  Institute 
under  Prellwitz,  Beck,  Moschcowitz 
and  Paddock.  Member:  Lg.  of 
NYA. 

DE  WOLF,  Wallace  L.,  109  North  Dear- 
born St.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  E,,  W.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Feb.  24, 
1854.  Self-taught.  Member:  AIC; 
Chicago  SA;  Municipal  A.  Lg. ;  Chicago 
SE;  Calif.  AC;  Calif  PM;  Chicago  Art 
Commission.  Work:  "Lake  Louise," 
Springfield  Art  Assoc;  "Coast  Scene, 
Santa  Barbara,"  Union  League  Club, 
Chicago;  "Hermit  Range,  Glacier,  B. 
C."    South   Park  Commission. 

DEXTER,    Mary    L.,    526    Astor    St.,    Mil- 
waukee, Wis. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

DEYOUNG,  H(arry),  A(nthony),  59  East 
Van  Buren  St.;  h.  135  West  115th  St., 
Chicago,  111. 

Landscp.  P. — Born  Chicago,  111.,  Aug. 
5,  1893.  Pupil  of  AIC,  F.  de  Forrest 
Schook.  Member:  Palette  and 
Chisel  Club. 

DIAL,  May,  Bryn  Mawr,  Washington. 
(P.) 


DICK,   G(ladys)    R(oosevelt),  818  Madison 
Ave.,   New  York,   N.   Y. ;   summer,   Glen 
Head,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born   New   York,    N.    Y.,    March    10, 

1889.  Pupil  of  George  Bridgman. 
DICKENSON,  S.  T.,  1029  Connecticut  St., 

Lawrence,   Kan.    (P.) 
DICKINSON,  Sidney   E(dward),  152  West 
55th   St.,   New   York,   N.   Y. 
P. — Born   Wallingford,    Conn.,    Nov.    28, 

1890.  Pupil  of  Bridgman,  Volk  and  Chase. 
Member:  Eclectics;  Allied  AA. 
Award  :  Third  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD,  1917.  Wo  r  k  :  "Self  Portrait." 
Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington;  "Un- 
rest," Chicago  Art  Inst.;  "The  Young 
Painter,"  "The  Black  Cape,"  City  Art 
Museum,  St.  Louis.  Instructor  ASL  of 
N.   Y. 

DICKMAN,  Charles  J(ohn),  628  Mont- 
gomery St.;  h.  Bohemian  Club,  Post 
and  Taylor  Sts.,  San  Francisco,  Cal. 
P. — Born  Demmin,  Germany,  May  4, 
1863.  Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Constant 
in  Paris.  Member:  San  F.  AA.  Mu- 
ral decoration  in  Syndicate  Bldg.,  Oak- 
land,   Cal. 

DIEDERICH,  (Wilhelm)  Hunt,  8  East 
85th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Woodstock,    N.    Y, 

S.,  A. — Born  Hungary,  May  3,  1884. 
Member  :      Salon    d'Automme,    Paris. 

DIEDRICKSEN,  Theodore,  Jr.,  343  York 
'St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 
E.,  I.— Pupil  of  Yale  School  of  Fine  Arts; 
Baschet  and  Gervais  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: New  Haven  PCC.  Instructor  in 
drawing,  Yale  School  of  Fine  Arts,  New 
Haven,   Conn. 

DIELMAN,  Ernest  B(enham),  154  West 
55th  St.;  140  West  55th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.— Born  New  York  City,  Apl.  24,  1893. 
Pupil  of  Volk. 

DIELMAN,  Frederick,  College  of  the  City 
of  New  York,  Convent  Ave.  and  140th 
St.;  41  West  10th  St.,  New  York,  N. 
Y.;  h.  Ridgefield,  Conn. 
P.,  I.,  C,  Etcher,  T. — Born  Hanover, 
Germany,  Dec.  25,  1847;  came  to  the 
United  States  in  childhood.  Pupil  of 
Diez  at  the  Royal  Academy  in  Munich. 
Member:  ANA  1881,  NA  1883  (pres. 
1899  to  1909);  AWCS;  SAA  1905;  SI 
(hon.)  1910;  Mural  P.;  Nat.Inst.AL; 
Century  Assoc;  Salma.C.  (hon.).  Pres. 
Fine  Arts  Fed.  of  N.  Y.  1910  to  1915. 
Professor  of  drawing  in  the  College  of 
the  City  of  New  York  since  1903.  Di- 
rector, Art  Schools  of  Cooper  Union. 
Work:  Two  mosaic  panels,  Library  of 
Congress,  Washington,  D.  C;  "Thrift," 
"Law"  and  "History,"  Albany  (N.  Y.) 
Savings  Bank;  six  mosaics  in  Iowa 
State  Capitol,  Des  Moines;  "A  Page," 
Art  Museum,   Montclair,  N.  J. 

DIETERICH,  Louis  P.,  347  North  Charles 
St.;  h.  824  Edmondson  St.,  Baltimore, 
Md. 

Port.  P. — Born  in  Germany,  Apr.  8, 
1842.     Member:  Char.  C. 

DIETERICH,     Waldemar     Franklin,     347 
North  Charles  'St.,   Baltimore,  Md. 
Port. P.,    I.,    T.— Born    Baltimore,    Nov. 
10,    1876.     Pupil   of   Constant   and   Lau- 


402 


DIETRICH 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


DODGE 


rens  in  Paris.  Member:  Charcoal 
C,  Baltimore;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Instruc- 
tor,   Maryland   Institute,    Baltimore. 

DIETRICH,   Albert   M.,   6   Garrison   Bldg., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

DIETSCH,    C.     Percival,    Saybrook    Park, 

sf— Born 'New  York  City,  May  23,  1881. 
Member:  Alumni  Ame.  Academy 
in  Rome;  NSS  1910;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1911. 
Award:  Rinehart  Scholarship  m 
sculpture,  American  Academy  in  Rome, 
1906  to  1910;  hon.  mention,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Work:  Besso  Memorial 
Monument  in  Rome;  panels  for  Rice 
Institute,  Houston,  Tex.;  "Athlete,' 
Peabody  Inst.,  Baltimore. 
Dl    FILIPPO,  A.,   306  Rivington   St.,   New 

York,   N.   Y.      (S.) 
DILLAWAY,    Theodore    M.,    218    Tremont 
St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.,  85  Warwick  Road, 
Melrose  Highlands,   Mass. 
P.,    T.— M  ember:    Boston    AC.      Di- 
rector of  Manual  Arts  in  Boston  Pub- 
lic Schools. 
DILLAYE,    Blanche,    1726    Chestnut    St.; 
Philadelphia,   Pa. 

P.,  I.,  Etcher. — Born  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  etching  under  Stephen 
Parrish;  painting  under  Garrido  in 
Paris.  Member:  NYWCC;  Phila. 
WCC;  Fellowship  PAFA;  Plastic  C; 
N.  A.  Women  PS;  Phila.  AC.  Awards  : 
Silver  medal  for  etching,  Atlanta  Exp. 
1895;  silver  medal,  AAS  1902;  silver 
medal  for  etchings.  International  Exp., 
at  Lorient,  France,  1903;  gold  medal  for 
water  color.  Conservation  Exp.,  Knox- 
ville,  Tenn.,  1913.  Work  :  "Still  Even- 
ing in  the  Little  Street,"  W.  C.  Art 
Collection.  Univ.  of  Syracuse,  N.  Y.; 
"Arrangement  in  Green"  (oil),  Syracuse 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts. 
DILLER,  Mary  Black,  902  Pine  St.,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa.  (P.) 
DINSMORE,    E.    J.,    364    West    23rd    St., 

New  York,  N.  Y.  (I.) 
DISMANT,  Marion,  care  of  Miss  Seal, 
The  Boxstall,  Ft.  Washington,  Pa.  (I.) 
DIX.  Eulabee  (Mrs.  Alfred  Le  Roy 
Becker),  57  West  75th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

Min.P.— Born  Greenfield,  111.,  Oct.  5, 
1879.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine 
Arts.  Studied  in  New  York,  London  and 
Paris.  Member:  Pa.  S.  Min.  P.;  A. 
S.  Min.  P. 
DIXON,  Francis  S(tiiwell),  90  Percy  St., 
Flushing,   N.  Y. 

P.— Born  New  York  City,  Sept.  18,  1879. 
Pupil    of    ASL    of    N.    Y.      Member: 
Allied  AA;   Conn.  AFA;   Salma.C. 
DIXON,    John    J.    A.,    2508    Jefferson    St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 
DIXON,  Maynard,  273  Valencia  St.,  and 
care  of  Bohemian  Club,  Post  and  Tay- 
lor Sts.,  San  Francisco,  Calif. 
P.,  I. — Born  Fresno,  Cal.,  Jan.  24,  1875. 
Self-taught.  Member:  SI  1912;  N.Y. 
Arch.Lg.  (assoc);  Mural  P.;  San  Fran- 
cisco AA;  Bohemian  C;  Salma.C; 
Southwest  Soc,  Los  Angeles.  Award: 


Bronze  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work:  Mural  paintings — "The  Pio- 
neers," Southwest  Museum,  Los  An- 
geles; four  lunettes.  Southern  Pacific 
Depot,  Tucson,  Ariz.  Illustrations: 
London's  "Men  of  Forty  Mile"  and 
"Son  of  the  Wolf";  Coolidge's  "Hid- 
den Water"  and  "The  Texican"; 
Brady's  "The  West  Wind,"  etc.;  nu- 
merous short  stories  for  magazines. 
Specialty,  Far  West  subjects,  chiefly  in 
Arizona;    also   posters. 

DOBSON,  Margaret  (Anna),  Teachers' 
College,  Syracuse  University;  h.  714 
Ostrom  Ave..  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T. — Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Nov.  9, 
1888.  Pupil  of  Weir,  Vonnoh,  Breck- 
enridge  and  Cecilia  Beaux.  Member: 
Md.  Inst.  Alumni  A. 

DODD,  M(ark)  D(ixon),  106  Columbus 
Heights,  Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
summer,  Ogunquit,  Me. 
P.,  E.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  Jan.  28, 
1888.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.,  and 
Charles  Hawthorne. 

DODGE,    Arthur    B.,    230    South   Norman- 
die  Ave.,   Los  Angeles,   Calif. 
P.— M  ember:     Calif.   AC;   Calif.  PM. 

DODGE,  Chester  L.,  The  Fleur-de-Lys,  7 
Thomas  St.;  h.  29  Waterman  St.,  Prov- 
idence, R.  I. 

P., I.— Born  Salem,  Me.,  May  21,  1880. 
Studied  at  R.  I.  School  of  Design  and 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  Providence 
AC;    Providence  WCC. 

DODGE,  Frances  F.  (Mrs.  A.  C.  Dodge), 
care  of  Fairbanks,  Morse  &  Co.,  St. 
Paul  Minn.;  summer,  care  of  Mr. 
Jamieson,  R.  D.,  White  Bear  Lake, 
Minn. 

P.— Born  Lansing,  Mich.,  Nov.  22,  1878. 
Pupil  of  Duveneck,  Meakin,  Wessel. 
Member:  Cincinnati  Woman's  AC; 
MacD.  C.  of  Cincinnati;  Cincinnati 
Grafters. 

DODGE,  Ozias,  Norwich  Town,  Conn.; 
summer,  Center  Harbor,  N.  H. 
P.,  Etcher. — Born  Morristown,  Vt.,  Feb. 
14,  1868.  Pupil  of  Yale  School  of 
Fine  Arts;  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Ecole 
des  Beaux-Arts  under  Gerome  in 
Paris.  Member:  Chicago  Soc.  of 
Etchers;  New  Haven  PCC;  Calif.  PM. 
Bachelor  of  Fine  Arts,  Yale  Univ.  Di- 
rector of  Norwich  (Conn.),  Art  School 
1897-1910.  Work:  Etchings  in  Con- 
gressional Library,  Washington,  and 
New    York    Public   Library. 

DODGE,  W.  De  Leftwich,  51  West  lOtl- 
St.;  h.  155  East  79th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

Mural  P.— Born  Liberty,  Va.,  1867. 
Studied  in  Munich  and  with  Gerome 
in  Paris.  Member:  Mural  P. 
Awards  :  Gold  medal,  Prize  Fund 
Exhibition,  New  York,  1886;  bronze 
medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1889;  medal,  Co- 
lumbian Exp.,  Chicago,  1893.  W  o  r  it  : 
Majestic  Theatre,  Boston;  Empire 
Theatre,  New  York;  hotels  Astor,  Al- 
gonquin, Devon  and  Waldorf-Astoria, 
New  York;  "Ambition,"  ceiling  in  Li- 
brary of  Congress,  Washington;  Mo- 
saics, Hall  of  Records,  New  York;  mu- 
ral paintings,  Panama-Pacific  Exp.,  San 
Francisco.   1915. 


403 


DOELGER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


DOUGHERTY 


DOELGER,     Frank    J.,     430    Irving    Ave., 
Brooklyn,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

DOHERTY,  Mrs.  Lillian  C,  12  Rhode 
Island  Ave.,  N.  W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P. — Pupil  of  Corcoran  School  of  Art, 
Washington,  D.  C. ;  Rhoda  H.  Nicholls; 
C.  W.  Hawthorne,  and  studied  in  Eu- 
rope.    Member:  Wash.  SA. 

DOHN,  Pauline.     See  Mrs.  Rudolph. 

DOKE,  Sallie  George  (FulIIIove)  (Mrs. 
Fred  Doke).  Lometa.  Texas. 
P.— Born  Keachie,  La.  Pupil  of  Cin- 
cinnati Acad.,  and  Chicago  Acad.  FA. 
Member:  S.  Indp.  A.  Award: 
Gold  medal  at  Dallas,   1916. 

DOLINSKY,  Nathan,  709  Willoughby 
Ave.,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ;  summer.  Hun- 
ter,  N.   Y. 

P.,  T. — Born  in  Russia,  Aug.  9,  1889. 
Pupil  of  NAD.  Member:  Salma.  C; 
N.    Y.   Arch.    Lg. ;    Mural   P. 

DONAH EY,  James  H.,  "Plain  Dealer". 
Cleveland;  h;  1887  Hillside  Ave.,  East 
Cleveland,   O. 

I.,  C,  W.,  L.,  Cartoonist.— Born  West- 
chester, O.,  Apl.  8,  1875.  Pupil  of 
Cleveland  School  of  Art.  Member: 
Cleveland  AA. 

DONAHUE,  William  Howard,  Nanuet, 
Rockland  Co.,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  New  York  City,  Dec.  21,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Henry  R.  Poore,  E.  L.  Warner. 
P.  A.  Bicknell.  Member:  Brooklyn 
SA;  Salma  C;  Wash.  AC. 

DONALDSON,  Alice  Willets,  313  West 
20th  St..  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Huguenot 
Park,    S.   I.,   N.   Y. 

P.,  I.,  C— Born  in  Illinois,  Sept.  28, 
1885.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Academy. 
Member:  Alumni  Pa.  Museum  School 
of  Industrial  Arts;  NYWCC;  AWCS. 
Colored  frontispieces  and  covers  for 
"Touring  Great  Britain,"  and  "The 
Book  of  New  York,"  by  Robert  Shackle- 
ton,  etc. 

DONALDSON,     Mrs.     Anne     D,,     Chagrin 
Falls,   O. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

DONALDSON,    Mrs.    John    A.,    24    Herron 
Ave.,   Bm.sworth,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

DONATO,  Giuseppe,  501  South  Broad  St.; 
h.  1512  South  9th  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
S. — Born  Maida,  Calabria,  Italy,  March 
14,  1881.  Pupil  of  Philadelphia  Indus- 
trial Art  School  under  Grafly  and  J. 
Liberty  Tadd  and  PAFA  under  Grafly; 
Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts;  Julian  and  Cola- 
rossi  academies  in  Paris.  Member: 
NSS  1909;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.;  Paris  AAA; 
Union  Internationale  des  Beaux-Arts 
et  des  Lettres;  Fellowship  PAFA. 
Awards  :  Stewardson  scholarship, 
PAFA,  1900  (first  time  awarded) ;  Cres- 
son  European  scholarship,  PAFA,  1903- 
1905  (first  time  awarded).  Work: 
"The  Quaker,"  City  Hall,  Philadelphia; 
and  in  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the 
Fine   Arts. 

DONDO,  Mathurin  M.,  526  West  122nd  St.; 
h.  Columbia  University,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Mar.  8,  1884.  Pupil 
of  Hawthorne,  Henri,  Bellows  and  Schu- 

404 


macher.      Member:      Lg.    of    N.Y.A.: 

5.  Indp.  A. 

DONLEVY,  Alice  H(eighes),  308  East 
173rd  St.,  Bronx,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  C.  I.,  L.,  W. — Born  Manchester, 
England,  Jan.  7,  1846.  Pupil  of  Women's 
-.^rt  School  of  Cooper  Union,  New  York. 
Prize  for  tapestry.  Columbian  Exp.,  Chi- 
cago, 1893;  second  prize  for  Illumina- 
tion, Phila.  Sketch  Club. 

DONLON,  Louis  J.,-  care  Connecticut 
Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts,  904  Main 
St.,  Hartford,  Conn. 

P.— M  ember:  Conn.  AFA.  Award: 
Dunham  prize,  Conn.  AFA,  1914. 

DONLY.  Eva  Brook,  115  East  27th  St., 
New  York.   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Simcoe,  Ontario.  Canada,  Apl. 
30,  1867.  Pupil  of  F.  M.  Bellsmith,  and. 
John      Ward      Stimson.  Member: 

NYWCC;  NAC;  Gamut  Club;  Newark  So- 
ciety of  Keramic  Arts:  N. A. Women  PS; 
Pen  and  Brush  C;  Wash.  AC;  Lyceum 
Club  of  London.  Works  :  "Arrival 
of  U-Boat  'Deutschland'  at  Norfolk, 
Va.,"  owned  by  United  States  Govern- 
ment; "Elba  Beach,  Bermuda,"  "Beach, 
Lake  Erie,"  National  Gallery,  Washing- 
ton, D.  C. 

DOOLITTLE.  Harold  L.,  127  North  Cata- 
lina   Ave.,    Pasadena,    Calif. 
E.— M  ember:     Calif.   PM. 

DORAN,  Robert  C,  304  West  52nd  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Dec.,P.,E. — Born  Dallas,  Tex.,  Nov. 
13,  1889.  Pupil  of  Kenneth  Hayes  Mil- 
ler in  New  York. 

DOSKOW,  Israel,  452  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Russia,  Nov.  30,  1881.  Pu- 
pil of  PAFA.  Member:  Salma.C; 
SL 

DOUGHERTY,  Louis  R.,  27  Norw^ood 
Ave..  Stapleton.  S.  I.  N.  Y. 
S. — Born  Philadelphia,  Dec.  24,  1874. 
Pupil  of  PAFA  and  Drexel  Inst.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :  The  Scumblers,  Phila. ;  Fellow- 
ship   PAFA. 

DOUGHERTY,  Parke  C(ustls),  49  Boule- 
vard du  Montparnasse;  h.  47  Rue  Va- 
vin,    Paris,    France. 

P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Aug.  11, 
1867.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Julian  Academy 
in  Paris.  Member:  AC  Phila.; 
Fellowship  PAFA  1916;  Paris  AAA;  In- 
ter.Soc.A.L.,  Paris.  Awards  :  Third 
prize,  Paris  AAA;  third  class  medal, 
Inter.Exp. Toulouse,   France. 

DOUGHERTY,   Paul,  care  of  Knoedler  & 
Company,    556    Fifth    Ave.,    New    York, 
N.   Y. 
Marine  P. — Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Sept. 

6,  1877.  Studied  alone  in  Paris,  London, 
Florence,  Venice  and  Munich.  Mem- 
ber: SAA  1905;  ANA  1906,  NA  1907; 
Nat. Inst. A.L.;  Lotos  C;  Salma.C.  1907; 
AWCS;  Century  Assoc.  Awards: 
Osborne  prize  ($500)  1905;  second  prize, 
CI  Pittsburgh  1912;  Inness  gold  medal, 
NAD  1913;  gold  medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915;  Carnegie  prize,  NAD  1915;  Alt- 
man  prize  ($1,000)  NAD,  1918.     Work  : 

•  "The  Land  and  the  Sea,"  Corcoran  Gal- 
lery, Washington;  "Flood  Tide,"  Car- 
negie Inst.  Pittsburgh;   "Moonlit  Cove," 


DOUGHTEN 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


DREIFOOS 


Toledo  Museum;  "Sun  and  Storm,"  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Washington;  "Autumn 
Oaks,"  Brooklyn  Institute  Museum; 
"Storm  Quiet,"  Chicago  Art  Institute; 
"October  Seas,"  "The  Road  to  Cayey," 
and  "Lake  Louise,"  Metropolitan  Muse- 
um, New  York;  "A  Freshening  Cale," 
Buffalo  Fine  Arts  Academy;  "Spring  in 
the  Hills,"  Art  Museum,  Montclair, 
N.  J.;  "Coast  of  Cornwall,"  Memorial 
Art  Gallery,  Rochester,  N,  Y.;  "In  a 
Golden  Light,"  Hackley  Gallery,  Muske- 
gon, Mich.;  "After  the  Gale,"  City  Art 
Museum,  St.  Louis;  "Moonlit  Surf," 
Minneapolis  Institute;  "Sun  and  Surf." 
Omaha  (Neb.)  Museum. 

DOUGHTEN,     Alice     B.,^327     Penn     St., 
Camden,    N.   J. 
P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

DOUGLAS,    Harold,  Farmington,   Conn. 
P. — M  ember  :     Conn.   AFA;    Salma.C. 

DOUGLAS,  Walter,  264  West  19th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Block  Islaiid, 
R.   I. 

P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Jan.  14,  1868. 
Pupil  of  Chase,  NAD  and  ASL  in  N.  Y. 
Member:  AWCS;  Salma.C.  1904. 
Work  :  "In  the  Shade,"  Dallas  (Tex.) 
Art  Association.     Specialty,   poultry. 

DOULL.  Mary  Allison,  18  East  9th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Cape  Trav- 
erse, Prince  Edward  Island,  Canada. 
Min.  P.,  C,  T. — Born  Prince  Edward 
Island,  Canada.  Pupil  of  NAD  in  New 
York;   Julian   Academy   in   Paris. 

DOVE,   Arthur   G.,   Westport,    Conn.    (I.) 

DOW,  Arthur  W(esley),  525  West  120th 
St.;  h.  501  West  120th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  summer,  Ipswich,  Mass. 
Ldscp.  P.,  E.,  T.,  W.,  L.— Born  Ipswich, 
Mass.  Pupil  of  Boulanger,  Lefebvre, 
Doucet  and  Delance  in  Paris.  Instruc- 
tor, Pratt  Institute,  Brooklyn,  1895- 
1904;  Professor  of  Fine  Arts,  Teachers 
College,  Columbia  Univ.,  since  1904; 
Director,  Summer  Art  School,  Ipswich, 
Mass.  Member:  AI  Graphic  A; 
Calif.  PM.  Awards  Hon.  mention, 
Paris  Exp.,  1899;  bronze  medal  for  paint- 
ing and  hon.  mention  for  woodcuts,  Pan- 
Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  medal,  Boston 
Mechanics  Assoc;  bronze  medal  for 
woodcuts,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Au- 
thor of  "Composition,"  "Theory  and 
Practice  of  Teaching  Art,"  "Construc- 
tive Art  Teaching,"  "By  Salt  Marshes," 
"Ipswich  Prints"  and  "Prints  from 
Wood  Blocks." 

DOW,    Leila    A.,    509    North    Henry    St., 

Madison,    Wis. 

P.,   C,   T.— Born  Cooksville,  Wis.,   Apr. 

2,    1864.      Pupil   of   AIC;    John    Vander- 

poel;    F.    W.    Fursman.      Member: 

Madison  AC;  Wis.  PS. 
DOWDALL,    Edward,    369    West    51st    St., 

New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

DOWNES,    Jerome    \.    H.,    83    Sutherland 

Rd.,    Brookline,    Mass. 

P.— M  ember:  New  Haven  PCC. 
DOWNES,   J(ohn)    l(reland)    H(owe),   254 

Lawrence    St.;    h.    345    Whitney    Ave., 

New   Haven,    Conn. 

Ldscp. P. — Born  Derby,  Conn.,  1861.    Pu- 


pil of  Yale  School  of  Fine  Arts  and  J. 
Alden  Weir;  Merson  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber :  New  Haven  Paint  and  Clay  Club 
(pres.);  Conn. AFA;  Librarian,  School 
of  Fine   Arts,    Yale   University. 

DOYLE,  Alexander,  718  High  St.,  Ded- 
ham,  Mass.;  summer,  Squirrel  Island, 
Me.  "     ■■"  1 

S.— Born  Steubenville,  O.,  Jan.  28,  1857. 
Pupil  of  Nicoli,  Dupre,  Pellicia;  Na- 
tional Academies  at  Carrara  and  Flor- 
ence, Italy.  Work:  Marble  statue  of 
Rev.  William  Pinkney,  Washington; 
bronze  equestrian  statue  of.  Gen.  Albert 
Sidney  Johnston  and  of  Gen.  G.  T. 
Beauregard,  New  Orleans,  La.;  "Peace," 
Gen.  Philip  Schuyler,  on  Revo- 
lutionary Monument,  Saratoga,  N.  Y. ; 
Gen.  James  B.  Steedman,  Toledo; 
Gen.  Garfield,  Cleveland;  eight  colos- 
sal allegorical  marble  statues  In 
rotunda.  State  Capitol,  Indianapolis; 
statue  of  Horace  Greeley,  New  York; 
Gen.  Robert  E.  Lee,  New  Orleans,  La.; 
"Calling  the  Roll,"  New  Orleans,  La.; 
Francis  Scott  Key,  Frederick,  Md. 
Henry  W.  Grady  and  Sen.  Benjamin 
Hill,  Atlanta,  Ga.;  Edwin  M.  Stanton, 
Steubenville,  O.;  Soldiers'  Monument, 
Montgomery,  Ala.;  Gen.  Thomas  H. 
Benton  and  Gen.  Frank  P.  Blair,  for 
State  of  Missouri,  and  Sen.  John  E. 
Kenna,  for  State  of  W.  Virginia,  In 
Capitol,  Washington,  D.  C;  Emma  Wil- 
lard,    Troy,    N.    Y. 

DRAKE,  Charles,  10  South  18th  St.,  Phil- 
adelphia, Pa. 
P.— M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

DRAKE,  Frank  C(ornelius),  "New  York 
World,"  Pulitzer  Bldg.,  Manhattan;  h. 
1821  East  15th  St.,  B'klyn.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

I.— Born  Palmyra,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  3,  1868. 
Pupil  of  G.  Ferrari,  August  Will,  and 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Art  director  of  "New 
York   World." 

DRAKE,  Will  H(enry),  care  W.  S.  Bud- 
worth  &  Son,  424  West  52nd  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  362  West  9th  St.,  Los 
Angeles,   Calif. 

P.,  I.— Born  New  York,  June  4,  1856. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under 
Constant  and  Doucet.  Member: 
ANA  1902;  AWCS;  NYWCC;  Salma.C. 
1887;  A.  Fund  S.  Award:  Hon. 
mention,  Paris  Exp.,  1889;  Inness  prize, 
Salma.C.  1903.  Specialty,  animals.  Il- 
lustrated   Kipling's    "Jungle    Book." 

DRAYTON,  Emily.  See  Mrs.  J.  Madison 
Taylor. 

DRAYTON,  G(race)  G(ebble)  (Mrs.  W. 
Heyward  Drayton),  830  Park  Ave., 
New  York.  N.  Y. 

I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Oct.  14,  1877. 
Member:  Fellowship  PAFA;  Al- 
liance. Author  and  illustrator  of 
"Fido,"  "Kitty  Puss"  and  other  chil- 
dren's books.  Originator  of  Campbell 
Soup  cards,  unbreakable  dolls,  paper 
dolls,  etc. 

DREIFOOS,  Byron  G(olding),  17  West 
Kinney  St.,  Newark,  N.  J.;  summer, 
Oswego,    N.    Y. 

P.,  L,  C,  W.,  L..  T._Born  Philadelphia, 
Jan.  30.  1890.  Member:  Fawcett 
Sketch   C;    School   Craft   C. 


405 


DRESSLER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


DUMMEtT 


DRESSLER,    Mrs.    Bertha    Menzler.      See 

Menzler-Peyton. 
DREYFOUS,   Florence,  315  West  99th  St., 

New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born    New    York,    N.    Y.      Pupil    of 

Robert   Henri. 
DREYFUSS,    Albert,    232    West    14th    St., 

New  York,   N.  Y. 

S.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  1880.     Pupil 

of  George  Gray  Barnard.     M  e  m  b  er    : 

S.    Indp.    A.;    Lg.    of    N.Y.A.      Work: 

Arsenal  Park  Memorial,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
DRIER,    Dorothea   A.,   Riverdale-on-Hud- 

son,   N.  Y. 

P. — M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 
DROGSETH,     Eistein    Olaf,    190    Beniteau 

Ave.,    Detroit,    Mich.      (P.) 
DROUET,    Clarke,    258    Riverside    Drive, 

New  York,   N.  Y.    (P.) 
DRURY,    Hope    Curtis    (Mrs.   William   H. 

Drury),   Paradise   Road,   Newport,   R.  I. 

P. — Born    Pawtucket,    R.    I.,    June    14, 

1889.     Pupil  of  R.   I.   School  of  Design. 

Member:  Providence  AC;  Providence 

WCC. 

DRURY,  William  H.,  Paradise  Road,  New- 
port,   R.    I. 

Marine  P. — Born  Fitciiourg,  Mass.,  Dec. 
10,  1888.  Pupil  of  R.  I.  School  of  De- 
sign ;  Tarbell  and  Woodbury.  Mem- 
ber: Providence  AC;  Providence  WCC 
(vice-pres.) ;  Newport  AA.  Award: 
Gillespie   prize,    Newport  AA,    1916. 

DRYDEN,  Helen,  9  East  10th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

I.,  D.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Nov.  26, 
1887.  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member:  S. 
Indp.A.;  SI,  1914  (assoc);  Alliance. 
Award  :  Second  prize  ($500),  Newark 
poster  competition,  1915.  Designs  cov- 
ers for  magazines,  posters,  stage  cos- 
tumes and  scenery. 

DRYSDALE,  Alexander  John,  1301  Bur- 
gundy St.;  h.  3820  Perrier  St.,  New 
Orleans,    La. 

P.,  I.— Born  Marietta,  Ga.,  March  2, 
1870.  Pupil  of  Paul  Poincy  in  New 
Orleans;  ASL  of  N.  Y.,  under  Curran 
and  Du  Mond.  Member:  Arts  and 
Crafts  Club  of  New  Orleans.  Award  : 
Gold  medal,  New  Orleans  AA.,  1909. 
Represented  in  Delgado  Museum,  New 
Orleans. 

DU  BOIS,  Guy  Pene,  care  Montross  Gal- 
lery, 550  Fifth  Ave.;  53  West  9th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Wilton, 
Conn. 

P.,  W.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  4, 
1884.  Pupil  of  Chase,  DuMond  and 
Henri. 

DU  BRAU,  Gertrud  (Margarete),  Pied- 
mont and  Columbia  Avenues,  Cumber- 
land, Md. 

P.,  I.,  C,  T. — Born  in  Germany,  June 
1,  1889.  Pupil  of  Maryland  Institute, 
Baltimore,  and  Royal  Academy,  Leipsig, 
Germany.  Member:  S.  Indp.  A.. 
Work:  Murals  in  Masonic  Temple, 
Cumberland,  Md. ;  "Entry  of  Gen.  Brad- 
dock  into  Fort  Cumberland,  1754,"  "Gen. 
Washington  Reviewing  Troops  at  Fort 
Cumberland,  1794,"  City  Hall  Rotunda, 
Cumberland,  Md. 


DUDENSING,  F.  Valentine,  116  East  19th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 

DUDLEY,  Frank  V.,  6356  Greenwood 
Ave.,    Chicago,    111. 

P.,  L. — Born  Delavan,  Wis.  Studied 
at  Chicago  Art  Inst.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;  AIC  Alumni  Asso.;  Chicago 
WCC;  Chicago  AC;  Chicago  AG;  Union 
Internationale  des  Beaux  Arts  et  des 
Lettres,  Paris.  Awards  :  Chicago 
Municipal  Art  League  Prize,  1907;  Mu- 
nicipal Art  League  Purchase  Prize, 
1914;  Butler  Purchase  Prize,  AIC,  1915; 
Cahn  Prize,  AIC,  1919;  Logan  Medal 
and  Prize,  AIC,  1921.  Represented  in 
Chicago  Art  Institute  collection;  Muni- 
cipal collection  of  Owatona,  Minn;  col- 
lection of  Cedar  Rapids  Art  Associa- 
tion; Public  School  collections  of  St. 
Louis  and  Chicago. 

DUER,    Douglas,    51   West   10th   St.,    New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     SL 

DUESBERG,   Otto,  10   Eldert  St.,   Brook- 
lyn, N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 

DUFFY,  Richard  H.,  9  East  55th  St.,  New 

York,   N.   Y. 

S.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  22, 
1881.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.;  Mercie  in 
Paris.     Member:   NSS  1914   (assoc). 

DUFNER,  Edward,  939  Eighth  Ave.,  New 
York,   N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  5,  1872. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  Buffalo;  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
Whistler  and  Laurens  in  Paris;  studied 
in  Madrid.  Member:  ANA  1910; 
NYWCC;  AWCS;  Salma.C.  1908;  Paris 
AAA;  Lotos  C;  NAC.  Awards: 
First  Wanamaker  prize,  Paris  AAA 
1899;  bronze  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1902;  Fellowship  prize,  Soc.  of  Artists, 
Buffalo,  1904;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  Evans  prize.  AWCS  1909. 
Instructor,  ASL  of  N.Y.  Work;  "In 
the  Studio,"  Buffalo  Fine  Arts  Acad- 
emy; "By  the  Window,"  Milwaukee  Art 
Soc;  "Meadow  Brook,"  Rochelle  Public 
Library. 

DULL,  John  J.,  1520  Locust  St.;  5853 
Willows  Ave.,  Philadelphia.  Pa. 
P.,  Arch.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  1862. 
Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA;  T.Sq.C;  Phila.  Sketch 
C. ;  Phila.WCC.  Award:  Gold  medal. 
Plastic   C,   1903. 

DUMLER,  M(artin)  G(eorge),  19  West 
8th  St.;  h.  1607  Dexter  Ave.,  Cincin- 
nati.  O. 

P. — Born  Cincinnati,  Ohio,  Dec.  22, 
1868.  Pupil  of  Edward  H.  Potthast, 
M.  Rettig,  and  R.  Busebaum.  Mem- 
ber:    Salma.    C. ;    Cincinnati   AC. 

DUMMETT,  Laura  Dow,  867  North  66th 
St.,  Ovprbrook,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.,  D.,  T.— Born  Allegheny,  Pa.,  Aug.  17, 
1856.  Pupil  of  Pittsburgh  School  of 
Design  for  Women;  Julian  Academy 
and  Desgoffe  in  Paris.  Member: 
Pittsburgh  AA. 


406 


DU  MOND 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


DUNN 


DU  MOND,  F.  Melville,  Monrovia,  Calif. 
(P.) 

DU  MOND,  F(rank)  V(incent),  109  East 
10th  St.,  New  Yorl?:,  N.  Y. ;  Briarcliff 
Manor,  N.  Y, 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  1865. 
Pupil  of  Boulanger,  Lefebvre  and  Con- 
stant in  Paris.  Member:  SAA  1905; 
ANA  1900,  NA  1906;  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
N.Y.ArchLg.  1904;  Mural  P.;  Lotos 
C;  Salma.C.  1900;  Century  Assoc; 
Players  C. ;  Rochester  AC.  Awards  : 
Third  class  medal,  Paris  Salon,  1890; 
gold  medal,  Boston,  1892;  gold  medal, 
Atlanta  Exp.,  1895;  silver  medals  for 
painting  and  for  illustration,  Pan- 
Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  hors  concours 
(jury  of  awards),  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F., 
1915.  Director,  Dept.  of  Fine  Arts, 
Lewis  and  Clark  Exp.,  Portland,  1905. 
Instructor  at  ASL  of  N.Y.  Work: 
"At  the  Well,"  Public  Gallery,  Rich- 
mond,  Ind. 

DU  MOND,  Helen  Savier  (Mrs.  F.  V.  Du 
Mond),  109  East  10th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

Min.  P.— Born  Portland,  Ore.,  Aug.  31, 
1872.  Pupil  of  ASL,  Robert  Brandegee 
and  F.  V.  Du  Mond  in  New  York;  Col- 
lin and  Merson  in  Paris.  Member: 
NAC    (life). 

DUNBAR,  Harold  C,  The  Hayden  Studio, 
Belmont,  Mass. 

P.,  I. — Born  Brockton,  Mass.,  Dec.  8, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art  School 
under  E.  L.  Major,  De  Camp  and  Tar- 
bell;  Colarossi  in  Paris,  Member: 
Boston  SWCP;  Boston  AC;  NYWCC; 
Copley  S.;  Concord  AA;  AWCS. 
Award:  Hon.  mention,  AWCS,  1917. 
Work:  "Spring  Evening,"  Boston 
Art  Club;  "Autumn  Glow,"  Boston  City 
Club;  "Portrait  of  Arthur  Gilman," 
RadclifCe  College;  "Portrait  of  Gov. 
Woodbury,"  State  House,  Vermont; 
"The  Morning  Letter,"  Municipal  Col- 
lection, McPherson,  Kansas;  "Portrait 
of  Chief  Justice  Watson,"  Supreme 
Court,  Vt.  Instructor,  Chatham  Sum- 
mer School  of  Painting,  Cape  Cod, 
Mass. 

DUNBAR,  U(lric)  S(tonewall)  J(ackson), 
1517  H  St.,  N.  W.;  h.  1832  Biltmore  St., 
Washington,  D.   C. 

S. — Born  London,  Ont.,  Canada,  Jan.  31, 
1862.  Pupil  of  Frederick  A.  T.  Dunbar 
and  Art  School,  Toronto,  Can.  Mem- 
ber: Wash.  AC.  Awards:  Bronze 
medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago, 
1893;  prize,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
prize,  Atlanta  Exp.,  1902;  prize,  Seattle, 
Wash.,  1906;  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  silver 
medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work: 
Bronze  statue  of  Gov.  Alexander  R. 
Shepherd,  Washington;  "Singleton  Mon- 
ument," Oak  Hill  Cemetery,  Washing- 
ton; bust  of  Hendricks  and  Martin  Van 
Buren,  U.  S.  Senate;  bust  of  G.  G.  Hub- 
bard, Hubbard  Memorial  Hall,  Wash- 
ington; statue  of  Col.  Hammond,  At- 
lanta, Ga.;  Ross  memorial  bronze, 
"Grief,"  Norwich,  Conn. 

DUNBIER,  Augustus  William,  513  Kar- 
bach  Blk.,  Omaha,  Neb. 


P.— Born  Nebraska,  Jan.  1,  1888.  Pupil 
of  Royal  Acad.,  Dusseldorf;  and  AIC. 
Work:  "Clouds,"  in  Public  Library, 
Omaha. 

DUNCAN,    Charles    W.,    11    Cornelia    St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
I. — M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

DUNCAN,  Florida  Allen-Harris,  Prov- 
incetown,  Mass. 

P. — Born  near  London,  Ontario.  Canada. 
Self-taught.     Member:     NYWCC. 

DUNCAN,  Frederick  (Alexander),  1  West 
67th   St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.,    S. — Born   Texarkana,   Ark.,   May  11, 
1881.      Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.   Y. 

DUNCAN,  G(eraldin)  R(ose),  1550  N. 
Garfield,  Pasadena,  Calif. 
P.,  E. — Born  Forest  Row,  Sussex,  Eng- 
land, Nov.  12,  1883.  Pupil  of  Desvalli- 
eres,  Lucien  Simon  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber:   Calif.  AC;   Calif.   PM. 

DUNCAN,  W.  J.,  7  East  8th  St.,  New 
York,     N.     Y. 

P. — M  ember:  Salma.C.  Official  art- 
ist, /American  Expeditionary  Forces  in 
France,   1918. 

DUN  DAS,  Verde  Van  Voorhees,  630  Or- 
chestra Hall,  Chicago,  111.;  318  West 
Court  St.,  Paris,  111.;  summer.  Art  In- 
stitute,  Chicago,  111. 

S.,  W.,  L.— Born  Marlin,  Tex.,  Aug.  31, 
1865.  Pupil  of  Lorado  Taft.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  Mun.  AL;  Chicago  ASL; 
Western  Art  Society;  AAS.  Work: 
"Baby   Buntin',"    Arche   Club,    Chicago. 

DUNLAP,  Helena,  Whittier,  Cal.;  and 
care  of  Lefebvre-Foinet,  19  Rue  Vavin, 
Paris,    France. 

I'. — Born  Los  Angeles,  Cal.  Pupil  of 
PAFA;  AIC;  Simon  in  Paris,  Mem- 
ber: Fellowship  PAFA;  Cal. AC;  San 
F.  AA;  Los  A,  Modern  A,  'Soc. 
Awards  :  Gold  and  silver  medals, 
Panama-Calif.  Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915; 
silver  medal,   San  Francisco  AA,  1919. 

DUNLAP,  Zoe  Fleming,  Dunlap  Villa, 
2210  Upland  PI.,  W.  H.,  Cincinnati,  O. 
Min.  P.,  W.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Jan. 
13,  1872,  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Academy 
under  Nowottny;  studied  in  Paris 
Member:  NAC;  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

DUNN,  Charles,  1449  Fairmont  St.,  N.  W., 
Washington,  D.  C. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Illustrates  for  "The  Nation's 
Business." 

DUNN,  Edna  Marie,  3820  Main  St.,  Kan- 
sas City,  Mo.   (P.) 

DUNN,  Emelene  Abbey,  435  West  119th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  97  Oxford  St., 
Rochester,   N.    Y, 

P.,  S.,  Arch. — Born  Rochester,  N.  Y., 
May  26,  1859.  Pupil  in  sculpture  of  Pow- 
ers in  Florence  and  Mimdy  in  Roches- 
ter; in  painting,  of  Wiles,  'Satterlee, 
Sanderson;  Corcos  in  Florence;  Duval 
in  Paris.  Supervisor,  State  Board  of 
Education  of  Connecticut.  Established 
N.  Y.  Normal  Art  School,  1905;  Ameri- 
can AC,  1913. 

DUNN,    Harvey   T.,   Tenafly,   N.   J. 
I.,    P.,    T.— Born    Manchester,    S.    Dak., 


407 


DUNN 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


EARHART 


March  8,  1884.  Pupil  of  AI  Chicago; 
Howard  Pyle.  Member:  SI  1913; 
Salma.C.  Illustrations  In  current  mag- 
azines. Official  artist  A.  E.  F.  during' 
Great  War.  Represented  in  Smithsonian 
Inst.,  Washington. 

DUNN,    Nat,    47    E.    Fayette    St.,    Union- 
town,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

DUNSMORE,  John  Ward,  96  Fifth  Ave., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 

P. — Born  near  Cincinnati,  O.,  Feb.  29, 
1856.  Pupil  of  Couture  in  Paris. 
Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1903;  Salma. 
C.  1903;  Boston  AC,  1881;  AWCS; 
A.  Fund  S;  Cincinnati  AC  (pres. 
1898-1902.)  Awards:  Medal,  Mass. 
Charitable  Mechanics'  Assoc,  Boston, 
1881;  Evans  prize,  Salma.C. 1914.  Direc- 
tor, Detroit  Institute  of  Arts  1888-90;  di- 
rector, Detroit  School  of  Arts  1890-94. 
Work:  "Macbeth,"  Ohio  Mechanics' 
Institute,  Cincinnati;  "All's  Fair  in  Love 
and  War,"  Lassell  Seminary,  Auburn- 
dale,  Mass.;  represented  in  collection 
of  Salmagundi  Club,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Specialties,  historical  subjects  and  por- 
traits. 

DUNTON,  W.  Herbert,  Taos,  Taos  Co., 
New  Mexico. 

P.,  I.,  W. — Born  Augusta,  Me.,  Aug.  28, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Andreas  M.  Anderson, 
De  Camp,  F.  V.  Du  Mond,  William 
L.  Taylor,  Ernest  L.  Blumenschein, 
Fred  C.  Yohn.  M  e  fn  b  e  r  :  Salma.  C; 
Taos  SA.  Work:  "The  Navaho  Coun- 
try," Peoria  (111.)  Societ"  of  Applied 
Arts.     Specialty,  paintings  of  the  West. 

DUPARQUE,  Paul,  Woodcrest  Ave.,  White 

Plains,  N.  Y. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

DUPHINEY,  Wilfred  l(srael),  Fleur-de- 
lis  Bldg.,  7  Thomas  St.,  Providence.  R. 
I.;  h.  95  Carpenter  St.,  Pawtucket,  R.  I. 
P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Central  Falls,  R.  I., 
Sept.  16,  1884.  Pupil  of  W.  C.  Loring 
and  Albert  F.  Schmitt.  Member: 
Prov.  AC. ;  Prov.  WCC.  Works:  Por- 
trait of  Bishop  Hickey  in  Providence, 
R.  I.;  portrait  Ex-Mayor  John  Lamay, 
Central  Falls,  R.  I.  Illustrations  for 
magazines. 

DUPRE,  E.,  117  Magnolia  Ave.,  Jersey 
City,  N.  J.    (I.) 

DUPREZ,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  F.  Kruseman 
Van  Elten,  care  of  P.  Foinet,  21  Rue 
Brea,   Paris.   France. 

P. — Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  NAD; 
Courtois  and  Collin  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber:   Paris   A.   Woman's   AA. 

DURKEE,  Helen  Winslow  (Mrs.  C.  J. 
Mileham),  124  West  72nd  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

Min.  P. — Born  New  York,  N.  Y.  Pupil 
of  ASL  of  N.  Y.,  Chase,  Du  Mond 
and  Mora.  Member:  Pa. S. Min. P.; 
N.A. Women  P.S. ;  A. S. Min. P.  Award  : 
C.  D.  Smith  Memorial  prize,  Baltimore 
Water  Color  Club. 

DUSHINSKY,  J.,  64  East  88th  St.,  New 
York,    N.   Y.      (P.) 


DUSTIN,  Silas  S.,  Wright  St.,  Westport, 
Conn. 

Ldscp.P. — Born  Richfield,  O.  Pupil  of 
NAD  and  William  M.  Chase.  M  e  m  - 
b  e  r  :  A.Fund  S.;  Salma.C;  Lg.  of 
NYA. 

DUTCH,  George  Sheldon,  1501  Barnard 
Ave.,  Nashville,  Tenn. 
P.,  T. — Born  Chelsea,  Mass.,  Aug.  16, 
1891.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art  School 
under  Major  and  DeCamp.  Mem- 
ber:    College  AA. 

DWIGGINS,  W(illiam)  A(ddison),  384A 
Boylston  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  Leavitt 
St.,   Hingham,   Mass. 

I.,  W. — Born  Martinsville,  Ohio,  June 
19,  1880.  Member:  Boston  SWCP; 
Boston    Soc.    of   Printers;    Boston   AC. 

DWIGHT,   Julia    S.    L.,   1651   Beacon   St., 

Brookline,   Mass. 

P.— Born  Hadley,  Mass.,  Dec.  2,  1870. 
Pupil  of  Tryon  and  Tarbell  in  Boston; 
Brush  in  New  York. 

DWIGHT,  Mabel,  111  West  10th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember  :     S.Indp.A. 

DYE,  Clarkson,  2595  Union  St.,  San 
Francisco,  Cal.;  summer,  Bon  Air,  Cal.; 
and  Santa  Barbara,  Cal. 
P. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  June  30, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Virgil  Williams,  Bur- 
ridge,  Michelson,  etc.  Work:  Mural 
decorations  in  Cathedral  of  Los  An- 
geles, Durango,  Mexico;  and  Grand 
Opera   House,   Waco,    Tex. 

DYER,    Mrs.    Agnes   S.,    483   North   Grove 
St.,   East   Orange,    N.    J. 
P. — Born    San   Antonio,    Texas,    Feb.   14, 
1887.    Pupil  of  Julian  Onderdonk,  Arthur 
Dow.  John  Carlson.  ASL  of  N.  Y. 

DYER,  H.  Anthony,  170  Blackstone  Blvd., 
Providence,    R.    I. 

Ldscp.P.,  L. — Born  Providence.  C^ct.  28, 
1872.  Studied  in  Holland  and  France. 
Member:  Providence  AC  (ex-pres.); 
Providence  WCC  (pres.);  Boston 
SWCP;  Newport  AA.  Work:  "The 
Road  that  Leads  Them  Home,"  water 
color,  Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington, 
D.  C. 

DYER,  H(arry)  W.,  483  North  Grove  St., 
East  Orange,  N.  J. 

P., I. —Born  Portland,  Me.,  Nov.  16,  1871. 
Pupil  of  Chas.  L.  Fox  in  Portland; 
Frank  W.  Benson  and  Ross  Turner  in 
Boston;  Voitz  Preissig  and  ASL  of 
N.Y.      Member:    S.Indp.A. 

DZIEKOUSKA,    Kasimir,   1947   Broadway, 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

EAKINS,  Susan  M.,  1729  Mt.  Vernon  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa.    (P.) 

EARHART,  John  Franklin,  Perin  Bldg., 
Cincinnati,  O.;  h.  Fernbank,  O. 
Ldscp.P.— Born  in  Ohio,  March  12,  1853. 
Member:  Cincinnati  AC.  Award  : 
Landscape  prize  ($100),  Cincinnati  AC 
1903. 


408 


EARLE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


EDDY 


EARLE,  Elinor,  620  S.  Washington  Sq.. 
h.  Stenton  Ave.,  Chestnut  Hill,  Phila- 
delphia,   Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of  PAPA. 
Member:  Plastic  C;  Fellowship 
PAFA.  Award  :  Mary  Smith  prize, 
PAFA  1902;  bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,    1904. 

EARLE,  L(awrence)  C(armichael).  Died 
November  20,   1921. 

P.— Born  New  York,  Nov.  11,  1845. 
Studied  in  Munich,  Florence  and  Rome. 
Member:  ANA  1897;  AWCS;  A.Fund 
S;  AIC  (hon.);  NYWCC.  Work: 
Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  decorations 
in  Chicago  National  Bank.  Specialty, 
portraits. 

EASLEY,  J.,  3  Vandam  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y.    (I.) 

EASTMAN,    Ruth,   9   West   9th    St.,    New 
York,  N.   Y. 
I. — M  ember:     SI. 

EASTMAN,  William  Joseph,  1868  East 
82nd  St.,  Cleveland,  Ohio;  summer, 
Ogunquit,    Me. 

P.,  C,  T. — Born  Cleveland,  Nov.  14, 
1888.     Pupil  of  Cleveland  School  of  Art. 

EASTON,  Spencer  G.,  16  State  St.^  Roch- 
ester, N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:  Rochester  AC. 

EATON,  Charles  Warren,  h.  Bloomfleld, 
N.  J. 

Ldscp.P.— Born  Albany,  N.  Y.,  Feb.  22, 
1857.  Pupil  of  NAD  and  ASL.  of  N.  Y. 
Member:  AWCS;  NYWCC;  Salma.C. 
1897 ;  A.Fund  S. ;  Lotos  C.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  Proctor 
prize,  Salma.  C.  1901;  silver  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  Inness  prize, 
Salma.C.  1902;  Shaw  prize,  Salma.C. 
1903;  gold  medal,  ACPhila.,  1903;  Inness 
gold  medal,  NAD  1904;  silver  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  gold  medal, 
Paris  Salon,  1906;  silver  medal, 
Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910.  Work: 
"Dunes  at  Knocke,  Belgium,"  Cincin- 
nati Museum;  "Gathering  Mists,"  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Washington;  "Connecti- 
cut Pines,"  B'klyn  Ins.  Museum;  "The 
Strip  of  Pines,"  Art  Museum,  Montclair, 
N.J.;  "Snow  Scene"  and  "Landscape," 
Hackley  Gallery,  Muskegon,  Mich. 

EATON,  Hugh  M.,  339  Halsey  St.,  Brook- 
lyn, New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  "The 
Fircone,"  Montville,  N.  J. 
P.,  I.,  C— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Jan. 
25,  1865.  Pupil  of  J.  B.  Whittaker  in 
Brooklyn;  Beckwith,  Cox  and  Chase  in 
New  York.  Member:  NSC.  Spe- 
cialty, bookplates  and  illumination; 
Eaton  lead  block  prints. 

EATON,  Margaret  Fernie  (Mrs.  Hugh  M. 
Eaton),  339  Halsey  St.,  Brooklyn,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  "The  Fircone," 
Montville,  N.   J. 

P.,  I.,  C. — Born  Leamington,  England, 
April  22,  1871.  Pupil  of  J.  B.  Whit- 
taker in  Brooklyn;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under 
Cox  and  Mowbray.  Member:  NY 
WCC;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  (life). 
EBBELS,  Victoria,  1213  Carrier  St., 
Denton,  Texas. 

P.,   T.— Born  Hasbrouck  Heights,  N.  J., 
Oct.  9,  1900.  Pupil  of  John  Sloan,  George 


Luks,  Robert  Henri,  George  Bridgman, 
Frank  Van  Sloan  and  others.  Mem- 
ber: Alliance;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A.;  S.  Indp. 
A. 

EBERHARD,    Robert   G.,    1931   Broadway, 
New  York,  N.   Y. 
S.— M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

EBERLE,  Abastenia  St.  Leger,  206% 
West  13th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Webster  City,  la.,  April  6, 
1878.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  George 
Grey  Barnard.  Member:  ANA;  NSS, 
Grey  Barnard.  Member:  NSS 
1906.  Awards:  Bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Barnett  prize,  NAD 
1910;  bronze  medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F., 
1915.  Work  :  "Girl  on  Roller  Skates" 
and  "Mowgli,"  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York;  "Windy  Doorstep,"  Wor- 
cester Art  IMuseum;  Peabody  Art  Inst., 
Baltimore;  Newark  Museum,  and  Car- 
negie Inst.,  Pittsburgh;  "Little  Mother," 
Chicago  Art  Institute;  "The  Dancer," 
Venice,  Italy,  and  Twentieth  Century 
Club,  Buffalo,  N.  Y.;  "Rag  Time," 
Toledo  Art  Museum;  "Hurdy  Gurdy," 
Detroit  Institute. 

EBERT,  Charles  H.,  Lyme,  Conn.;  sum- 
mer, Monhegan  Island,  Me. 
P. — Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  July  20, 
1873.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy; 
ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  Greenwich  SA;  Salma.C. 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  Buenoa 
Aires  Exp.,  1910;  silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,     San    F.,     1915. 

EBERT,  Mary  Roberts  (Mrs.  Charles  H. 
Ebert),  Lyme,  Conn.;  summer,  Monhe- 
gan Island,   Me. 

P.,  C— Born  Titusville,  Pa.,  Feb.  8, 
1873.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Twacht- 
man;  Hunt  in  Boston.  Member: 
AAVCS    (assoc);    N.A. Women   PS. 

EBY,   Kerr,  Westport,  Conn. 

I.,  E.— Born  Tokio,  Japan,  Oct.  19.  1890. 
Member:     Salma.  C. ;  P.-G. 

ECHERT,  Florence,  The  Valencia,  276 
St.  George  St.,  St.  Augustine,  Fla. ; 
summer,  "Little  Chalet",  Intervale 
White  Mountains,  N.  H. 
P.,  C— Born  Cincinnati,  O.  Pupil  of 
Cincinnati  AA;  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  W.  M. 
Chase.  Member:  Cincinnati  Wo- 
man's AC. 

ECKFORD,  Jessiejo,  4403  Gaston  Ave., 
Dallas,    Texas. 

P.— Born  Dallas,  Texas,  Nov.  21,  1895. 
Pupil  of  Aunspaugh  Art  School,  Hale 
Bolton,  Frank  Reaugh.  Member: 
Dallas  Art  Asso.;  S.Indp.A.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal  1916,  Gold  medal  1919, 
Dallas  Woman's  Forum   Exhibit. 

EDDY,    Henry    B.,   care   of   N.    Y.    Sunday 
Anierican,    2   Duane    St.,    New   York,    N. 
Y. ;   h.   Mamaroneck,  N.   Y. 
I.— Born    New    York,    N.    Y.,    Sept.    16, 
1872.      Member:    SI    1914. 

EDDY,  Henry  S(tephens),  58  West  57th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Springfield 
Road,  Westfield,  N.  J.;  summer,  Prov- 
incetown,   Mass. 

P.— Born  Rahway,  N.  J.,  Dec.  31,  1878. 
Pupil  of  Volk,  Cox,  Twachtman,  Al- 
phonse    Mucha    and    Geo.    E.    Browne. 


409 


EDENBOROUGH 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


EDWARDS 


Member:  Salma.  C;  Beachcombers 
of  Provincetown;  A.  Aid  S.;  A.Fund  S. ; 
Provincetown  AA. ;  Am.  Painters  G. 
Work:  "In  from  the  Nets,"  Mil- 
waukee  Art   Inst. 

EDENBOROUGH,  Aubrey  C,  373  Fifth 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  28  Elmhurst 
Ave.,  Elmhurst,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
Des.,  C. — Born  London,  Eng.,  Mar.  19, 
1887.  Member:  Guijd  of  Free  Lance 
A. 

EDENS,  Annette,  University  of  Washing- 
ton, Seattle,  Wash.     (P.) 

EDERHEIMER,     Richard,     18    East     57th 
St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
Port.     P. — Born     Frankfort,     Germany, 
Oct.     25,     1878.       Member:     Lg.     of 
N.Y.A.;    S.Indp.A. 

EDGERLY,  Beatrice,  The  Lenox,  13th 
and   Spruce   Sts.,  Philadelphia,   P.      (P.) 

EDGERLY,  Gladys  C,  The*  Lenox,  13th 
and  Spruce  Sts.,   Philadelphia,   Pa.    (P.) 

EDHOLiVI,  C(harlton)  L(awrence),  10 
Larchmont  Ave.,  Larchmont,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  W.— Born  Omaha,  Neb.,  Mar.  21, 
1879.  Pupil  of  Ludwig  Herterich  in 
Munich.  Member:  Lg.  of  N.Y.A., 
Whitney  Studio  Club. 

EDINGER,    Dorothy,    52    West    12th    St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — ^M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

EDIVIONDSON,  William  J.,  2362  Euclid 
Ave.,  Cleveland,  O.;  h.  2812  Scarborough 
Rd.,  Cleveland  Heights,  O. 
P.— Born  Norwalk,  O.,  1868.  Pupil  of 
Vonnoh  in  Philadelphia;  Aman-Jean 
and  Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Member  : 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Cleveland  SA;  Cleve- 
land AA.  Awards  :  Second  Toppan 
prize,  PAFA;  European  traveling  schol- 
arship, PAFA;  first  prize,  figure  paint- 
ing, popular  vote  prize  and  Penton 
medal,  Cleveland  Museum  of  Art,  1919. 
Work  in:  Delgado  Art  Museum,  New 
Orleans;  Cleveland  Museum;  Chamber 
of  Commerce,  Cleveland;  Western  Re- 
serve University;  Society  for  Savings, 
Cleveland;  Fellowship  PAFA,  Philadel- 
phia;  State  House,   Columbus,   O. 

EDOUARD,    Giovani,    417    Madison    Ave., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

EDROP,  Arthur  N(orman),  1630  Sansom 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  h.  5  Woodside 
Ave.,   Narberth,    Pa. 

P.,  I. — Born  Birmingham,  England,  May 
15,  1884.  Pupil  of  Whittaker  in  Boston. 
Member:  Asso.  Artists  of  Phila- 
delphia. Contributor  to  "Life",  "Judge", 
etc. 

EDSTROM,  David,  33  West  67th  St.;  15 
Gramercy  Park,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Hvetlanda,  Swe- 
den, March  27,  1873.  Pupil  of  Bor- 
jison.  Royal  Acad.,  Stockholm;  Injal- 
bert  in  Paris.  Award  :  Silver  medal. 
World's  Fair,  St.  Louis,  1904.  Work: 
"Soldiers  Monument,"  Ottumwa,  Iowa; 
"Isis"  and  "Nepthys,"  Masonic  Temple, 
Washington,  D.  C;  War  memorial  re- 
lief, Montreal,  Can.;  "Portrait  of  Judge 
G.  F.  Moore,"  Scottish  Rite  Temple,  Dal- 
las, Tex.;  "Athlete,"  National  Museum, 
Stockholm,    Sweden;    "Cry  of  Poverty," 


"Caliban,"  "Portrait  of  Baron  Beck- 
Friis"  and  "Portrait  of  Dr.  Romdahl" 
in  Gothenburg  Museum,  Sweden;  reliefs 
in  the  Faehrens  Gallery,  Stockholm; 
"Portrait  of  the  Crown  Prince  of 
Sweden,"  and  "Portrait  of  Princess 
Patricia  of  Connaught,"  in  the  Royal 
Palace,  Stockholm. 

EDWARDS,  A.  Elsie,  3800  Nebraska  Ave., 
Washington,   D.   C. 
P. — M  ember:   Wash.  WCC. 

EDWARDS,  Edward  B.,  127  West  12th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  L,  D.— Born  Columbia,  Pa.,  Feb.  8, 
1873.  Studied  in  Paris  and  Munich. 
Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.,  1892;  A.  L 
Graphic  A.;  Salma.C;  Guild  of  Free 
Lance  A. 

EDWARDS,  George  Wharton,  331  Madison 

Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Greenwich, 
Conn. 

P.,  I.,  W. — Born  Fair  Haven,  Conn. 
Studied  in  Antwerp  and  in  Paris. 
Member:  NYWCC;  AWCS;  NAC; 
SI;  Greenwich  Soc.  A.  Awards: 
Bronze  and  silver  medals,  Boston, 
1884  and  1890;  bronze  medal,  Pan- 
Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901,  for  painting, 
and  Jion.  mention  for  drawing;  sil- 
ver medal,  Charleston  Exp.,  1902; 
medal,  Barcelona,  Spain,  1902;  medal 
of  King  Albert,  1920;  Golden  Palms 
of  French  Academy,  1921.  Manager, 
art  department,  Collier's,  1898  to  1903; 
Am.  Bank  Note  Co.  since  1904.  Work: 
Mural  dec,  "Henrik  Hudson,"  U.  S. 
Military  Academy;  illustrated  Austin 
Dobson's  "Sun  Dial";  "Old  English 
Ballads,"  "The  Last  Leaf,"  by  O.  W. 
Holmes,  etc.  Author  of  "Alsace-Lor- 
raine," "Vanished  Towers  and  Chimes 
of  Flanders,"  "Vanished  Halls  and 
Cathedrals  of  France,"  "Holland  of  To- 
day,"  "Belgium,   Old  and  New,"   etc. 

EDWARDS,  H(arry)  C,  735  Fulton  St.; 
h.  754  Halsey  St.,  Brooklyn,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  Gananoque,  Ontario, 
Canada. 

P.,  L— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Nov.  29, 
1868,  Pupil  of  Adelphi  College,  Brook- 
lyn, under  J.  B.  Whittaker;  ASL  of 
N.  Y.  under  Mowbray.  Member: 
Salma.  C,  1901;  Brooklyn  SA.  Illustrated 
"The  Gun  Brand,"  "Blackwater  Bayou," 
etc. 

EDWARDS,  Kate  F(lournoy),  35  East 
Fourth  St.,  Atlanta,  Ga. 
P.— Born  Marshallville,  Ga.,  July  29, 
1877.  Pupil  of  AIC;  and  Simon  in  Paris. 
Member:  The  Cordon,  Chicago;  At- 
lanta AA.  Award  :  First  prize. 
Southeastern  Fair  Ex.  1916,  Atlanta,  Ga. 
first  prize,  Atlanta  AA,  1921.  Work  : 
Portrait  Judge  Barbour,  property  of  U. 
S.  Gov,.  Washington,  D.  C;  portrait 
Gov.  Slaton,  property  of  State  of 
Georgia;  portrait  of  Senator  A.  S.  Clay, 
Georgia   State   Capitol, 

EDWARDS,    Mary    L.,    1    West    67th    St., 
New    York,    N.    Y, 
P. — M  ember:     Pittsburgh  AA. 

EDWARDS,       Robert,      46      Washington 
Square,    New    York,    N.    Y. 
P.,  I.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  4,  1879. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  Buffalo;  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 


410 


EGGLESTON 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


ELMORE 


Chase  School;  Eric  Pape  School  and 
Cowles  School  in  Boston.  Member  : 
SI  1910.  Illustrated  "The  Lovers  of 
Sanna,"  "Eve's  Second  Husband,"  "The 
Wiving  of  Lance  Cleveridge."  Com- 
poser of  "The  Song  Book  of  Robert 
Edwards."     Editor   of   "Mr.   Quill." 

EGGLESTON,  Benjamin,  164  East  22d 
St.,  Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  sum- 
mer, Lyme,   Conn. 

P. — Born  Goodhue  Co.,  Minn.,  Jan.  22, 
1867.  Pupil  of  Minneapolis  School  of 
Fine  Arts  under  Douglas  Volk.  Mem- 
ber: Brooklyn  AC;  Brooklyn  WCC; 
Salma.C,    1903;    Brooklyn   SA. 

EH  MANN,    Fred,   515  West  4th   St.,    Cin- 
cinnati, O. 
P. — M  ember:    Cincinnati  AC. 

EICHLEAY,    Harry    O.,    2115    Sidney    St., 
Pittsburgh,    Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.    AA. 

EILERS,  Emma,  751  St.  Marks  Ave., 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Littleworth  Lane,  Sea  Cliff,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.,  C— Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  ASL 
of  N.  Y.  under  Cox,  Chase,  Mowbray, 
Beckwith  and  Du  Mond.  Member: 
ASL  of  N.  Y.;  N.Y.Woman's  AC;  Fel- 
lowship  PAFA. 

EILSHEMIUS,    Louis,    118   East    57th    St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

EIMER,     Elsa,    209    East    19th    St.,    New 
York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

EISENLOHR,  E.  G.,  324  Eads  Ave.,  Sta- 
tion  A,    Dallas,    Tex. 

P.,  L.,  T. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Nov.  9, 
1872.  Pupil  of  R.  J.  Onderdonk  and  F. 
Reaugh  in  Texas;  Academy  Karlsruhe, 
Germany,  under  G.  Schoenleber.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :  Salma  C.  Work:  "The  Gar- 
den," Dallas  Public  Art  Gallery;  Eliza- 
beth Ney  Museum,  Austin,  Tex.  Au- 
thor of  "Study  and  Enjoyment  of  Pic- 
tures"; "Tendencies  in  Art  and  Their 
Significance";    "Landscape   Painters." 

ELAND,  John  Slienton,  Rodin  Studios, 
200  West  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  E. — Born  Market,  Harborough,  Eng- 
land, March  4.  1872.  Pupil  of  Sargeant. 
Member:  NAC.  Illustrated  "Flower 
Legends  for  Children".  "Willy  Wind  and 
Jock  and  the  Cheese",  etc. 

ELDER,  Arthur  J(ohn),  Nutley,  N.  J. 
P.  E.,  C. — Born  London,  England,  Mar. 
28,  1874.  Pupil  Walter  Sickert,  Theodore 
Roussel,  Charles  Swinstead.  Mem- 
ber: Art  Workers  Guild,  London. 
Award  :  Medal,  Crystal  Palace, 
London,  1901. 

ELLEN,   Dorothy   Hambly,  512  East  End 
Ave.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember  :   Pittsburgh  AA. 

ELLERHUSEN,  Uiric  H(enry),  939 
Eighth  Ave.;  51  West  10th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

S.,  T.— Born  in  Germany,  Apl.  7,  1879: 
came  to  America  at  age  of  15.  Pupil 
of  AIC;  Lorado  Taft;  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
Karl  Bitter.  Member:  NSS  1912; 
N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  1914;  Beaux-Arts  Inst. 
of  D.  (hon.),  1916;  Am.  Numismatic  Soc. 
(assoc),   1919.   Award:    First  prize  in 


competition  for  medal  for  St.  Louis  Art 
Guild.  Work:  "Contemplation". 

"Wonderment",         "Meditation  and 

"Frieze  of  Garland  Bearers",  exterior 
decorations,  Fine  Arts  Bldg.,  San  Fran- 
cisco; Schwab  Memorial  Fountain,  Yale 
University  Campus,  New  Haven,  Conn.; 
medal  for  St.  Louis  Art  League;  Penn- 
sylvania Memorial  medal  to  employees 
of  the  Penna.  R.  R.   in  miliffiry  service. 

ELLINGER,  Carlton   D.,  8  West  92nd  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

ELLiOTT,  Eilzabeth  Shippen  Green  (Mrs. 

Huger  Elliott),  Allen  Lane,  Philadel- 
phia, Pa. 

I. — Born  Philadelphia,  I'a.  Pupil  of 
PAFA  and  of  Howard  Pyle.  Mem- 
ber: Phila.  WCC;  NYWCC;  SI 
(assoc.)  1903;  Inter-Soc.  of  Sculptors, 
Painters  and  Gravers; Fellowship  PAFA; 
Plastic  C;  Providence  AC.  Awards  : 
Second  Corcoran  prize.  Wash.  WCC 
1904;  bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  Mavy  Smith  prize,  PAFA  1905; 
Beck  prize,  Phila.  WCC  1907;  silver 
medal,   P.-P.Exp.,   San  F.,   1915. 

ELLIOTT,  Hannah,  2036-13th  Ave.,    South, 
Birmingham,    Ala. 
P.,   Min.   P.,   I.,    T.— Born  Atlanta,   Ga., 

Sept.  29,  1876.  Studied  in  America  and 
Europe.  Award  :  Third  prize  for 
Miniature,  All  Southern  Exhibition, 
Charleston,    S.    C,    1921. 

ELLIOTT,  John,  Newport,  R.  L 
P.— Born  in  England,  April  22,  1858. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  and  of  Caro- 
lus-Duran  in  Paris;  Villegas  at  Rome. 
Decorated  by  King  of  Italy  in  1910  for 
devotion  to  survivors  of  Messina  earth- 
quake. Award:  Hunt  prize,  New- 
port AA,  1917.  Work:  "Triumph  of 
Time,"  ceiling  decoration,  Boston  Public 
Library;  "Diana  of  the  Tides,"  mural 
decoration.  National  Museum,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C;  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  Old  State  House, 
Boston,  and  in  the  Ethnographical  Mu- 
seum,   Athens. 

ELLIOTT,    Robert    R.,    170    Green    Lane, 

Manayunk,   Pa. 

P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 
ELLIS,     Charles,     care    of    Provincetown 

Players,  133  Macdougall  St.,  New  York, 

N.   Y. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 
ELLIS,    Joseph    Bailey,   431   Fourth   Ave.; 

h.    5546    Pocusset    St.,    Pittsburgh,    Pa.; 

summer.  North  Scituate,  Mass. 

S.,  T. — Born  North  Scituate,  Mass.,  May 

24,    1890.      Pupil    of    Albert    H.    Munsell, 

Bela  Pratt;  Peter  and  Injalbert  in  Paris. 

Member:      Copley   S.,    Boston  Arch. 

C,   Pittsburgh  AA. 
ELMENDORF,      Stella.     1320      University 

Ave.,  Madison,  Wis. 

S. — M  ember:     Wis.  PS. 
ELMER,    Rachel    Robinson    (Mrs.    Robert 

Elmer),   508  West  122nd  St.,   New  York, 

N.    Y. 

P. — M  ember:      N.  A.  Women  PS. 
ELMORE,     Elizabeth     Tinker,     345    West 

57th  St.,   New  York,  N.   Y.     (P.) 


411 


ELWELL 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


ENGLER 


ELWELL,   F(ranl<)    Edwin.    Died  January 

23,    1922. 

S. — Born  Hubbardville,  Concord,  Mass., 
June  15,  1858.  Pupil  of  Daniel  C. 
French  in  Concord;  Falguiere  and  Ecole 
des  Beaux-Arts  in  Paris.  Member: 
Cincinnati  AC  (hon.).  Curator  of  the 
Depart,  of  Statuary,  Metropolitan  Mu- 
seum of  Art,  New  York,  1903-05. 
Awards  :  Medal,  Columbian  Exp., 
Chicago,  1893;  gold  medal,  AC  Phila. 
1891  and  1897;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901.  Hilver  medal  for 
architecture  from  King  of  Belgium. 
Work:  "Dicltens  and  Little  Nell," 
Philadelphia;  Equestrian  statue  of  Gen. 
Hancock,  Gettysburg,  Pa.;  "New  Life," 
Cemetery,  Lowell,  Mass.;  "Greece"  and 
"Rome,"  New  York  Custom  House; 
"Dispatch  Rider,"  Orange,  N.  J.;  "Lin- 
coln Monument,"  Orange,  N.  J.;  "Ad- 
miial  Davis,"  National  Naval  Monu- 
ment, Vicksburg,  Miss.;  "Gen.  Frederick 
Steele"  and  "The  Flag,"  Vicksburg, 
Miss.;  "Death  of  Strength,"  Garden  of 
Old  Cathedral,  Edam,  Holland;  "Sir 
Peter  Esselmont,"  Aberdeen  (Scotland) 
Library;  "Egypt  Awaking,"  Paris, 
France;  "The  New  Life,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  "Aqua 
Viva,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
Yorlc;  "Genius  of  Memory,"  Lowell 
Cemetery;  Amzi  Dodd  Memorial,  Mu- 
tual Benefit  Life.  Newark,  N.  J. 
ELWELL,  John  H.,  30  Bromfield  St., 
Boston,  Mass.;  h.  33  Brewster  Rd., 
Newton  Highlands,  Mass. 
P.,  S.,  I.,  E.,  W.— Born  Marblehead, 
Mass.,  Mar.  10,  1878.  Pupil  of  Vesper 
L.   George,   Reuben  Carpenter. 

ELY,    Edward    Francis,    36    Prospect    St., 
Providence,  R.  L 
P. — M  ember:    Providence  AC. 

ELY,  Letitia  Maxwell,  New  Hope,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:   Wash.   WCC. 

EIVIERSON,  Arthur  W(ebster),  176  Waver- 
ly  PI.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  L,  E.,  T.— Born  Honolulu,  Hawaii, 
Dec.  5,  1885.  Pupil  of  John  C.  Johan- 
sen.  Member:  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Al- 
liance;   Provincetown   AA. 

EMERSON,  C(harles)  Chase,  107  Fenway 
Studios,  30  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
I.,  P.— Member:  SI  1912;  Salma.C; 
Boston  AC. 

EMERSON,  Edith,  "Cogslea,"  Allen  Lane, 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P.,  T.— Born  Oxford,  O.,  July  27,  1888. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  PAFA  and  Violet  Oakley. 
Member:  Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila. 
Print  C;  Phila.  AlUance.  Work: 
Mural  decorations  in  the  Little  Theatre, 
Philadelphia;  Roosevelt  memorial  win- 
dow, Temple  Keneseth  Israel,  Philadel- 
phia, Pa. 

EMERSON,  W.  C,  109  West  84th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer.  New  Canaan, 
Conn. 

P.,  Arch. — M  ember:  Chicago  SA; 
Chicago  WCC;  NYWCC;  New  Canaan 
SA.     Award  :   Englewood  Club  prize. 

EMERTON,  James  H.,  Fenway  Studios,  30 
Ipswich  St.,  Boston,   Mass. 
I, — Born    Salem,    Mass.,    1847.      Mem- 


ber: Copley  S.  1894.  Illustrates  zoo- 
logical publications.  Specialty,  Ame. 
spiders.  1  y  ^[ 

EMMET,  Ellen  G.  See  Mrs.  Wm.  B.  Rand. 

EMMET,  Jane  Erin.  See  Mrs.  Von 
Glehn.  |     i^ 

EMMET,    Leslie,   126   East   34th   St.,    New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P. — Member:      N.   A.   Women  PS. 

EMMET,  Lydia  Field,  535  Park  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Stockbridge, 
Mass.  iTt^ 

Port.  P.,  I.— Born  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y., 
Jan.  23,  1866.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Mow- 
bray, Cox  and  Reid  in  New  York; 
Bouguereau,  Collin,  Robert-Fleury  and 
MacMonnies  in  Paris.  Member: 
ANA  1909,  NA  1912;  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  NY- 
WCC; Port.  P.;  Conn.  AFA;  N.  A. 
Women  PS.  Awards  :  Bronze  medal, 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1S93;  bronze 
medal,  Atlanta  Exp.,  1895;  hon.  men- 
tion, Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Shaw 
prize,  SAA  1906;  Proctor  prize,  NAD 
1907;  Clarke  prize,  NAD  1909;  hon.  men- 
tion, CI  Pittsburgh,  1912;  Bok  prize 
(first  award),  PAFA  1915;  popular  prize, 
Corcoran  Gallery  of  Art,-  Washington, 
1917;  Maynard  portrait  prize,  NAD,  1918; 
Hudson  prize.  Conn.  AFA,  1919. 

EMMET,    Rosina.     See  Mrs.    Sherwood. 

EMMONS,    Mrs.   C(hansonetta)    S(tanley), 

'21  Bennington  St.,   Newton,   Mass. 

P..     C— Born    Kingfield,     Me.,     Dec.     30, 

1858.    Pupil  of  Enneking  and  Alice  Beck- 

ington.        Member:        Boston      SAC. 

Represented   in   SAC   collection,   Boston. 
EMMONS,    Dorothy   Stanley,   21   Benning- 
ton   St.,    Newton,    Mass. 

P. — Born  Roxbury,  Mass.,  June  14,  1891. 

Pupil  of  Woodbury,  J.  G.  Browne,  G.  A. 

Thompson   and   G.    L.    Noyes.     Director 

of     Occupational     Therapy     at     Boston 

Consumptives'   Hospital. 
EMRICH,   Harvey,  Woodstock,  N.  Y.    (I.) 
ENGEL,    Richard    Drum,    1634   Third    St., 

N.   W.,    Washington,    D.    C. 

P.,   W.— Born   Washington,   D.   C,   Dec. 

25,   1886.     Member:  Wash.  AC;   See. 

Wash.  A. 
ENGELS,    Charles,    care    of    Helen    Page, 

21  West  9th   St.,   New   York,   N.   Y. 

P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 
ENGLE,  Amos  W.,  44  West  50th  St.,  New 

York,   N.  Y. 

P.— M  ember:    NYWCC. 

ENGLE,  H(arry  Leon),  Athenseum  Bldg., 
59  East  Van  Buren  St.,  Chicago,  111.; 
summer,  Yorkville,  1)1. 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Richmond,  Ind.,  Feb.  24, 
1870.  Pupil  of  AI  Chicago.  Mem- 
ber: Palette  and  Chisel  C;  Chicago 
SA.  Award:  Palette  and  Chisel  Club 
prize,  1917.  Work:  "Old  Lyme 
Road,"  purchased  by  Chicago  Art  Com- 
mission, 1914.  "Laurel  Blossoms,"  Long 
Beach    (Calif.)    Public   Library. 

ENGLER,  Arthur,  150  Nassau  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  36  Gardner  Ave.,  Jersey 
City,  N.  J. ;  summer.  Ideal  Beach,  N.  J. 
Engr.,  D. — Born  Jersey  City,  Mar.  26, 
1885.     Pupil  of  Francis  Clarke.     M  e  m  - 


412 


ENGLISH 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


EVANS 


b  e  r  :  American 
Indp.  A.  Award 
plate,   Grolier  Club, 


Bookplate    Soc. ;    S. 
1st  prize  for  book- 
1921. 


ENGLISH,  Frank  F.,  Point  Pleasant, 
Bucks   Co.,    Pa. 

P.— Born  Louisville,  Ky.,  Dec.  4,  1854. 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  studied  in  England  and 
Holland.  Member:  Fellowship 

PAFA;  Phila.  Sketch  C.  Award: 
Gold  medal,  AAS.  Phila.  1902. 

ENGLISH,  Mabel  Bacon  Plimpton  (Mrs. 
J.  L.  English),  210  Fern  St.,  Hartford, 
Conn. ;  summer,  Weekapaug,  R.  I. 
P.— Born  Hartford,  Feb.  18,  1861.  Pu- 
pil of  Chase  and  D.  W.  Try  on.  Mem- 
ber: Hartford  AS;  Hartford  AC;  Hart- 
ford-Municipal AS;  Conn.  AFA;  Hart- 
ford  Arts   and   Crafts   C. 

ENNEKING,  J(oseph)  Eliot,  17  Webster 
Square,  Hyde  Park,  Mass.;  summer, 
Mystic,    Conn. 

P. — Born  Hyde  Park,  Mass.  Pupil  of 
De  Camp,  Benson  and  Tarbell  in  Bos- 
ton. Member:  Boston  AC;  Copley 
S. 

ENNIS,  George  Pearse,  58  West  57th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Meddy- 
bemps.  Me. 

P.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  July  21,  1884. 
Pupil  of  Chase.  Member:  Salma.C; 
AWCS;  Allied  AA;  A.Aid  S.;  N.  Y. 
Arch.  Lg.;  NYWCC;  Guild  of  American 
Painters.  Work:  Three  victory 
windows  in  New  York  Military  Acad.; 
memorial  windows,  New  York  Athletic 
Club;    Eastport,    Me. 

ENNIS,  Georgia   L(eaycroft),   (Mrs.  G.   P. 
Ennis),    58    West    57th    St.,    New    York, 
N.   Y. ;   summer,   Meddybemps,   Me. 
P.,    S. — Born    Wading    River,    Long    Isl- 
and.    Pupil  of  Chase  and  Hayes  Miller. 

ENOS,  E.   IViarguerite,  St.  Paul's  Rectory, 
Troy,   N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 

ENQUIST,    Mary    B.,   lll-14th    St.,    N.   E., 
Washington,  D.  C. 
S.— M  ember:     Wash.  WCC. 

ENRIGHT,      Mrs.      Maginel      Wright,      20 
West   10th   St.,    New   York,    N.    Y. 
I.— M  e  m  b  e  r  :    SI   1912    (assoc). 

ENRIGHT.  Walter  J.,  23  East  9th  St., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 

I.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  July  3,  1875.  Pu- 
pil of  AIC.     Member:   SI  1910. 

ENTRESS,  Albert,  79  Allen  Place,  Hart- 
ford,  Conn. 
P. — M  ember:    Conn.    AFA. 

ERB,     George,     Thaw     Bldg.,     Pittsburgh, 
Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.   AA. 

ERICSON,  David,  48  Commercial  St., 
Provincetown,  Mass. 

P. — Born  Motala,  Sweden,  April  15, 
1870.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Whistler  and 
Prinet.  Award  :  Silver  Medal,  St. 
Louis  Exposition  1904.  Work:  "Na- 
tivity," City  of  Duluth;  "Moonlight, 
Provincetown,"  owned  by  City  of  La 
Crosse;  "Barley  Field,  Etaples,"  Com- 
mercial Club,  Duluth. 

ERSKINE,  H.  P.,  159  West  56th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.     (S.) 


ERTZ,   Bruno,  Manitowoc,  Wis. 
P. — Born    Manitowoc,    Wis.,    March    1, 
1873.     Paints  birds  and  insects. 

ERTZ,    Edward    (Frederick),   Pulborough, 

Sussex,   England. 

P.,  L,  Etcher,  T.— Born  Canfield,  Taze- 
well Co.,  111.,  March  1,  1862.  Pupil  of 
Lefebvre,  Constant  and  Delance  in 
Paris.  Member:  Royal  Soc.  of  Brit- 
ish Artists;  Soc.  of  Arts,  London;  Im- 
perial Arts  League;  British  WCS;  Essex 
AC;  Aberdeen  AG;  Soci6t6  Inter. 
d'Aquarellistes,  Paris;  Soci€t6  des 
Cinquante;  Union  Inter,  des  Beaux-Arts; 
Chicago  SE;  Chicago  AG;  Cal.  SE. 
Awards  :  Diploma  of  honor.  Interna- 
tional Exp.,  St.  Etienne;  gold  medal, 
Exp.  d'Angiers;  grand  prix.  Interna- 
tional Exp.,  Rouen,  France;  medal,  Soc. 
des  Amis  des  Arts  de  la  Somme,  1899; 
medal,  Ville  d'Elboeuf,  France;  two 
awards,  Bristol  (Eng.)  Arts  and 
Crafts;  medal  AAS  Philadelphia,  1902. 
Work:  "The  Gardener,"  Alexander 
Palace  Museum,  London;  "Spanish 
Water  Currier,"  Public  GhUptw,  Liver- 
pool; Print  Dept.,  Library  of  Congress, 
Washington,  D.  C,  and  California 
State  Library;  N.  Y.  Public  Library; 
"The  Vacation  Girl,"  "Sunset,  Grand 
Canyon,"  American  Consulate,  London. 
ERTZ,  Gordon,  1411  Foster  Ave.,  Chi- 
cago, 111. 

P.,  I.,  C,  T.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Feb. 
19,  1891.  Self-taught.  Member: 
Palette    and    Chisel   C. 

ESCHERICH,  Elsa  F.,  1753  West  46th  St., 
Los  Angeles.    Calif. 
P.— M  ember:     Calif.  AC. 

ESHERICK,  Wharton  H(arris),  Paoli,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  July  15, 
1887.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Beaux,  and 
Anshutz.  Member:        Fellowship 

PAFA. 

ESKRIDGE,  Robert  Lee,  Coronada  Beach, 
Cal. 

P.,  E.,  D. — Born  Phyllysburg,  Pa.,  Nov. 
22,  1891.  Pupil  of  Los  Angeles  College 
of  Fine  Arts;  AIC;  Chicago  Academy  of 
Fine  Arts;  George  Senseney.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SE;  Brooklyn  SE. 
Award  :  Bronze  medal  for  water 
color.  Pan. -Cal.  Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915. 

ESSIG,  George  E(merick),  9  North  Cam- 
bridge Ave.,  Ventnor,  Atlantic  City,  N. 
J.;  summer,  Elwyn,  Delaware  Co.,  Pa. 
P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Sept. 
2,  1838.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Edward  Moran; 
James  Hamilton.     Specialty,  marines. 

ETZ,     Pearl     Potter,     1515    Rhode    Island 
Ave.,  Washington,   D.   C. 
P.— M  ember:    Wash.WCC. 

EVANS,  Anne,  1320  Hannock  St.,  Denver, 
Colo. 
P. — M  ember  :  Denver  A  C. 

EVANS,  Edwin,  Univ.  of  Utah;  h.  1261 
Emerson  Ave.,  Salt  Lake  City,  Utah. 
P.,  T.— Born  Lehi,  Utah,  Feb.  2,  1860. 
Pupil  of  Laurens,  Lefebvre  and  Benja- 
min-Constant in  Paris.  Member: 
S.  Utah  A.  (pres.  1905);  Utah  Art  In- 
stitute (pres.  1907).  Director  of  Art, 
University  of  Utah. 


413 


EVANS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


FAIRCHILD 


EVANS,  Dulah   Marie.     See  Dulah  Evans 
Krebheil. 

EVANS,     Elizabeth,     4     Soldiers'     Home, 
Washington,   D.   C.     (P.) 

EVANS,   Ethel,   130  Claremont  Ave.,   New 
York,   N.    Y. 
P.— M  ember:     N.  A.  Women  PS. 

EVANS,    Mrs.    Eva    Clemence,    17    Spring 
St.,    Providence,    R.    I. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence  AC. 

EVANS,  Grace  (Lydia),  930  Presser  Bldg.; 
h.   218-32d  St.,  Philadelphia,   Pa. 
P.,  I.,   T.— Born  Pittston,  Pa.,   Feb.   19, 

1877.  Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Chase,  An- 
shutz  and  Breckenridge;  Drexel  Inst. 
Member:  Phila.  Alliance;  Fellow- 
ship PAFA.  Instructor,  Fine  Arts  Col- 
lege of  Syracuse  University.  Award  : 
First  prize  for  fashion  drawing  for 
"Good  Housekeeping  Magazine,"  1915. 
Formerly  fashion  artist  for  the  "Phila- 
delphia Press."  Work:  Portrait  of 
Dr.  Francis  March,  March  High  School, 
Easton,    Pa. 

EVANS,  Jessie  Benton,  1517  East  61st  St., 
Chicago,  111.;  winter,   Scottsdale,  Ariz. 
P. — Born     in     Ohio.        Pupil     of     AIC. 
Member:   Chicago  SA;  Chicago  AC; 
Cordon   C;    Salvator   Rosa,    Naples. 

EVANS,  John  W(illiam),  633  St.  Mark's 
Ave.,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
Wood  Engr. — Born  Brooklyn,  March  27, 
1855.  Pupil  of  P.  R.  B.  Pierson. 
Award  :  Bronze  medal,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  silver  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,    San    F.,    1915. 

EVANS,     Rudulph,     71    Washington    PI., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 

S.— Born  Washington,  D.  C.  Pupil  of 
Falguiere  and  Rodin.  Member: 
ANA,  1919;  Paris  AAA;  Allied  AA. 
Award  :  Bronze  medal,  Paris  Salon, 
1914;  Watrous  gold  medal,  NAD,  1919. 
Work:  Statue  acquired  by  French 
Government  for  Luxembourg;  "The 
Golden  Hour,"  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New   York. 

EVERETT,    Herbert    Edward,    1632   Lati- 
mer   St.,    Philadelphia,    Pa. 
S.,  T. — Born  Worcester,  Mass.     Pupil  of 
Boston    Museum    School;    Julian    Acad- 
emy in  Paris.     Member:  Phila.WCC. 

EVERS,     Ivar    Eils,    Tillson,    Ulster    Co., 
N.    Y. 
P.,    Arch.— Born    in    Sweden,    Oct.     28, 

1866.  Pupil  of  Napoleon  Csesar  in 
Sweden;  De  Camp  in  Boston;  Twacht- 
man  in  New  York:  Member:  S. 
Indp.A. 

EYRE,    Louisa,    1003    Spruce    St.,    Phila- 
delphia, Pa. 

S.— Born  Newport,  R.  I.,  Jan.  16,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Augustus  Saint  Gaudens. 
Member:  Phila.  ACG;  Fellowship 
PAFA;  Philadelphia  Alliance.  Work: 
Tablet  to  Gen.  George  Sykes  for  Me- 
morial  Hall,    West    Point,    N.    Y. 

FABIAN,   Lydia  Dunham,  3918  Lake  Park 
Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.— Born    Charlotte,    Mich.,    March    12, 

1867.  Pupil  of  the  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  AIC; 


Ossip  Linde  and  Henry  Henshall; 
Member  :  Sante  Fe  Society  of  Art- 
ists; Alumni  of  the  Chicago  Art  Insti- 
tute. 

FAHRENBRUCH,  Lottie,  22  S  St.,  N.  W., 
Washington,    D.    C.      (P.) 

FAIG,  Mrs.  Frances  Wiley,  3345  Whitfield 
Ave.,  Clifton,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P. — Pupil  of  Duveneck,  'Grover,  and 
Hawthorne.  Member:  MacD.  C.  of 
Cincinnati;  Cin.  Woman's  AC.  Work: 
Mural  decorations  in  Engineering  Li- 
brary, University  of  Cincinnati. 

FAILING,    Ida   C,   1041  Acoma   St.,   Den- 
ver,   Colo. 
P. — M  ember:     Denver  AA. 

FAIRBANKS,  Avard  Tenneson,  Univer- 
sity of  Oregon,  Eugene,  Ore. 
S.— Born  Provo,  Utah.  March  2,  1897. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  James  E. 
Eraser;  Beaux- Arts  in  Paris,  under  In- 
jalbert.  Award  :  First  prize  for  bust 
and  first  prize  for  relief,  Utah  State 
Fair,  1915;  prize  for  sculpture,  Utah 
State  Fair,  1916.  Work:  "The  In- 
dian," "The  Pioneer,"  Salt  Lake  City 
Public  Schools;  monument  "The  Bless- 
ing of  Joseph"  and  fountain  in  honor  of 
Hawaiian  motherhood,  Laie,  H.  I.; 
"Doughboy  of  Idaho." 

FAIRBANKS,    Charles     Mason,    44    West 
44th  St.,  New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Salma.  C. 

FAIRBANKS,  Frank  P.,  15  Vanderbilt 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Larchmont, 
N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Boston,  1875.  Pupil  of  Tar- 
bell  and  De  Camp  in  Boston. 
Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.l913  (vice- 
pres.);  Mural  P.  (sec);  Players. 
Awards  :  Sears  prize  and  Paige 
traveling  scholarship  from  the  Boston 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts;  Academy  at 
Rome  scholarship,  1909-1912.  Instruc- 
tor in  painting,   Cooper  Union. 

FAIRBANKS,  John  B.,  1111  Whitlock 
Ave.,  Salt  Lake  City,  Utah. 
P.,  T.— Born  Payson,  Utah,  Dec.  27, 
1855.  Pupil  of  Constant,  Lefebvre  and 
Laurens  in  Paris.  Member:  P?iris 
AAA;  S.  Utah  A.;  Assoc.  Artists  Salt 
Lake  City.  Awards  :  First  prize, 
Utah  State  Fair,  1899;  first  prize  for 
marine,  Utah  State  Fair,  1913;  second 
prize  for  marine,  Utah  State  Fair,  1917; 
second  prize  for  landscape,  Utah  State 
Fair,  19i8;  first,  second  and  third  prizes, 
Utah   State  Fair,   1920. 

FAIRBANKS,  J.  Leo.,  1228  Byran  Ave., 
■Salt  Lake  City,  Utah. 
P.,  E.,  T.— Pupil  of  Julian  Academy, 
Paris.  Member:  Associated  Artists 
of  Salt  Lake  City;  Utah  A.  Inst.  De- 
signed and  assisted  in  executing  sculp- 
ture frieze  on  Mormon  Temple,  Hawaii. 
Director  of  Art  in  public  schools  of  Salt 
Lake  City. 

FAIRCHILD,    C.   Wiilard,   care  of  Hoyt's 
Service,    Inc.,    116   West   32nd    St.,    New 
York.    N.   Y. 
I.— M  ember:   SI  1912. 

FAIRCHILD,  Lucia.  See  Mrs.  Henry  B. 
Fuller. 


414 


FAIRCHILD 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


FASSETT 


FAIRCHILD,    Mary.      See    Mrs.    Will    H. 

Low. 
FAIRCHILD,    May    (Mrs.    Charles   Nelson 

Fairchild),  58  West  57th  St.,  New  York, 

N.   Y.;   h.   Rhinebeck,   N.   Y. 

Min.   P.— Born  Boston,   Mass.     Pupil  of 

Cowles  Art   School  in   Boston;   ASL.   of 

N.    Y.;    John   F.    Carlson.      Member: 

N.  A.  Women  PS;  PBC;  ASL,  of  N.  Y. 

Taught    miniature    painting   at   ASL    of 

N.  Y. 
FALCO,    Henri    Louis,    643    Carlton    Ave., 

Brooklyn,    N.    Y. 

P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 
FALLER,     Mrs.     Hortense     Gimbel,     St. 

Leger,     Cincinnati,     O.;     and    60     Lake 

Flower   Ave.,    Saranac   Lake,    N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Vincennes,  Ind.,  Dec.  15,  1889. 

Pupil   of   St.   Louis   School   of  Art   and 

Cincinnati  Art  Academy.     Member: 

Cin.   Woman's  AC;   Cincinnati  AL. 
FALLS,   Charles   Buckles,   2  East  23d   St. 

New    York,    N.    Y. 

I. — Born    Fort    Waynr-,    Ind.,     Dec.    10, 

1874.     Member:     SI  1909.     Award: 

Beck  prize,  Phila  WCC,  1918. 
FALLS,    D(e)    W(itt)    C(linton),    16    East 

60th   St.;   h.   449  Park  Ave.,   New  York, 

N.    Y. 

P.,   T.— Born   New  York,    Sept.   29,    1864. 

Pupil    of    Walter    Satterlee.      Specialty, 

military   subjects,     portraits,    comic    il- 

llustrating. 
FANGEL,   Henry  Guy,  360  West  22nd  St., 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,   I.— M  f  m  b  e  r  :    SI  1913. 
FANGEL,  Maud  Tousey  (Mrs.  H.  G.  Fan- 
gel),    360   West   22nd   St.,    New   York,   N. 

Y. 

I.— M  e  m  b  e  r  :    SI   1913    (assoc). 

FARINA,   Pasquale,  1314  Arch  St.;  h.  625 
North    64th    St.,    Philadelphia,    Pa. 
Port.    P. — Born    Naples,    Italy,    Nov.    2, 
1864.      Member:    Phila.    AC;    Phila. 
Alliance;     Fellowship    PAFA;     Print    C. 
Award  :   Bronze  Medal,  World's  Fair, 
Chicago,    1903.    Founded    School    of    De- 
sign, Painting  and  Sculpture,  Tucuman, 
Argentina. 
FARIS,  Ben  Howard,  The  Primrose  Bldg., 
434  Race  St.,   Cincinnati,   O. 
P.,  I.— Born   St.   Clairsville,   O.,  July  21, 
1862.     Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy. 
Member:    Cincinnati  AC.    Illustrator 
for  "The   Commercial  Tribune." 
FARJEON,  Eliot  E.,  418  Penn  Ave.,  Pitts- 
burgh,  Pa. 

Port.  P. — Born  in  New  York  City. 
Studied  at  Cooper  Union;  NAD;  ASL 
of  N.  Y.;  with  Bonnat,  Bouguereau, 
Robert-Fleury  and  Lefebvre  in  Paris. 
Member:  Pittsburgh  JlA. 
FARLEY,  R(ichard)  B(lossom),  Hunting- 
ton Valley.  Pa. 

P.— Born  Poultney,  Vt.,  Oct.  24,  1875. 
Pupil  of  Whistler,  Chase,  Cecilia  Beaux. 
Member:  Phila.  AC;  Fellowship 
PAFA;  Phila.  Sketch  C;  Allied  AA. 
Awards  :  Fellowship  prize,  PAFA. 
1912;  gold  medal,  Phila.  AC.  1912; 
fourth  W.  A.  Clark  prize  ($500),  Cor- 
coran Gallerv,  1914;  silver  medal.  P. -P. 
Exp.,    San    F.,    1915.      Work:     "Morn- 


ing Mists,"  Pennsylvania  Academy  of 
the  Fine  Arts;  "Fog,"  Corcoran  Gal- 
lery, Washington,   D.   C. 

FAR  LOW,  Harry,  Hotel  Chelsea,  222  W. 
23rd  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  49  Beverly 
Road,  Kew  Gardens,  L.  I.;  summer 
Woodstock,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  April  11,  1882. 
Pupil  of  Duveneck,  Benson,  and  Tar- 
bell.  Member:  Salma.  C,  Lg.  of 
NYA.,  MacD.  C.  Portraits  in  Hunter 
College,  Lawyers'  Club,  Yale  Club, 
Board  of  Education,  New  York;  Manu- 
facturers' Club,  and  Neff  College,  Phila- 
delphia, P. 

FARNDON,  Walter,  Douglaston,  Long 
Island,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  in  England,  March  13,  1876. 
Pupil  of  NAD  under  Edgar  M.  Ward. 
Member:  'Salma.  C. ;  Brooklyn  SA. 
Award  :  Turnbull  prize,  Salma  C, 
1919. 

FARNHAM,  Paul,  1441  Broadway,  Oak- 
land, Calif.     (P.,  L) 

FARNHAM,   Sally  James    (Mrs.   Paulding 
Farnham),  57  West  57th  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 
S — Born  Ogdensburg,  N.  Y. 

FARNSWORTH,  Jerry,  2020  G  St.,  N.  W., 
Washington,   D.   C.      (P.) 

FARNUM,  Herbert  Cyrus,  23  Waterman 
St.,  Providence,  R.  I.;  h.  Olney  Ave., 
North  Providence,  R.  I. 
P.— Born  Gloucester,  R.  I.,  Sept.  19, 
1866.  Pupil  of  R.  L  School  of  Design; 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Member: 
Providence  AC;  Providence  WCC. 
Work:  "Flood  Tide,"  Rhode  Island 
School   of   Design. 

FARNUNG,  Helen  M.,  413  West  147th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  E.,  T.— Born  Jersey  City,  N.  J., 
Mar.  31,  1896.  Pupil  of  Frank  V.  Du- 
Mond,  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  S. 
Indp.  A.;  ASL  of  N.  Y. 

FARR.   Bertha    M.,  Wyoming,   N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember  :      Rochester   AC. 

FARRELL,  Katherine  Levin  (Mrs.  Theo. 
P.  Farrell),  330  South  43rd  St.,  Phila- 
delphia,   Pa. 

P.,  Etcher. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Pupil  of  School  of  Design,  School  of 
Industrial  Art  and  of  PAFA.  Mem- 
ber:  Plastic  C;  Fellowship  PAFA. 

FARRELL,    Ruth    Clements,    39^^    Wash- 
ington  Sq.,   New   York,    N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

FARRINGTON,  Katherine,  483  Field 
Point  Rd.,  Greenwich.  Conn. 
P.,  W.,  T.— Born  St.  Paul,  Minn.,  May 
3,  1877.  Pupil  of  DeCamp,  Mowbray, 
DuMond  and  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber: St.  Paul  AS.  See.  Conn.  Art- 
ists. 

FASANO,  Clara,  5719  Tenth  Ave.,  Brook- 
lyn,  N.  Y. 
S. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

FASSETT,   Truman    E.,  58  West  57th   St., 
New   York,   N.   Y. ;   summer,   Woodmere, 
L.  I.,   N.   Y. ;   West  Falmouth,   Mass. 
P.,  I.— Born  Elmira,  N.  Y.,  May  9,  1885. 
Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School. 


415 


PAULEY 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


FERGUSON 


PAULEY,    Mrs.    Lucy    S.,    Lock   Box   705, 
Columbus,   O. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

FAULKNER,  Barry,  11  Macdougal  Alley, 
New  York,  N.  Y.,  and  61  Summer  St., 
Keene,    N.    H. 

Mural  P.— Born  Keene,  July  12,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Abbott  H.  Thayer  and  George 
de  F.  Brush.  Member:  Mural  P.; 
N.Y.Arch.Lg-.1911.  Award  :  American 
Academy  in  Rome  Scholarship,  1908- 
1911;  medal  of  honor  for  painting,  N.Y, 
Arch.Lig.  1914.  Work  :  Mural  decora- 
tions in  the  house  of  Mis.  E.  H.  Harri- 
man,  Arden,  N.  Y. ;  panels  in  foyer  of 
Washington  Irving  High  School,  New 
York  City.  Pictorial  Maps  in  Cunard 
Bldg.,    New   York,    N.    Y. 

FAULKNER,   Mrs.   E.   D.,  992  Fifth  Ave., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     N.   A.   Women  PS. 

FAULKNER,  Herbert  W.,  Washington, 
Conn. 

P.,  I.,  Engr.,  W.,  L.— Born  Stamford, 
Conn.,  Oct.  8,  1860.  Pupil  of  ASL.  of 
N.  Y.  under  Beckwith  and  Mowbray; 
Collin  in  Paris.  Member:  Salma.  C, 
1897;  Syndicat  de  la  Presse  Artistique. 
Award:  Hon.  mention,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901.  Work:  "Gondo- 
lier's Kitchen,"  Dallas  (Tex.)  Art  Asso- 
ciation; "Palace  on  Grand  Canal,"  'St. 
Louis  Museum;  "Une  Fete  qui  finlt 
mal,"  Minneapolis  Museum;  "San 
Georglo,  Venice,  at  Sunset,"  Herron  Art 
Institute,   Indianapolis. 

FAXON.  William  Bailey,  7  West  43rd  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.-Born  Hartford,  Conn.,  1849.  Pupil 
of  Jacquesson  de  la  Chevreuse.  Mem- 
ber: SAA  1892;  ANA  1906;  AFAS; 
A.  Aid  S.;  Century  Assoc. 

FAY,   Clark,  Westport.   Conn. 
I. — M  ember:  Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

FAY,   Nancy,  Westport,   Conn.      (I.) 

FAY,    Nellie,    1612    Washington    St.,    San 

Francisco,   Cal. 

P.— Born    Eureka,    Cal.,    Feb.    11,    1870. 

Pupil  of  Arthur  F.   Mathews  and  Emil 

Carlsen.       Member:     San    Francisco 

SA;   Kingsley  Art  C,   Sacramento. 
FEHRER,  Oscar,  257  West  86th  St.,  New 

York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Lyme,  Conn. 

Port.   P.— Born  New  York  City  in   1872. 

Studied  in  New  York,  Paris  and  Munich. 

Member:  Allied  AA;  Salma.  C;  NAC 

(life).      Represented    in    Memorial    Hall 

City  Library,  Lowell,  Mass. 

FEITELSON,    Alice    L.     L.,    7    AVest    14th 
St.,  New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

FELDMAN,  Baruch  M.,  320  Harmony  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa.;  h.  Uhlerstown,  Pa. 
P.,  W.,  T.— Born  in  Russia,  Mar.  4,  1885. 
Pupil  of  Anshutz.  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA.  Award  :  Hon,  men- 
tion, Americanization  through  Art  Ex- 
hibition, Philadelphia,  1916;  first  hon. 
mention,   Phila.   Sketch  C,   1921. 

FELKER,      Ruth      Kate      (Mrs.      W.      D. 
Thomas),   6949  Mitchell  Ave.,    St.  Louis, 
Mo. 
Arch.,   P.,   I.,   T. — Born   St.   Louis,   Mo., 


May  16,  1889.  Pupil  of  School  of  Archi- 
tecture at  Washington  University  and 
St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts;  ASL  of 
N.  Y. ;  Society  of  Beaux-Arts  Archi- 
tects; studied  in  Europe.  Member: 
Soc.  of  Ancients  of  St.  Louis;  Wash. 
Univ.  Arch.  Soc.  (hon.);  St.  L.  AG. 
Award:  Mallinckrodt  prize,  St.  Louia 
AG,  1915,  1916,  1917,  1919.  Work: 
Mural  decoration  in  St.  John's  Hospital, 
St.   Louis. 

FELLOWS,  A.  P.,  23  West  43rd  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  Etcher.— Pupil  of  School  of  Indus- 
trial Art  and  of  Drexel  Inst.,  Phila- 
delphia. Member:  Phila.  Soc.  of 
Etchers;  Phila.  Sketch  C. 

FELLOWS,  Cornelia  Faber  (Mrs.  A.  P. 
Fellows),  3203  Summer  St.,  W.  Phila- 
delphia,  Pa. 

Port.  P.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of 
PAFA  and  Drexel  Inst.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Plastic  C. 

FENDERSON,  Annie  M.  (Mrs.  Mark 
Fenderson),  144  West  23d  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

Min.  P. — Born  Spartansburg,  Pa. 
Member:      N.   A.   Women   PS. 

FENDERSON,    Mark,    144   West    23d    St., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 
I.— M  ember:     SI    1913. 

FENNER,  Mrs.  Albert,  78  Oriole  Ave., 
Providence.    R.    I. 

P. — M  ember:  Providence  AC;  Provi- 
dence WCC. 

FENTON,  Beatrice,  1523  Chestnut  St.;  h. 
1319  Spruce  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
S.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  July  12, 
1887.  Pupil  of  School  of  Industrial  Art, 
Phila.,  and  PAFA.  Member:  Fellow- 
ship PAFA;  Plastic  C. ;  Phila.  Alliance. 
Awards:  Stewardson  sculpture  prize, 
PAFA,  1908;  Cresson  traveling  scholar- 
ship, PAFA,  1909  and  1910;  hon. mention, 
P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  hon.  mention. 
Plastic  C,  1916.  Represented  in  per- 
manent collection,  Philadelphia  Art 
Club. 

FENTON,  Hallie  Champlin    (Mrs.  Warden 
Fenton),  Bronxville,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born     St.     Louis.     Mo.,     Oct.,     1880. 
Pupil   of  AIC;   Blanche   in   Paris;    NAD. 
Member:     N.   A.   Women  PS. 

FENTON,  John  William,  11  Clove  Road, 
New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  "Fenton 
Farms",  Conewango  Valley,  Cattarau- 
gus   Co.,    N.    Y. 

P.,  T. — Born  Conewango  Valley,  July  6, 
1875.  Pupil  of  N.  Y.  School  of  Fine 
and  Applied  Art;  Cullen  Yates  and 
Howard  Giles.  Member  :  SAL  of 
N.  Y. ;  New  Rochelle  AA.  Teacher  of 
Art  in  New  York  City  High  Schools. 

FERG,  Frank  X.,  6026  Webster  St.,  Phila- 
delphia,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Fellowship    PAFA. 

FERGUSON,  Alice  Lowe  (Mrs.  H.  G. 
Ferguson),  2330  California  St.,  Wash- 
ington,   D.    C. 

P.— Born  Washington,  D.  C.  Pupil  of 
Corcoran  School  in  Washington;  and 
of  Hawthorne.  Member:  Wash. 
WCC;   Wash.   AC;    S.Indp.A. 


416 


FERGUSON 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


FINK 


FERGUSON,  Eleanor  M.,  123  Vernon  St., 
Hartford,   Conn. 

S.— Born  Hartford,  June  30,  1876.  Pu- 
pil of  C.  N.  Flag-g  in  Hartford;  D.  C. 
French,  G.  G.  Barnard  and  ASL  of 
N.    Y.     Member:    Conn.   AFA. 

FERGUSON,  Elizabeth  F(oote).  1039  Fine 
Arts  B!dg. ;  2822  Cambridge  Ave.; 
Chicago,  III.;  summer.  Bay  View.  Mich. 
I.,  T.— Born  Omaha,  Neb.,  July  2,  1884. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  PAFA.  Member; 
Omaha  AG;  Alumni  AIC;  Cordon  C, 
Chicago. 

FERGUSON,  Lillian  Prest,  Laguna 
Beach,  Calif. 

P.,  T. — Born  Windsor,  Ont.,  Canada, 
Aug.  18,  1871.  Pupil  of  W.  L.  Forster, 
"VV.  M.  Chase,  Alex.  Robinson,  Julian 
School.  Member:  S.  Indp.  A. ; 
Calif.  AC;  Laguna  Beach  AA;  AVomaa's 
Art  Club  of  Southern   Calif. 

FERGUSON,    Nancy    M.,    524   Walnut    St.; 

53  West  Tulpehocken   St.,   Philadelphia, 

Pa. 

P. — Member:        N.    A.    Women    PS; 

Fellowship    PAFA.       Award:       Mary- 
Smith  prize,  PAFA,  1916. 
FERNBACH.  A(gnes)    B..  48  St.  Nicholas 

Place,   New  York,   N.  Y. 

E.— Born  New  York  City.  June  29.  1879. 

Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.,  Alphonse  Mucha 

and  Ernest   Haskell. 
FERN  IE,      Margaret.       See     Mrs.     Hugh 

Eaton. 

FERNOW,  Bernice  Pauahi  Andrews  (Mrs. 

B.   E.   Fernow,   Jr.),    432  Lafayette   PL, 
^  Milwaukee,    Wis. 
*  Min.   P. — Born   Jersey   City,    N.   J.,   Dec. 

17,  1881.     Pupil  of  Olaf  M.  Brauner  and 

Theodora   Thayer.      Member:      ASL 

of  N.   Y. 

FERRARI,  Febo,  96  William  St.;  h.  94 
William  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn.;  sum- 
mer, Onahill  Cottage,  Short  Beach, 
Conn. 

S.— Born  Pallanza,  Italy,  Dec.  4,  1865. 
Pupil  of  Royal  Academy,  Turin,  under 
Tabacchi.  Member:  New  Haven 
PCC;   New  Haven  Arch.   C. 

FERRER,  Vera  L..  193  Wa.shington  Ave., 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  13, 
1895.  Pupil  of  Lucia  Fairchild  Fuller 
and  J.  B.  Wliittaker;  NAD.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS.    Specialty,  miniatures. 

FERRIS,  Jean  Leon  Gerome,  8  No.  50th 
St.,    Philadelphia,    Pa. 

Hist.P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Aug.  8,  1863. 
Pupil  of  S.  J.  Ferris  and  Christian 
Schuessele  in  Philadelphia;  Bouguereau 
and  G6rome  in  Paris.  Member:  A. 
Fund  S.  of  Phila.  (treas.  and  sect.); 
Phila.  SE,  1881;  Phila.  AC,  1890. 
Painter  of  historical  genre. 

FERRISS,  Hugh,  210  West  59th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

L,  E.,  A.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  July  12, 
1889.  Member:  SI;  S.  Indp.  A.;  St. 
Louis  Art  Lg.  Drawings  for  Committee 
on  Public  Information,  "Harpers," 
"Century,"   "Pencil  Points." 


FERRO,  Charles  M.,  515  Madison  St., 
Seattle,  Wash.      (P.) 

FERRY,  Isabella  H.,  Skye  Studio,  Booth- 
bay  Harbor,  Me.;  h.  189  East  St.,  East- 
ham-pton,   Mass. 

P.,  T. — Born  Williamsburgh,  Mass. 
Pupil  of  Tryon,  Henri,  Bouguereau, 
Boutet  de  Monvel,  Fleury,  etc.  Mem- 
ber: Springfield.  Mass.  Art  Lg. 
Supervisor  of   drawing   at   Holyoke. 

FETSCHER,  Charles  W.,  323  Gulon  Ave., 
Richmond  Hill,   L.   L,   N.   Y. 
P.,    Arch. — M  ember:    Soc.    Deaf    A. 
(pres.). 

FEURER,  Karl,  3125  Western  Ave., 
Seattle,  Wash.      (P.) 

FICKBOHIVl,    Sallie    I.,    47    East    58th    St., 

New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.— M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 
FIELD,   Edward,  The  Harvard,  4  Trinity 

St.,   Hartford,   Conn. 

P.,  W.— Born  Providence,  R.   I.,  Oct.   4, 

1858.     Member:     Conn.  AFA. 

FIELD,  Hamilton  Easter,  106  Columbia 
Heights,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Thurnscoe,  Ogunquit,  Me. 
P.,  E..  T.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  April 
21,  1873.  Pupil  of  Gerome,  Collin,  Cour- 
tois,  Fantin-Latour  and  Lucien  Simon 
in  Paris.  Member:  S.  Indp.  A.; 
Brooklyn  SA. ;  Modern  Artists  of  Amer- 
ica. Director;  Thurnscoe  School  of  Art, 
Ogunquit,  Me.;  Ardsley  School  of  Art, 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y.  Art  editor,  Brooklyn 
Daily  Eagle;  The  Touchstone,  The  Arts, 
and   The  American   Art   Student. 

FIELD,  J.  M.     1440  Broadway,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

FIELD,    Mrs.    Louise    Blodgett,   32  Cottage 

St.,   Wellesley,   Mass. 

P. — Born  Boston.  Pupil  of  Ross  Tur- 
ner, Fred  D.  William^,  William  Mor- 
ris Hunt  and  Tomasso  Juglarls  in 
Boston.  Member:  Boston  WCC; 
Copley  S.,   1896. 

FIELD,  M.  (Mrs.  Herman  Field),  4826 
Kimbark  Ave.  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  C. — Born  Stoughton,  Mass.,  Jan.  14, 
1864.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  Chica- 
go S'A.  Award  :  Bronze  medal, 
A  la  ska- Yukon-Pacific  Exp.,  Seattle, 
1909. 

FINCKEN,  James  H(orsey),  1012  Walnut 
St.;  h.  909  South  St.  Bernard  St.,  Phil- 
adelphia, Pa. 

P.,  E.,  C. — Born  Bristol,  England,  May 
9,   1860.     Member:   Phila.    Sketch   C. 

FINK,  Aimee  M.,  1069  Madison  Ave.,  New 
York.    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 

FINK,  Denman,  Haworth,  N.  J. 
P.,  I. — Born  Springdale,  Pa.,  Aug.  29, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Benson,  Hale  and  Walter 
A.  Clark.  Member:  SL ;  Salma.C. 
Illustrated  "Mace's  History  of  United 
States";  "The  Barrier"  and  "The  Post 
Girl,"  by  Rex  Beach;  "Lost  Borders," 
by  Mary  Austen,  etc.  Illustrations  for 
"Harper's,"  "Scribner's,"  "Century," 
etc. 


417 


FINKELNBURG 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


FITTS 


FINKELNBURG,  Augusta,  Kimmswick, 
Mo. 

P. — Born  Fountain  City,  Wis.  Pupil  of 
AIC;  Pratt  Inst.,  Brooklyn;  studied  in 
Paris,  Italy,  Holland  and  England  and 
with  Robert  Reid,  Willard  Metcalf, 
Henry  B.  Snell,  Herbert  Adams  and  Ar- 
thur W.  Dow.  Awards:  Three  first 
prizes  at  Missouri  State  Fair.  Mem- 
ber: St.  Louis  AG;  St.  Louis  AL. 
Work:  Two  pictures  in  San  Fran- 
cisco Art  Museum. 

FINKLE,    Melik,    Art    Academy    of    Cin- 
cinnati, O. 
S. — Work  in  Cincinnati  Museum. 

FIORATO,  Noe,  308  West  56th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.      (S.) 

FIORENTINO-VALLE,  Maude  Richmond, 
1136-1140  Corona  St.,  Denver,  Colo.; 
summer,    "Mt.    Falcon,"    Mt.    Morrison, 

Colo. 
P.,  L,  W.,  T.— Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y., 
under  Cox,  Chase,  Brush,  and  Beck- 
with;  Academic  Julian  under  Lefebvre, 
Constant  and  Beaury-Sorel,  in  Paris. 
Member:  Denver  Art  Asso.  Art 
Critic  for   "Rocky  Mountain   News." 

FIRESTONE,  I  (sadore)  L(ouis),  549  Riv- 
erside Drive,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  246 
Dinwiddle  St.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P.,  I.,  T. — Born  in  Austria -Hungary, 
Apr.  13,  1894.  Pupil  of  Carnegie  Inst, 
of  Tech.,  and  Stevenson  Art  School, 
Pittsburgh;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
Pittsburgh  AA. 

FISCHER,  Anton  Otto,  Bushnellville, 
Greene   Co.,    N.    Y. 

I. — Born  Munich,  Germany,  Feb.  23, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Julian  Academy,  Paris. 
Member:   SI  1913. 

FISCHER,    H.,    48    West    90th    St.,    New 
York,    N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

FISCHER,  Mary  Ellen  SIgsbee  (Mrs.  An- 
ton O.  Fischer),  Bushnellville,  Greene 
Co.,  N.  Y.;  and  415  Central  Park  West, 
New    York,    N.    Y. 

I. — Born  New  Orleans,  La.,  Feb.  26, 
1876.     Member:   SI    (assoc),   1912. 

FISHBURN,      Mrs.      Josephine      R.,      110 
Huntington  PI.,   Mt.   Auburn,   O. 
P. — M  ember:       Cincinnati    Woman's 
AC. 

FISHER,  Anna  S.,  939  Eighth  Ave.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

P.— Member:  ANA:  AWCS;  NY- 
WCC;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  SPNY. 
Award  :  National  Arts  Club  prize, 
N.  A.  Women  PS,  1919.  Work:  "The 
Orange  Bowl,"  National  Academy  of 
Design,    New  York,   N.   Y. 

FISHER,   Bud,  258  Riverside  Drive,   New 
York,    N.   Y. 
I.— Born  April   3,   1885. 

FISHER,  Emily  Kohler  (Mrs.  Charles  W. 
Fisher).    Manheim    Apartments,    Queen 
Lane,  Germantown,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

FISHER,    George    V.,    858-52nd    St.,    New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

FISHER,    Harrison,    80  West   40th   St.,   44 
West   77th   St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
I.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  July  27,  1875. 


Studied  in  San  Francisco.  Member: 
SI  1911.  Illustrated  "The  Market  Place," 
by  Harold  Frederic;  "Three  Men  on 
Wheels,"  by  Jerome  K.  Jerome;  for 
"Life,"   etc. 

FISHER,  Vaudrey,  1730  Broadway,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  care  of  Miss  Piers, 
Denver  Capitol  Hill  Bank,  Denver,  Colo. 
P.,  C,  T.— Born  Staffordshire,  England, 
Aug.  9,  1889.  Pupil  of  von  Herkomer, 
Castellucho,   Brangwyn. 

FiSHER,  William  Fdgar,  52  East  19th 
St.;  h.  611  West  136tn  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

L,  D.— Born  Wellsville,  N.  Y.,  Oct. 
24,  1872.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Cornell  Univ. 
Member:  AI  Graphic  A. ;  A.  Book- 
plate S. ;  Salma.  C.  Specialty,  book- 
plate designs. 

FISK,  H.  T.,  3004  Heath  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 
I. — M  ember:     Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

FISK,  Mary  Stella,  Angola.  Ind. 
S.— M  ember:       Ind.    SS. 

FISK,   Mrs.  Pliny,  Rye,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     N.  A.  Women  PS. 

FISKE,  Gertrude,  120  Riverway.  Boston, 
Mass. 

P.,  E.— Born  Boston,  April  16,  1879. 
Pupil  of  Tarbell,  Benson,  Hale  and 
Woodbury.  Member:  Boston  GA; 
N.  A.  Women  PS;  Boston  SE. 
Award:  Silver^medal,  P.-P  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  Hudson  prize.  Conn.  AFA, 
1918;  Samuel  Bancroft,  Jr.,  prize,  Wil- 
mington,   SFA,   1921. 

FISKEN,  Jessie,  1607  Minot  Ave.,  Seattle, 
Wash. ;  summer,  Wing  Point,  Winslow, 
Washington. 

P.,  C,  T.— Born  Row,  Scotland,  Mar.  5, 
1860.  Pupil  of  Glasgow  School  of  Art. 
Member:     Seattle  FAS. 

FITCH,  Benjamin  Herbert,  217  West  33rd 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— Born   Lyons,    N.    Y.,    Sept.    4,    1873. 
Self-taught.        Member:      Rochester 
AC;    Rochester   SA. 

FITCH,    Eugene    C,    327    West    28th    St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

FITCH,  Walter,  348  Judah  St.,  San  Fran- 
cisco,  Calif. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

FITE,  Mrs.  Frank  E.  See  Anne  Merri- 
man  Peck. 

FITLER,  Mrs.  W.  C.  See  Claude  Raguet 
Hirst. 

FITSCH,  Eugene  C(amille),  253  West  42nd 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Lyme, 
Conn. 

P.,  E. — Born  Alsace,  France,  Dec.  11, 
1892.  Pupil  of  Mahonri  Young,  Frank 
V.  DuMond.  Member:  S.  Indp.  A.; 
Lg.  of  N.   Y.  A. 

FITTS,  Clara  Atwood  (Mrs.  F.  W.  Fitts), 
40  Linwood  St.,  Roxbury,  Mass. 
I. — Born  Worcester,  Mass.,  Oct.  6,  1874. 
Pupil  of  School  of  the  Boston  Museum 
of  Fine  Arts.  Member:  Copley  S. 
Work  :  Altar  piece,  three  panels.  St. 
John's  Church,  Roxbury,  Mass.  Illus- 
trates books  for  children,  "St.  Nicholas," 
etc. 


418 


FITZGERALD 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


FLISHER 


FITZGERALD,  Harrington,  716  Walnut 
St.;  h.  2109  Porter  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Ldscp.  P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Apr.  5, 
1847.  Pupil  of  Fortuny  and  Gerome  in 
Paris;  George  Nicholson  in  Philadel- 
phia. Member:  Fairmount  Park 
AA;   Phila.    Sketch   C;    Pen   and   Pencil 

C,  Phila;  Newspaper  Artists'  Asso. 
Award:  Gold  medal,  AAS,  1902; 
bronze  medal,  Charleston  Exp.,  1902. 
Work:  "Valley  Forge,"  four  panels, 
State  Capitol,  Harrisburg,  Pa.;  "The 
Wreck."    National  Gallery,  Washington, 

D.  C;  "The  Smuggler's  Cave,"  Detroit 
Institute,  "The  Smugglers"  and  "In 
Cairo,"  Albright  Art  Gallery,  Buffalo, 
N.  Y. ;  "On  the  Shore,"  Pennsylvania 
Museum,  Philadelphia;  "Delaware 
Water  Gap,"   State  College,  Pa. 

FITZGIBBON,  J.  L.,  3704  Bell  St.,  Kansas 
City,  Mo.     (P.) 

FITZPATRICK,   Daniel   Robert,  Post-Dis- 
patch Bldg.,   12th  &   Olive   Sts.;   h.   1230 
Amherst  Place,   St.  Louis,  Mo. 
Cartoonist — Born  Superior,  Wis.,  Mar.  5, 

1891.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  St. 
Louis  AG. 

FITZPATRICK,   J,    C,    212-lst    St.,    S.    E., 

Washington,   D.   C. 

P.— M  ember:   Wash.  WCC. 
FJELDE,     Paul,    333    Fourth    Ave.,    New 

York.  N.  Y. 

S. — Born    Minneapolis,    Minn.,    Aug.    12, 

1892.  Pupil  of  Lorado  Taft.  Mem- 
ber: S'W  Sc;  Chicago  SA.  Award: 
Hon,  mention,  St.  Paul  Inst.,  1918. 
Work:  Lincoln  Monument  at  Kris- 
tiania,  Norway;  John  Scott  Bradstreet 
Memorial,  Minneapolis  Art  Institute; 
Irwin  Memorial,  Auburn,  Me.;  Gjertsen 
Memorial,  Minneapolis,  Minn.;  Lincoln 
monument,  Hillsboro,  N.  D. ;  Pioneers' 
memorial.  Council  Bluffs,  la.;  Donners- 
berger  memorial,  McKinley  Park,  Chi- 
cago,   111. 

FLACK,  Arthur  W.,  Atlas  Bldg.;  h.  78 
Fulton  Ave.,  Rochester,  N.  Y. 
P.,  D.,  Arch. — Born  in  San  Francisco, 
1878,  Pupil  of  Rochester  Mechanics' 
Institute,  Fine  Arts  Dept,;  studied  in 
Paris  and  London,  Member  :  Roch- 
ester AC;   Rochester  AL, 

FLAGG,  H.  Peabody,  26  East  23d  St., 
New    York,    N,    Y. 

P, — Born  Somerville,  Mass.,  1859.  Pupil 
of  Carolus-Duran  in  Paris.  Member: 
N,Y,Arch,Lg,  1899;  Boston  AC;  Salma,C. 
1904.  Work:  Two  historical  paint- 
ings in  Flower  Memorial  Library, 
Watertown,    N,    Y, 

FLAGG,  J(ames)  Montgomery,  33  West 
67th  St.,  New  York,  N,  Y. 
I.,  P. — Born  Pelham  Manor,  N.  Y.,  June 
18,  1877.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Her- 
komer  in  England;  Victor  Marec  in 
Paris,  Member:  SI  1911;  Lotos  C, 
Illustrations  for  "Judge,"  "Life"  and 
other  magazines;  collection  of  drawings 
published  as  "The  Well-Knowns." 

FLANAGAN,  John,  1931  Broadway,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

S.— Born  Newark,  N.  J.  Pupil  of  Saint 
Gaudens  in  New  York;  Chapu  and  Fal- 
guiere  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA 
1911;   NSS   1902;   N,   Y.   Arch.   Lg.    1914; 


Conn.  AFA;  Salma.  C.  Am.  Numismatic 
Soc.  Awards  :  Silver  medal,  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal.  Pan- Am.  Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  medal  of  honor  for  section 
of  medals,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915; 
Saltus  medal,  American  Numismatic 
Soc,  1921.  Work:  Clock,  Library  of 
Congress,  Washington,  D.  C. ;  bronze  re- 
lief, "Antique  Education,"  Free  Public 
Library,  Newark,  N.  J.;  tinted  marble 
relief  "Aphrodite,"  Knickerbocker  Hotel, 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  bronze  memorial  por- 
trait of  Samuel  Pierpont  Langley, 
Smithsonian  Institution.  Washington, 
D.  C;  Bulkley  memorial,  Aetna  Life  In- 
surance Bldg., _  Hartford,  Conn.;  Alex- 
ander memorial  medal  for  School  Art 
League  of  New  York,  1915.  Represented 
in  medal  collections  of  the  Luxembourg, 
Paris;  Museum  of  Ghent,  Belgium; 
Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art  and  Amer- 
ican Numismatic  Society  of  New  York; 
Chicago  Art  Institute;  Carnegie  Insti- 
tute, Pittsburgh;  Newark  Art  Museum; 
war  medal  for  the  town  of  Marion. 
Mass.;  medal  for  the  Garden  Club  of 
America;  "Medaille  de  Verdun,"  voted 
by  Congress,  and  presented  by  the 
President  of  the  United  States  to  the 
City  of  Verdun. 

FLEMING,  H(enry)  S(tuart),  44  West 
47th  St.;  h.  2  East  G5th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  Southampton,  L.  I., 
N.  Y. 

L,  P.,  S.,  C— Born  Philadelphia,  July 
21,  1863,  Pupil  of  Lefebvre  and  Benja- 
min-Constant in  Paris,  Member:  SI 
1901    (sec). 

FLEMING,     Margot,    Hibernia,    Flemings 
Island,  Fla. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

FLETCHER,  Calvin,  Utah  Agricultural 
College;  h.  166  South  4th  East,  Logan, 
Utah. 

P.,  S.,  Arch,,  C„  W„  L.,  T,— Born  Provo, 
Utah,  June  24,  1882,  Pupil  of  Pratt  In- 
stitute; Columbia  University;  AIC;  Cen- 
tral School  Arts  and  Crafts  in  London; 
Colarossi  and  Biloul  in  Paris;  Morse  in 
Chicago.  Award  :  First  prize,  Utah 
State  Fair  Assoc,  Work:  Two  murals 
in  L,  D.  S.  Temple  at  Logan,  Utah. 

FLETCHER,  Godfrey  Bockius,  Watson^ 
ville,  Calif.;  summer,  Monterey,  Calif. 
P. — Born  Watsonville,  Calif.,  Dec.  16, 
1888.  Pupil  of  N.  Y.  ASL  and  Armin 
Hansen;  Academic  de  la  Grande  Chaum- 
iere.  Award  :  Silver  medal  for 
water  color  painting,  San  Francisco  A  A 
1918.  Gold  medal,  San  Francisco  AA. 
1920. 

FLETCHER,    Grace,    222    West    23rd    St.. 
New   York.    N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:   N.  A.  Women  PS. 

FLEURY,  Albert,  1133  North  Dearborn 
St.,   Chicago,  111. 

Mural  P.,  T. — Born  Havre,  France,  Feb. 
2,  1848.  Pupil  of  Lehman,  Renouf  and 
Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  in  Paris,  Officier 
d'Instruction  Publique,  France.  Mem- 
ber:  Chicago  SA;  Chicago  WCC. 

FLISHER,     Edith     M,,     Church    St.,    Bel- 
mont Heights,  Tenn. 
P.,  C,  T.— Born  Nashville,  Tenn,     Pupil 


419 


FLORANCE 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


FORSYTHE 


of  PAFA.  Member:  Nashville  AA; 
Nashville  Pes.  Club.  Work:  "Por- 
trait of  Gov.  Tom  Rye,"  State  Capital, 
Nashville. 
FLORANCE,  Eustace  Lee,  1090  Wash- 
ington St.,  Dorchester,  Mass. 
P. — Born  in  Philadelphia.  Member: 
St.   Botolph   C. 

FLOWER,  Sherwood,  Evesham  Ave.,  Bal- 
timore, Md.;  summer.  Govans,  Md. 
P.,    Arch. — Born    Oakwood,     Cecil    Co., 
Md.,    Jan.    3,    1878. 

FOBES,    Elizabeth    C,    350    55th    St.,    New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

FOGARTY,  Thomas,  38  East  22d  St.;  h, 
253  West  71st  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.— Born  New  York,  1873.  Pupil  of  ASL 
of  N.  Y.  M  e  m  b  e  r  :  SI  1901;  Salma.C. 
1908,  Illustrated  "The  Making  of  an 
American,"  by  Riis;  "On  Fortune's 
Road,"  by  Will  Payne,   etc. 

FOLAWN,  Thomas  Jefferson,  1809  Marine 
St.,  Boulder,  Colo.;  summer,  Santa  Fe, 
N.  M. 

P. — Born  Youngstown.  O.,  May  1,  1876. 
Pupil  of  C.  Sanborn  Miles.  Member: 
Denver  Art  Asso.:  Brush  and  Pencil 
Club,   St.  Louis;   S.Indp.A. 

FOLINSBEE,  John  Fulton,  New  Hope, 
Pa 

P.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Mar.  14,  1892. 
Studied  with  Birge  Harrison,  John  F. 
Carlson  and  Du  Mond.  Member: 
Salma.  C. :  Allied  AA;  ANA,  1919;  Conn. 
AFA;  NAC.  Awards:  Third  Hall- 
garten  prize,  NAD.  1916;  second  Hall- 
garten  prize,  NAD,  1917;  Greenough 
memorial  prize,  Newport  A  A,  1917:  hon. 
mention,  AIC,  1918;  hon.  mention.  Conn. 
AFA,  1919;  Isidor  prize,  Salma.  C,  1920; 
Carnegie  prize,  NAD,  1921.  Represented 
in  Syracuse  (N.Y.),  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts. 

FOLSOM,  Frances,  277  Eagle  St.,  Buffalo, 
N.   Y.      (P.,    T.) 

FONDA.  Mina  M.  See  Mrs.  I,eonard 
Ochtman. 

FOOTE,  Mary,  3  Washington  Square, 
North,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I. — Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS; 
New  Haven  PCC;  Port.  P.  Work: 
"Portrait  of  an  Old  Lady,"  Art  Insti- 
tute of  Chicago. 

FOOTE,  Will  Howe,  Old  Lyme,  Conn. 
P.,  T. — Born  Grand  Rapids,  Mich.,  June 
29,  1874.  Pupil  of  AIC;  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under  Lau- 
rens and  Constant.  Member:  ANA 
1910;  Paris  AAA:  Salma.  C.  Awards; 
Hon.  mention,  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  third  HaUgarten  prize.  NAD  1902; 
bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904:  sil- 
ver medal,    P.-P.Exp.,    San  F.,   1915. 

FORBELL,    Charles,    116    Nassau    St.;    114 
East  13th   St.,  New  York,   N.   Y. 
I. — -M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

FORBES,  Helen  K.,  426  Palo  Alto  Ave., 
Palo  Alto,  Calif. 

P.,  E. — Born  San  Francisco,  Calif.,  Feb. 
3,  1891.  Pupil  of  San  F.  AA  and  A. 
Hansen.     Member  :     San  F.  AA. 


FORBES,   Laura  S.,  22  East  8th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

FORCE,  Clara  G.,  Marine  Bank  Bldg., 
Erie,   Pa.      (Min,   P,) 

FORD,  J.  W.  Neilson,  1124  Calvert  St., 
Baltimore,    Md, 

P. — Pupil  of  Leonce  Rabillon  in  Paris; 
Hugh  Newell  in  New  York;  B.  West 
Clinedinst  in  Philadelphia;  J,  "W.  Jack- 
son in  England;  Lippish  in  Berlin. 
Member:  Baltimore  WCC;  Plastic  C. 
of  Phila. 

FORESMAN,  Alice  Carter,  2117  Eighth 
Ave,,  Seattle,  Wash, 

Min,  P, — M  ember:  N.  A.  Women 
PS, 

FORINGER,  A(lonzo)  E(arl),  15  West 
67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Grant- 
wood,   N,   J. 

Mural  P.,  I, — Born  Kaylor,  Armstrong 
Co,,  Pa„  Feb,  1,  1878.  Pupil  of  H.  S. 
Stevenson  in  Pittsburgh;  Blashfield  and 
Mowbray  in  New  York.  Member: 
Mural  P.;  N.Y,Arch.Lg.l911.  Award: 
Third  prize  ($300),  Newark  poster  com- 
petition, 1915.  Work:  11  panels, 
Council  Chamber,  City  Hall,  Yon- 
kers,  N.  Y. ;  Baptistery  and  Organ 
Walls,  Church  of  the  Savior,  Philadel- 
phia; panel,  County  Court  House,  Mer- 
cer, Pa.;  panel,  House  of  Representa- 
tives, Utah  State  Capitol;  bank  note 
designer  for  European  and  Canadian 
banks;  Red  Cross  War  poster  "The 
Greatest  Mother  in  the  World";  and 
the  post-war  poster  "Still  the  Greatest 
Mother  in  the  World";  4  panels  in  the 
Home  Savings  and  Loan  Company 
Bldg.,  Youngstown,  O.  Illustrations 
for    "Scribner's"    and    other   magazines, 

FORKNER,  Edgar,  2615  East  Cherry  St., 
Seattle,   Wash. 

P. — Born  Richmond.  Ind.  Pupil  of  C. 
Beckwith,  Irving  Wiles,  F,  DuMond, 
ASL  of   N.  Y, 

FORSYTH,    William,    15    South    Emerson 

Ave..   Irvington.    Ind. 

P.,  T.— Born  Hamilton  Co.,  O,  Pupil 
of  Royal  Academy  in  Munich  under 
Loefftz,  Benczur,  Gysis  and  Lietzen- 
meyer.  Member  :  Art  Assoc,  of  In- 
dianapolis, Instructor  Herron  Art  In- 
stitute, Awards  :  Medal  Munich, 
1885;  silver  medal  for  water  color  and 
bronze  medal  for  oil,  St,  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  bronze  medal,  Buenos 
Aires  Exp.,  1910;  Fine  Arts  Bldg, 
prize  ($500),  SWA  1910;  bronze  medal 
for  oil  and  silver  medal  for  water 
colors,  P,-P.Exp,,  San  F,,  1915.  Work: 
"Autumn  at  Vernon,"  "The  Constitu- 
tional Elm — Corydon,"  "Close  of  a 
Summer  Day"  and  "Still  Life,"  Art  As- 
sociation, Indianapolis;  "Autumn  Road- 
side,"   Public    Gollery,    Richmond,    Ind. 

FORSYTHE.  (Victor)  Clyde,  40  Prospect 
St,,  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y, 
P,.  I.— Born  Orange,  Calif.,  Aug,  24, 
1885.  Pupil  of  L.  E.  Garden  Maclcod; 
Frank  Vincent  Du  Mond.  Member: 
Salma.  C;  So.  Calif.  A.  C.  Author  of 
poster  used  in  5th  Victory  Liberty 
Loan,  "And  They  Thought  We  Couldn't 
Fight." 


420 


FORTUNE 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


FRANCIS 


FORTUNE,   Miss   E.   Chariton,   47  Mardale 

Crescent,  Edinburgh,  Scotland. 
P.— Born  Marin  Co.,  Cal.,  1885.  Studied 
at  St.  John's  Wood  School  of  Art  in 
London;  ASL,  of  N.  Y.  under  F.  V. 
Du  Mond,  Mora  and  Sterner.  Mem- 
ber: Cal.  AC;  San  Francisco  AA; 
NY.ASLi.  Award  :  Silver  medal 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  silver  medal, 
Panama-Cal,  Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915; 
honorary  prize,  San  F.  AA.,  1916; 
Emanuel  Walter  purchase  prize,  San 
Francisco  AA.,   1920. 

FOSDICK,  Gertrude  C.  (Mrs.  J.  W.  Fos- 
dick),  33  West  67th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  summer.  Sugar  Hill,  N.  H. 
P.— Born  in  Virginia,  Apr.  19,  1862, 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under 
Bouguereau  and  Lefebvre.  Member: 
Pen   and   Brush   C. 

FOSDICK,  J(ames)  William,  33  West 
67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer. 
Sugar  Hill.  N.  H. 

Mural  P.,  C,  W. — Born  Charlestown, 
Mass.,  Feb.  13,  1858.  Pupil  of  Boston 
Museum  School;  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris  under  Boulanger,  Lefebvre  and 
Collin.  Member:  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg. 
1890;  Mural  P.;  Copley  S.  1904;  N.Y.  Soc. 
C;  NAC;  Lotos  C.  Specialty,  mural 
decorations,  both  in  paint  and  in  fire 
etching.  Work  :  "Adoration  of  St.  Joan 
of  Arc,"  National  Gallery,  Washington; 
"Decorative  Portrait  Louis  XIV,"  Penn- 
sylvania Academy,  Philadelphia.  Deco- 
rations in   National  Arts  Club. 

FOSTER,  Ben,  119  East  19th  St.,  New 
York,  N.Y. ;  sum.,  W.  Cornwall,  Conn. 
Ldscp.P.,  W, — Born  North  Anson,  Me., 
July  31,  1852.  Pupil  of  Abbott  H.  Thayer 
in  New  York;  Morot  and  Merson  in  Paris. 
Member:  SAA  1897;  ANA  1901,  NA 
1904;  NYWCC;  AWCS;  Century  Assoc; 
Cal.  AC;  Nat.  Inst.  AL. ;  Lotos  C;  Salma. 
C.  NAC  (life).  Awards:  Medal  Co- 
lumbian Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  second 
prize,  Cleveland,  1895;  bronze  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal,  C.I.Pitts- 
burgh, 1900;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  Webb  prize,  SAA 
1901;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
Carnegie  prize,  NAD  1906;  Inness  gold 
medal,  NAD  1909;  gold  medal  and  prize, 
NAC,  1917;  Altman  prize  ($500)  NAD 
1917.  Work:  "Sunset  in  the  Litchfield 
Hills"  and  "Late  Autumn  Moonrise," 
Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington;  "Early 
Moonlight,"  Toledo  Museum;  "Lulled  by 
the  Murmuring  Brook,"  Luxembourg 
Museum,  Paris,  France;  "Birch-Clad 
Hills,"  National  Gallery,  Washington; 
"A  Hill — Early  Twilight,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy,  Philadelphia;  "Misty  Moon- 
light Night,"  Brooklyn  Institute  Mu- 
seum; "Late  Afternoon,  Litchfield  Hills," 
Public  Gallery,  Richmond,  Ind.;  "In  the 
Connecticut  Hills,"  and  "Late  Summer 
Moonrise,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  "Litchfield  Hills,"  Art  Institute 
of  Chicago;  "Hazy  Moonrise,"  Carnegie 
Institute,  Pittsburgh;  and  represented  in 
the  Montreal  Art  Association;  City  Art 
Museum  of  St.  Louis;  Omaha  Society 
of  Fine  Arts;  Grand  Rapids  Art  Asso- 
ciation,  etc. 


FOSTER,   Charles,   Farmington,    Conn. 
P. — Born     North    Anson,     Me.,     July     4. 
1850.       Pupil     of     Cabanel,     Ecole     des 
Beaux-Arts  and  Jacquesson  de  la  Chev- 
reuse  in  Paris.    Me  m  b  e  r  :  Conn.  AFA. 

FOSTER,   Mrs.   Emilie,  1017  M  St.,  N.  W., 
Washington,  D.   C. 
P.— M  em  b  e  r  :     S.  Wash.  A. 

FOSTER,   Enid,  Ross,  Marin  Co.,   Calif. 
S. — Born    San   Francisco,    Oct.    28,    1895. 
Pupil  of  Chester  Beach. 

FOSTER,  Ralph  L.,  care  of  Livermore  & 
Knight  Co.,  42  Pine  St.;  h.  268  Presi- 
dent Ave.,  Providence,  R.  I. 
D.,  I.— Born  Providence,  Mar.  20,  1881. 
Pupil  of  R.  I.  School  of  Design;  ASL  of 
N.  Y.  Member  :  Providence  AC; 
Director,  Art  Dept.,  Livermore  and 
Knight. 

FOSTER,    W(illiam)     F.,    care    of    Salma- 
gundi   Club,    47    Fifth   Ave.,    New    York, 
N.    Y. 
I.— M  e  m  b  e  r  :    SI   1910;    Salma. C. 

FOURNIER,  Alexis  J(ean),  150  Walnut 
St.,  East  Aurora,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  L. — Born  St.  Paul,  Minn.  Pupil 
of  Laurens,  Constant,  Harpignies  and 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Member: 
Buffalo  SA;  Buffalo  AC;  Toledo  Art 
Klan;  Minneapolis  A.Lg. ;  Paris  AAA. 
Awards:  Gold  and  silver  medals, 
Minnesota  Industrial  Soc;  Hengerer 
prize,  Buffalo,  1911;  hon.  men- 
tion, Chicago  AG..  1917.  Work: 
"Clearing  After  a  Storm,"  Vanderbilt 
University,  Nashville,  Tenn.;  "The 
Haunts  and  Homes  of  the  Barbizon 
Masters,"  twenty  oil  paintings.  Rep- 
resented in  Minneapolis  Institute,  St. 
Paul  Library,  Detroit  Art  Institute,  Pa. 
Historical  Soc,  Congressional  Library 
Print  Dept.,  Woman's  Club  of  Minnea- 
polis; "A  France  Sky,"  Hackley  Art 
Gallery,  Musl^egon,  Mich.;  Kenwood  C, 
Chicago;  Minneapolis  Club  and  Library. 

FOWLER,  Carlton  C,  Colonial  Studios: 
h.  39  West  67th  'St..  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Mar.  19, 
1877.  Pupil  of  Academic  Julian  and 
Caro  -  Delvaille.  Member:  NAC; 
Salma.  C;  Lg.  of  N.Y. A.  Award: 
Hon.  mention,  Pan-American  Exp., 
Buffalo,   1901. 

FOX.  C(ecilia)  Beatrice  B(ickerton)  Mrs. 
C.  F.  Grifl^.th. 

FOX,  Fontaine,  care  of  Wheeler  Syndi- 
cate, 373  Fourth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
(Cartoonist.) 

FOX,  Selden,  care  of  Alley  and  Trask,  52 
East  53rd  St.,   New  York,  N.   Y.      (P.) 

FRANCE,  J(esse)  L(each),  78  Pearl  St., 
New  Haven,  Conn.;  summer,  Higgins 
Beach,   Me. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Oct.  8, 
1862.  Pupil  of  Carolus-Duran.  Lefebvre 
and  Constant  in  Paris;  H.  W.  Mesdag 
in  Holland.  Member:  Buffalo  Soc 
of    Artists. 

FRANCIS,  Helen  I.  See  Mrs.  H.  F.  Hodge. 

FRANCIS,    William    C,    64    Pearl    St.;    h. 
]8  Oakland  Place,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 
Dec,   Arch.— Born   Buffalo,   N.   Y.,   May 
21,  1879.     Pupil  of  Buffalo  ASL;  Colum- 


421 


FRANCISCO 


WHO*S  WHO  IN  ART 


FREEDLANDER 


bia  Univ.  Sch.  of  Arch.  Award: 
Fellowship  prize,  Buffalo  SA,  1918. 
Member:  Alumni  Academy  in  Rome; 
Buffalo  SA;  Buffalo  GA.  Instructor  of 
interior  decoration,  Albright  Art  School. 

FRANCISCO,  J.  Bond,  1401  Albany  St., 
I^os    Angeles,    Calif. 

P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Dec.  14,  1863. 
Pupil  of  Fechner  in  Berlin;  Nauen 
Schule  in  Munich;  Bouguereau,  Robert- 
Fleury  and  Coutois  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber:    Laguna  Beach  Asso.,  Calif. 

FRANK,  Charles  Lee,  Box  1140,  Wash- 
ington,  D.   C.      (P.) 

FRANK,  Gerald  A.,  Tree  Studio  Bldg.,  4 
E.  Ohio  St.;  summer,  Box  8,  Clifton, 
Mass. 

P.— Born  Chicago,  Nov.  22,  1888.  Pupil 
of  Reynolds  and  Ufer  in  Chicago; 
Hawthorne,  Webster  and  Nordfeldt 
in  Provincetown,  Mass.  Member: 
Chicago  SA;  Chicago  AC;  Chicago 
AG;  AIC.  Alumni;  Provincetown  AA. 
Awards  :  Chicago  AG  Fine  Arts 
prize,   1919.     Represented   in  AIC. 

FRANK,  Herman,  950  North  Franklin  St., 
Philadelphia,   Pa.      (S.) 

FRANKLIN,  Dwight,  care  of  The  Coffee 
House,  54  West  45th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

P.,  S.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  28, 
1888.  Member:  Am.  Assoc,  of  Mu- 
seums. Work  in  American  Museum 
of  Natural  History;  Newark  Public  Li- 
brary; Metropolitan  Museum;  Children's 
Museum,  Brooklyn;  Cleveland  Museum; 
University  of  Illinois;  French  War 
Museum.  Specialty,  miniature  groups 
for  museums,  usually  of  historical 
nature. 

FRANKLIN,      Kate      Mann,     38     Sanford 
Ave.,    Flushing,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:       N.    A.    Women    PS. 

FRANTZ,  Marshall,  49  West  37th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

I.— Born  Kief,  Russia,  Dec.  26,  1890. 
Pupil  of  Walter  Everett.  Member: 
Phila.  Graphic  Sketch  C.  Illustrations 
for:  "Saturday  Evening  Post,"  "Mc- 
Clure's." 

FRANZEN,  August,  222  West  59th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Bar  Harbor, 
Me. 

Port.P.— Born  Norrkoping,  Sweden,  1863. 
Pupil  of  Dagnan-Bouveret  in  Paris. 
Member:  SAA  1894;  ANA  1906;  NA 
1920;  Lotos  C.  Awards:  Medal, 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  bronze 
medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  hon.  mention, 
Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  gold 
medal,  AAS.  1902.  Work:  "Yellow 
Jessamine."  Brooklyn  Institute  Museum; 
"William  H.   Taft,"  Yale  University. 

FRASER,  James  Earle,  3  Macdougal 
Alley,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Winona,  Minn.,  Nov.  4,  1876. 
Pupil  of  Falguiere  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: N.Inst.AL;  NSS  1907;  ANA 
1912;  NA  1917.  National  Commission 
of  Fine  Arts.  Award  :  First  prize, 
Paris  AAA,  1898;  medal  Edison  com- 
petition, 1906;  gold  medal  for  sculpture 
and  gold  medal  for  medals,  P. -P.Exp., 
San    F.,    1915.     Represented   by  medals 


in  Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York; 
Ghent  Museum  and  Rome;  bust  Ex-Pres. 
Roosevelt,  Senate  Chamber,  Capitol, 
Washington;  Fine  Arts  Academy,  Buf- 
falo; statute  of  Bishop  Potter  in  Cathe- 
dral of  St.  John  the  Divine,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  "End  of  the  Trail,"  City  of  San 
Francisco;  Buffalo  nickel;  U.  S.  Victory 
Medal;  John  Hay  Memorial,  Cleveland. 
Instructor,  ASL.   of  N.   Y.  1906-1911. 

FRASER,    Mrs.    James    E.      See    Gardin. 

FRASER,  Malcolm,  care  of  Salmagundi 
Club,   45   Fifth  Ave.,   New  York,   N.    Y.; 

.     h.    Brookhaven,    N.    Y. 

I. — Born  Montreal,  Canada,  Apr.  19, 
1868.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.,  under 
Wyatt  Eaton;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris 
under  Boulanger  and  Lefeb'vre.  Mem- 
ber: Salma.C.  1897.  Illustrated  "Rich- 
ard Carvel,"    "Caleb  West,"   etc. 

FRAZEE,     Hazel,      Fine     Arts     Building, 
Chicago,    111. 
P. — M  ember:     Chicago  SA. 

FRAZER,    John    E.,    422   Wood    St.,    Pitts- 
burgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

FRAZIER,  John  R(obinson),  University 
of  Kansas.  Lawrence,  Kan. 
P.,  T.— Born  Stonington,  Conn.,  July  29, 
1889.  Pupil  of  R.  I.  School  of  Design, 
and  C.  W.  Hawthorne.  Member: 
Providence  AC.  Award  :  Phila. 
WCC.  Prize,   1920. 

FRAZIER,  Kenneth,  129  East  40th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Garrison-on-Hud- 
son,    N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Paris,  France,  June  14,  1867. 
Pupil  of  Herkomer  in  England;  Con- 
stant, Doucet  and  Lefebvre  in  Paris. 
Member:  SAA  1893;  ANA  1906;;  Cen- 
tury Assoc.  Award  :  Bronze  medal, 
Pan-Am. Exp.,   Buffalo,   1901. 

FRECH,   Howard,  1230  St.  Paul  St.,  Bal- 
tiinore,    Md. 
P.— M  ember:    Char.    C. 

FRECHETTE,     M  (arie)  -  M  (arguerite),     67 

Somerset  St.,  West,  Ottawa,  Canada. 
P. — Born  Ottawa,  Canada,  April  16, 
1884.  Pupil  of  Kenyon  Cox,  Charles 
Hawthorne;  Mme.  LaFarge  in  Paris. 
Member:  Union  Internationale  des 
Beaux-Arts  et  des  Lettres.  Works  : 
Ten  historical  portraits.  Chateau  Fron- 
tenac,  Quebec. 

FREDERICK,  Edmund,  322  Fenimore  St., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

I. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Apr.  2,  1870. 
Studied  at  PAFA.  Member:  SI  1910. 
Worked  in  New  York  for  the  "World" 
and  "The  Morning  American."  Illus- 
trated books  by  Elinor  Glyn,  Robert 
W.  Chambers,  Joseph  C.  Lincoln,   etc. 

FREDERICK,  Frank  F(orrest),  9  Bel- 
mont Circle,  Trenton,  N.  J. 
P.,  C,  T.,  W.,  L.— Born  Methuen,  Mass., 
Oct.  21,  1866.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal 
Art  School;  Royal  College  of  Art,  Lon- 
don; Trenton  School  of  Industrial  Arts. 
Director,  Trenton  School  of  Industrial 
Arts. 

FREEDLANDER,    Arthur    R.,    153    West 
57th  St.,   New  York,   N.  Y.— 
P.,      T.— Born     New     York.      Pupil     of 


422 


FREEDMAN 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


FRIESEKE 


Twachtman  and  Mowbray  in  New  York; 
Cormon  in  Paris.  Member:  Salma. 
C.1905.  A  w  ar  d  :  Isidor  portrait  prize, 
Salma.C.1915. 

FREEDMAN,  Ruth,  4113  Arcade  Bldg-.; 
h.  6731  38th  Ave.,  South,  Seattle,  Wash. 
P.— Born  Chicago,  HI.,  June  4,  1899. 
Pupil  of  Chicago  AFA.  Member: 
Seattle  AC.  Award  :  1st  prize,  Seat- 
tle  SFA,    1921. 

FREELON,  Allan  R(andall),  774  South 
15th  'St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer, 
Grendell  Ave.,  Torresdale,  Pa. 
P.,  T. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Sept.  2, 
1895.  Pupil  of  Pa.  Museum  School  of 
Industrial  Art,  Member:  Alumni 
Assoc,   Pa.  Mus.   School  of  Art. 

FREEMAN,     Jane,     1110    Carnegie    Hall, 
New    York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Conn.   AFA. 

FREEMAN,   Mrs.   Margaret,  43  West  12th 
St.,    New    York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:      N.   A.   Women  PS. 

FRENCH,  Alice  Helm  (Mrs.  William  M. 
R.  French),  37  Glen  Road,  Williams- 
town,   Mass. 

P.— Born  Lake  Forest,  111.,  Mar.  17,  1864. 
Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  Chicago  SA. 
Represented  in  St.  Louis  Museum;  Be- 
loit  College  Art  Museum;  Doshisha  Col- 
lege,  Kotyo,   Japan. 

FRENCH,  Daniel  C(hester),  12  West  8th 
St.;  h.  125  West  11th  St.,  New  i^ork, 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  Glendale,  Mass. 
S.— Born  Exeter,  N.  H.,  Apr.  20,  1850. 
Pupil  of  Wm.  Rimmer  in  Boston;  J.  Q. 
A.  Ward  in  New  York;  Thomas  Ball  in 
Florence.  Member:  ANA  1900,  NA 
1901;  NSS  (hon.pres.)  1893;  SAA  1882; 
N.Y.Arch.Lg.l890;  AIA  (cor.)  1896; Acad- 
emy San  Luca,  Rome;  NAC;  Century 
Assoc;  Nat. Inst. A.L.;  Am.Acad.A.L. 
Member  Nat.  Commission  of  Fine  Arts 
1910  to  1915.  Awards:  Third  class 
medal,  Paris  Salon,  1892;  medal  of 
honor,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  medal  of  honor 
for  sculpture,  N.Y.Arch.Lg.l912;  medal 
of  honor,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  gold 
medal  of  honor,  Nat.  Inst.  AL,  1918. 
■^/V  o  r  k  :  "Death  and  the  Sculptor," 
memorial  to  Martin  Milmore,  Boston; 
"The  Minute  Man,"  Concord,  Mass.; 
"Abraham  Lincoln,"  for  Lincoln,  Neb.; 
"Continents,"  New  York  Custom  House; 
"Gen,  Devens,"  equestrian  statue  (in 
collaboration  with  E,  C.  Potter),  Wor- 
cester, Mass.;  "Jurisprudence"  and 
"Commerce,"  Federal  Building,  Cleve- 
land; "Quadriga,"  State  Capitol,  St. 
Paul,  Minn.;  "Alma  Mater,"  Columbia 
Univ,,  New  York;  Parkman  Memo/;al, 
Boston;  "Mourning  Victory,"  memorial 
to  Melvin  brothers  in  Concord,  Mass., 
and  replica  and  "Memory,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  bust  of  Emerson, 
Art  Museum,  Montclair,  N.  J. ;  "Spirit 
of  Life,"  Trask  Memorial,  Saratoga,  N. 
Y. ;  "Sculpture"  on  exterior  of  St.  Louis 
Museum;  "Study  of  a  Head,"  Fine  Arts 
Academy,  Buffalo;  "Statue  of  Emerson," 
Concord,  Mass.;  "Lafavette  Monument." 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N,  Y,  "Lincoln," 
Lincoln  Memorial,  Washington,  D.  C; 
Dupont  Fountain,  Washington,  D.  C. 


FRENCH,  Frank,  83  Hanover  St.,  Man- 
chester, N.  H. 

Port. P.,  I.,  Wood  Engr. — Born  Loudon, 
N.  H.,  May  22,  1850.  Mainly  self-taught. 
Member:  Socof  American  Wood  En- 
gravers; Salma, C.  Specialty,  illustra- 
tion of  nature  books.  A  w  ar  d  s  : 
bronze  medal.  Centennial  Exp.,  Phila- 
delphia, 1876;  medal,  Columbian  Exp., 
Chicago,  1893;  silver  medal  for  wood 
engravings,  Pan-Am. Exp,,  Buffalo, 
1901;  gold  medal  for  wood  engraving, 
St,  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 

FREUND,     Arthur,     3714     Olinville     Ave., 
New  York,  N,  Y. 
P, — M  ember:     S.Indp.A, 

FREW,    Wm.,   1519   Wightman    St.,    Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Pitts.  AA. 

FREY,  Ervvin  F.,  110  Main  St.,  Fleming- 
ton,   N.   J. 

S.— Born  Lima,  O.,  Apl,  21,  1892,  Pupil 
of  Barnhorn,  J,  E.  Eraser  and  Piccirilli. 
Member:      YS. 

FRIEDLANDER,  Leo,  71  Woodside  St., 
Stamford,    Conn, 

S,— Born  New  York  City,  1889,  Pupil 
of  ASL  of  N,  Y,;  Ecole  des  Beaux  Arts 
of  Paris  and  Brussels.  Awards: 
American  Academy  in  Rome  Fellow- 
ship, 1913-1916;  Helen  Foster  Barnett 
Prize,  NAD,  1918;  hon.  mention,  AIC, 
1920.  Work:  Sculptures  on  Wash- 
ington Mem.orial  Arch,  Valley  Forge, 
Pa,,  1912;  figures  on  altar  of  St.  Thom- 
as'   Church,   Frankfort,   Pa. 

FRIEDMAN,  Sarah,  49  West  8th  St,,  New 
York,  N,  Y. 
P.— M  ember:      S,Indp,A   . 

FRIES,  Charles  Arthur,  P.  O.  Box  28th 
and  Broadway;  h.  2876  F  St.,  San 
Diego,   Cal. 

P.,  L,  T.— Born  Hillsboro,  O.,  Aug.  14, 
1854.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy. 
Member:  San  Diego  AG;  Cal.A.C. 
Laguna  Beach  AA;  La  Jolla  AA,  Rep- 
resented   in    San    Diego    Art    Museum. 

FRIESEKE,  Frederick  Carl,  care  of  Mac- 
beth Galleries,  450  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  and  64  Rue  du  Cherche 
Midi,    Paris,    France, 

P. — Born  Owosso,  Mich.,  Apr.  7,  1874. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Constant, 
Laurens  and  Whistler  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1912,  NA  1914;  Assoc.Soc. 
Nat. des  Beaux- Arts,  Paris;  Paris  AAA; 
Inter.SocAL,  Awards  :  Silver  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  gold  medal,  Mu- 
nich, 1904;  fourth  W.  A.  Clark  prize 
($500),  Corcoran  AG  1908;  Temple  gold 
medal,  PAFA  1913;  grand  prize,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Harris  silver  medal 
and  prize  ($500),  AIC  1916;  Wm,  W.  R. 
French  Gold  Medal,  AIC,  1920;  Potter 
Palmer  Gold  Medal  ($1,000),  AIC,  1920; 
Edw.  B.  Butler  prize  ($100),  AIC,  1920, 
Work  :  "Before  the  Mirror,"  Luxem- 
bourg Museum,  Paris;  "The  Toilet," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York;  "The 
Open  Window,"  "On  the  Bank"  and 
"The  Toilet,"  Art  Institute,  Chicago; 
"Garden  in  June,"  Minneapolis  Institute 
of  Arts;  "Nude"  and  "The  Hammock," 
Telfair  Academy,  Savannah,  Ga. ;  Mod- 
ern Gallery,   Venice,   Italy;    Museum   of 


423 


FRIETSCH 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


FULLER 


Odessa;  "The  Sun  Bath,"  Museum  of 
Fine  Arts,  Syracuse,  N.  Y.;  "The  Blue 
Khiiono"  and  "Torn  Lingerie,"  Art 
Museum,  St.  Louis;  "Under  the  Wil- 
lows," Cincinnati  Museum;  "Mem- 
ories," Toledo  Museum;  "The  Bird 
Cage,"  New  Britain  (Conn.)  Institute; 
"The  Blue  Gown,"  Detroit,  Mich.  "Lady 
in  Pink,"  Corcoran  Art  Gallery,  Wash- 
ington; "Golden  Locket,"  Cincinnati 
Museum. 
FRIETSCH,  Charlotte,  138  West  77th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  Des. — Born  Mud  Bay,  Wis.,  Jan.  18, 
1893.      Member:      Alliance;    S.Indp.A. 

FRISHMUTH,      Harriet     W(hitney),     152 

East  36th  St.,  New  York,  N  .Y. 
S.— Born  Philadelphia,  Sept.  17,  1880. 
Pupil  of  Rodin  and  Injalbert  in  Paris; 
Gutzon  Borglum  in  New  York.  Mem- 
ber: NSS,  1914;  Alliance;  N.  A. 
Women  PS.  Awards:  McMillin 
sculpture  prize,  N.  A.  Women  PS.;  hon. 
mention,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1916;  NAC 
prize,   N.   A.   Women  PS;    1921. 

FRITZ,   Henry  E.,  29  Second  Ave.,  North 
Pelham,    N.    Y. 

P.,  T.— Director  of  drawing.  Public 
Evening    Schools,    New    York   City. 

FROEHLICH,    George    J.,    44    Love    St., 
Rochester,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:  Rochester  AC. 

FROELiCH,     Paul,     237     South     11th     St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa.     (P.) 

FROMEN,      Agnes      Valborg,      6016      Ellis 
Ave.,   Chicago,   111. 

S.— Born  Waldermasvik,  Sweden,  Dec. 
27,  1868.  Pupil  of  AIC  under  Lorado 
Taft.  Member:  Chicago  SA;  AIC 
Alumni.  Awards  :  Prize  Municipal 
Art  League  of  Chicago,  1912;  Swedish 
Exhibition,  1912;  second  and  third  for 
frieze  of  Illinois  State  Fair  Building, 
1914;  prizes  at  Swedish  American  Ex- 
hibition, 1917  and  1919.  Work:  "The 
Spring,"  Art  Institute  of  Chicago; 
"Bust  of  Washington  Irving,"  Wash- 
ington Irving  School,  Bloomington,  111.; 
memorial  fountain  in  Englevvood  High 
School;  memorial  tablet  in  Hyde  Park 
Church    of   Christ,    Chicago. 

FROMKES.    Maurice,    51    West    10th    St., 
New   York,    N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Russia,  Feb.  19,  1872.  Pupil 
of  NAD  under  Ward  and  Low.  Mem- 
ber: Salma.  C;  MacD.  C;  Allied  AA. 
Award  :  Isidor  portrait  prize,  Salma. 
C.  1908.  Work:  Painting  at  Delgado 
Museum,  New  Orleans;  "Portrait," 
Newcomb  College,   New  Orleans. 

FROIVIUTH,  Charles  H(enry),  Concar- 
neau,  Finistere,  France. 
Marine  P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Feb. 
23,  1861.  Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Thomas 
Eakins.  Member:  Fellowship  Penn- 
sylvania Academy  of  Fine  Arts;  Assoc. 
Soc.  Nat.  des  Beaux- Arts;  Pans;  Lon- 
don Pastel  Soc;  Soc.  des  Peintres  de 
Marine,  Paris;  Berlin  Secession  Soc.  of 
Painters  (cor.).  Awards:  Second 
class  gold  medal,  International  Exp., 
Munich,  1897;  silver  medal,  Paris  Exp., 
1900;   gold  medal,    St.   Louis  Exp.,   1904. 


FROST,  A(rthur)  B(urdett),  529  South 
Madison  Ave.,  Pasadena,  Calif. 
I.,  P.— Born  Philadelohia,  Pa.,  Jan.  17, 
1851.  Member:  SI  1905;  Fellowship 
PAFA.  Award  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris 
Exp.,  1900.  Author  and  illustrator  of 
"The   Bull   Calf,"    etc. 

FROST,  John,  546  South  Madison  Ave.; 
h.  529  South  Madison  Ave.,  Pasadena, 
Calif. 

P.,  I.— Born  Philadelphia,  May  14,  1890. 
Pupil  A.B.  Frost.  Member:  Calif. 
AC. 

FRUEH,  (Alfred  J.),  34  Perry  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  I.,  C— Born  Lima,  Ohio,  Sept.  2, 
1880.     Member:     S.   Indp.  A. 

FRY,  John  H(emming),  200  West  57th 
St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  in  Indiana.  Pupil  of  Bou- 
langer  and  Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Lotos  C;  Paris  AAA;  A. Fund  S; 
Salma.C.    1902. 

FRY,    Sherry    E(dmundson),    21    Carmine 

St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Creston,  la.,  Sept.  29,  1879. 
Pupil  of  AIC  under  Taft;  MacMonnies 
in  Paris.  Member:  NSS  1908;  N.Y. 
Arch.Lg.l911;  ANA  1914.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1906;  medal, 
Salon,  1908;  Am,  Acad,  at  Rome  schol- 
arship 1908-11;  silver  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Watrous  gold  medal, 
NAD,  1917.  Work:  Statue,  "Indian 
Chief,"  Oskaloosa,  Iowa;  "Au  Soliel," 
fountain,  Toledo  Museum  of  Art;  "The 
Dolphin,"  fountain,  Mt.  Kisco,  N.  Y.; 
"The  Turtle,"  fountain,  Worcester, 
Mass.;  fountain  for  St.  George,  S.  I., 
N.  Y. ;  Capt.  Abbey,  Tompkinsville, 
Conn.;  pediment,  H.  C.  Frick  house, 
New  York  City;  pediment  Clark  Mau- 
soleum, Los  Angeles;  statute  of  Ira 
Allen,  U.   of  Vt. 

FRY,  William  H.,  Art  Academy,  Cin- 
cinnati,  O.      (Wood  Carver.) 

FRYE,     M(ary)     H(amilton),     10     Acacia 

St.,   Cambridge,   Mass. 
C,  I.— Born  Salem,  Mass.,  April  18,  1890. 
Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School.    Mem- 
ber:  Boston   SAC. 

FRYER,     Bryant    W.,    239    Central    Park, 
West,   New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember     Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

FUCHS,  Emil,  80  West  40th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y.      (P.,   S.) 

FUERTES,  Louis  Agassiz,  Cornell 
Heights,  Ithaca,  N.  Y. 
I.,  Mural  P.— Born  Ithaca,  Feb.  7,  1874. 
Pupil  of  Abbott  H.  Thayer  in  Boston. 
Specialty,  illustrations  of  bird  and  an- 
imal life:  Coves's  "Key  to  North  Amer- 
ican Birds,"  Eaton's  "Birds  of  New 
York,"  etc.;  made  studies  for  habitat 
groups  in  museum  of  Natural  History, 
New  York. 

FUHR,    Ernest,  Westport,    Conn. 
I. — M  ember:     SI. 

FULLER,   Arthur   D.,  Westport,   Conn. 
I.— M  ember:     SI. 


424 


FULLER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


GALLAGHER 


FULLER,  Henry  B(rown),  40  Washington 
Sq.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Wind- 
sor,   Vt. 

P.— Born  Deerfield,  Mass.,  Oct.  3,  1867; 
son  of  George  Fuller.  Pupil  of  Cowles 
Art  School  in  Boston  under  Bunker; 
Cox  and  Mowbray  at  ASL  of  N.  Y. ; 
Collin  in  Paris.  Member:  SAA  1902; 
ANA  1906.  Awards:  Bronze  medal, 
Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  Carnegie 
prize,  NAD  1908;  silver  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work:  "Illu- 
sions,"   National    Gallery,    Washington. 

FULLER,  Lucia  Fairchild  (Mrs.  Henry 
B.  Fuller),  219  Clifford  Ct.,  Madison, 
Wis. 

Min.P.— Born  Boston,  Dec.  6,  1872.  Pu- 
pil of  Dennis  M.  Bunker  in  Boston; 
Mowbray  and  Chase  in  New  York. 
Member:  SAA  1899;  ANA  1906;  Am. 
S. Min.P.  (hon.  vice-pres.);  Pa.Min.P. ; 
NYWCC;  N.  A.  Women  PS.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  silver 
medal,  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 
Work  :  "Portrait  of  a  Child,"  Metro- 
politan Museum,   New  Yorlc. 

FULLER,    Mrs.    Meta    W.     See    Warrick. 

FULLER,  R(alph)  B(riggs),  170  Ames 
Ave.,    Leonia,    N.    J. 

P.,  I.— Born  Capac,  Mich.,  Mar.  9,  1890. 
Humorous  illustrations  for  Life  and 
Judge. 

FULLER,  Walter  B.,  606  West  191st  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  Arch. — Born  Allston,  Mass.,  Oct.  3, 
1881.      Pupil    of    NAD. 

FULOP,    Koroly,    7    West    14th    St.,    New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Tndp.A. 

FULTON,    E.    Donald,    care   Pa.    Academy 
of  the  Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:        Fellowship    PAFA. 

FUNK,  Wilhelm  (Heinrich),  80  West  40th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Port. P. — Born  Hanover,  Germany,  Jan. 
14,  1866;  came  to  United  States  in  1885. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.;  Royal  Academy 
in  Munich.  Member:  NAC;  Acad- 
emy of  Fine   Arts,    Munich. 

FURLONG,  Charles  (Wellington),  P.  O. 
Box  222,  Back  Bay  17,  Boston,  Mass.; 
summer,  Pendleton,  Ore. 
P.,  I.,  W.,  L. — Born  Cambridge,  Mass., 
Dec.  13,  1874.  Pupil  of  Bouguereau,  Jean 
Paul  Laurens.  Member:  Boston 
Art  School  Alumni  Asso. ;  Salma.  C. 
Award  :  Prix  de  concours.  Academic 
Julian,  Paris. 

FURSMAN,  Frederick  F.,  4465  North  Kil- 
dare  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
P. — M  ember:  Chicago  SA.  Award: 
Cahn  prize  ($100),  AIC  1911.  Work: 
"In  the  Garden,"  Museum  of  Art,  To- 
ledo. 

FYFE,   Gilbert   G.,   511  Jeanette   St.,   Wil- 

l<;insburg.  Pa. 

P.— M  ember:    Pitts.  AA. 
GABAY,     Esperanza,    136    West    91st    St., 

New  York,    N.   Y. 

P.— Member:       N.    A.    Women    PS. 
GADO,    T.    K.,    12   Arden    St.,    New    York, 

N.  Y. 

P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 


GAFILL,  Mrs.  John  J.,  506  Southfield 
Ave.,    Birmingham,    Mich.    (S.) 

GAG,  Wanda  H(azel),  226  North  Wash- 
ington St.,  New  Ulm,  Minn. 
I. — Born  New  Ulm,  Minn.,  March  11, 
1893.  Pupil  of  Koehler,  Zeigler,  Goetsch, 
Phoenix;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Award:  New 
York  prize  and  honorable  mention,  Min- 
nesota   State   Art    Society. 

GAGE,  G(eorge)  W(illiam),  64  Poplar  'St., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I. — Born  Lawrence,  Mass.,  Nov.  14, 
1887.  Pupil  of  Hale,  Benson  and  Pyle. 
Designs  covers  for  leading  magazines, 
and  has  illustrated  numerous  books. 

GAGE,  Harry  L.,  5839  Morrowfield  Ave., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 

P.,  D.,  T.— Born  Battle  Creek,  Mich., 
Nov.,  1887.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Member: 
Pittsburgh  AA;  AI  Graphic  A.  Instruc- 
tor at  Carnegie  Institute  of  Technology. 

GAGE,  Robert  Merrell,  1031  Fillmore  Ave., 
Topeka,  Kan. 

S.— W  o  r  k  :  Bronze  statue  of  Lincoln, 
State  House  Grounds,   Topeka. 

GAGNON,  Clarence  A.,  9  Rue  Falgulere, 
Paris,    France. 

P.,  E. — Born  Montreal,  Canada,  Nov.  12, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Art  Gallery,  Montreal; 
Jean  Paul  Laurens,  Julian  Academy, 
Paris.  Member:  Salma.  C,  Royal 
Canadian  Society  of  Arts;  Arts  Club, 
Montreal.  Awards  :  Medal,  St. 
Louis  Fair,  1904;  Honorable  mention, 
Paris  Salon,  1906.  Represented  in  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Ottawa;  Halifax  Muse- 
um; Toronto  Art  Gallery;  Petit-Palais, 
Paris;  South  Kensington  Museum,  Lon- 
don; Dresden  Gallery;  Venice,  Rome, 
Florence,   Hague,   and  Mulhausen. 

GALE,  Charles  F.,  91  North  20th  St.,  Co- 
lumbus, O. 

P.— Born  Columbus,  July  3,  1874. 
Member:  Pen  and  Pencil  Club, 
Columbus;  Col.Lg.A.  Award:  Mary 
Elizabeth  Bascom  prize  ($100),  St. 
Louis    AG,    1914. 

GALE,  Walter  R.,  Baltimore  City  College; 
h.  233  West  Lanvaie  St.,  Baltimore,  Md. 
P.,  L,  L.,  T.— Born  Worton  Manor,  Kent 
County,  Md.,  Jan.  17,  1878.  Pupil  of 
J.  P.  Haney  and  Walter  Sargent; 
Maryland  Institute;  Charcoal  Club 
School  of  Art.  Member:  Md.  Inst, 
Alumni  A.;  College  AA;  Archaeological 
Inst.;  Balto.  WCC;  Balto.  Municipal  AS; 
Balto.  School  AL;  Balto.  Handicraft  C; 
Eastern   Arts  Asso. 

GALLAGHER,     James     A.,     426     Oakland 
Ave.,   Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Pitts.  AA. 

GALLAGHER,  Sears,  96  Hemenway  St., 
Boston,  Mass.;  h.  West  Roxbury,  Mass. 
P.,  E.— Born  Boston,  Apr.  30,  1869.  Pu- 
pil of  Tomasso  Juglaris  in  Boston;  Lau- 
rens and  Constant  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Boston  AC;  Boston  SWCP;  Chi- 
cago SE;  Cal.  SE;  Boston  SE. 
Etchings  in  Boston  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts;  Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  New 
York  Public  Library;  Brooklyn  Mu- 
seum; Library  of  Congress. 


425 


GALLI 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


GARNSEY 


GALLI,  Alfredo,  417  Riverside  Drive,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (I.) 

GALLUP,  Jeanie.     See  Mrs.  Mottet. 

GALT,  Charles  F(ranklln),  4021  Washing- 
ton Ave.,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 
P.— Born  St.  Louis,  1884.  Pupil  of  St. 
Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts  and  of  Rich- 
ard Miller.  Award  :  Bascom  prize 
($100),  St.  Louis  AG.,  1914;  Mallinckrodt 
prize   ($100),   St.   Louis  AG,  1917. 

GAMBLE,  John  Marshall,  8I31/2  State  St., 
h.  Box  313,  Santa  Barbara,  Calif. 
P. — Born  Morristown,  N.  J.,  Nov.  25, 
1863.  Pupil  of  San  Francisco  School 
of  Design;  Academic  Julian,  Laurens 
and  Constant  in  Paris.  Member: 
San  F.  AA.  Award:  Gold  medal, 
Alaska-Yukon-Pacific  Exp.,  1909.  Rep- 
resented in  Museum  of  Art,  Auckland, 
N.  Z.;  Park  Museum,  San  Francisco. 

GAMBLE,  Roy  C,  83  Fort  St.,  West,  De- 
troit, Mich. 

P.— Born  June  12,  1887.  Pupil  of  De- 
troit Fine  Arts  Academy;  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
Julian  in  Paris.  Member:  Scarab  C. 
Awards  :  Second  Hopkin  prize  for 
painting.  Scarab  C,  Detroit,  1914;  gold 
medal,  1920,  Scarab  C.  Wo  r  k  in 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts; 
"Freckles,"   Detroit  Art  Institute. 

GAMMELL,     R(obert)     H(ale)     Ives,     480 

Boylston  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  170 
Hope  St.,  Providence,  R.  I.;  summer, 
Provincetown,   Mass. 

P.— Born  Providence,  R.  L,  Jan  7,  1893. 
Pupil  of  William  M.  Paxton.  Mem- 
ber: Providence  AC;  Provincetown 
AA. 

GANIERE,  George  Etlenne,  6016  Ellis 
Ave.;  1155  East  62d  St.,  Chicago,  111. 
S.,  T.— Born  Chicago,  111.  Pupil  of  AIC. 
Member  :  Chicago  SA;  Alumni  AIC; 
SW  Sc.  Award:  Shaffer  prize,  AIC, 
1909.  Work:  "Baby  Head"  in  John 
Vanderpoel  Memorial  Collection;  "Lin- 
coln" at  Lincoln  Memorial  School,  Web- 
ster City,  la.,  and  at  Burlington,  Wis.; 
"Lincoln  Fountain,"  Lincoln  Highway, 
Chicago,  111.;  "Gen.  Anthony  Wayne," 
equestrian  statue.  Fort  Wayne,  Ind. 
"Lincoln"  and  "Douglas,"  Chicago  His^ 
torical  Society;  "Lincoln,"  Illinois  His- 
torical Society;  "Lincoln,"  Grand  Army 
Memorial  Hall.  Chicago;  "Hately  Memo- 
rial," Highland  Park,  111.;  Lincoln 
Memorial,  Starved  Rock,  State  Park, 
111.;  Dr.  Frank  W.  Gunsaulus  Memorial, 
Chicago.  Former  instructor  in  Sculp- 
ture Dept.,  Chicago  Art  Inst. 

GANG,     Katherlne    V.,    2302    Park    Ave., 
Cincinnati,   O. 
P.. — M  ember:     Cinn.  Woman's  A.   C. 

GARBER,  Daniel,  1819  Green  St.,  Phila.. 
Pa.;  and  Lumberville,  Bucks  Co.,  Pa, 
P.,  T. — Born  N.  Manchester,  Ind.,  Apr. 
11,  1880.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art 
Academy  under  Nowottny;  PAFA  under 
Anshutz.  Member:  ANA  1910,  NA 
1913.  Fellowship  PAFA;  NAG;  Salma. 
C.  Instructor  PAFA  since  1909. 
Awards:  Cresson  scholarship  PAFA 
1903;  first  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1909; 
non.   mention,  ACP  1910;  hon.  mention, 


CI  Pittsburgh  1910;  fourth  Clark  prize, 
Corcoran  Gal.  1910;  bronze  metal,  Bue- 
nos Aires  Exp..  1910;  Lippincott  prize, 
PAFA  1911;  Palmer  prize  ($1,000),  AIC- 
1911;  second  W.  A.  Clark  prize  ($1,500) 
and  silver  Corcoran  medal,  1912;  gold 
medal,  P.-P  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Altman 
prize  ($500),  NAD,  1915;  Shaw  prize, 
Salma  C,  1916;  Morris  prize,  Newport 
AA.,  1916;  Altman  prize  ($1,000),  NAD, 
1917;  Stotesbury  prize,  PAFA,  1918; 
Temple  gold  medal,  PAFA,  1919. 
Work:  "April  Landscape,"  Corcoran 
Gallery,  Washington;  "Winter — Rich- 
mont,"  Cincinnati  Museum;  "The  Hills 
of  Byram"  and  "Towering  Trees,"  Art 
Institute,  Chicago,  111.;  "September 
Fields,"  City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis; 
"Midsummer  Landscape,"  University  of 
Missouri;  "March,"  Carnegie  Institute, 
Pittsburgh;  "Down  the  River.  Winter." 
Mus.  of  Art  and  'Science,  Los  Angeles; 
represented  in  Ann  Mary  Brown  Me- 
morial, Providence;  National  Arts  Club, 
New  York;  St.  Paul  Institute  of  Art; 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts; 
Detroit  Institute. 

GARBETT,  Mrs.  C.  (See  Cornelia  Barns). 

GAR  DIN,  Laura  (Mrs.  James  E.  Fraser), 
3  Macdougal  Alley,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Sept.  14,  1889. 
Pupil  of  James  E.  Fraser.  Member: 
NSS;  N.  A.  Women  PS.  Award: 
Helen  Foster  Barnett  prize,  NAD,  1916. 
Shaw  memorial  prize,  NAD,  1919. 

GARDINER,  Eliza  D(raper),  2139  Broad 
St.,  Providence,  R.  I. 
P.,  Engr.,  T.— Born  Providence,  R.  L, 
Oct.  29,  1871.  Pupil  of  RI  School  of  De- 
sign. Member  :  Providence  AC;  Prov- 
idence HC;  Providence  WCC;  S.Indp.A.; 
Calif.  P.M.  Represented  in  Detroit  In- 
stitute, Springfield  Public  Library  and 
Philadelphia  Print  Club. 

GARDNER,  Donald,  701  Emerson  Ave., 
Evanston,  111.      (I.) 

GARDNER,  Fred  D.,  246  Fuller  St.;  h. 
1234  Pacific  St.,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer, Janesville,  N.  Y. 

P.,  Arch. — Born  Syracuse,  N.  Y.,  April 
16,  1880.  Pupil  of  Pratt  Institute,  Brook- 
lyn.     Member:      S.Indp.A. 

GARDNER,  Gertrude  G(azelle),  171  Union 
St.,     Flushing,     L.     I.,    N.    Y. ;     summer. 
Rocky  Neck,   Gloucester,    Mass. 
P.,  T.— Born  Palo  Alto  Co.,  la..   Oct.  26, 
1878.      Pupil    of   Henry   B.    Snell. 

GARDNER,  Hamlin,  12  Gramercy  Park, 
New  York,   N.   Y.      (I.) 

GARDNER,  Mabel,  54  Stimson  Ave.,  Prov- 
idence,   R.    I. 
P.— M  ember:       Providence    WCC. 

GARNSEY,    Elmer    E(llsworth),   Prospect 

Hill,  White  Plains,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P. — Born  Holmdel,  Monmouth  Co., 
N.  J.,  Jan.  24,  1862.  Pupil  of  Cooper 
Union,  ASL,  George  Maynard  and 
Francis  Lathrop  in  New  York.  Mem- 
ber: Mural  P;  AIA  (hon.).  1899;  N.  Y. 
Municipal  AS;  Century  Assoc;  A. Aid  S. 
Awards  :  Bronze  designer's  medal, 
Columbian    Exp.,     Chicago,     1893;    hon. 


426 


GARO 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


GAULEY 


mention  and  silver  medal  for  mural 
decorations,  Paris  Exp.,  1900.  Work: 
General  color  schemes — Library  of  Con- 
gress, Washington;  Public  Library, 
Boston;  Public  Library,  St.  Louis;  Li- 
brary of  Columbia  University,  New 
York;  Memorial  Hall,  Yale  University, 
New  Haven;  State  Capitol,  St.  Paul, 
Minn.;  State  Capitol,  Des  Moines,  la.; 
State  Capitol,  Madison,  Wis.;  U.  S. 
Custom  House,  New  York;  Richardson 
Memorial  Library,  City  Art  Museum, 
St.    Louis. 

GARO,  John  H.,  747  Boylston  St.,  Boston, 
Mass. 
P. — M  ember:   Boston  AC. 

GARRATT,       Arthur,       42       Washington 
Square,  New  York,  N.  Y.   (P.,  I.) 

GARRETSON,  Albert  M.,  Waite  and  Bart- 
lett  Bldg.,  53  Jackson  Ave.,  Long  Is- 
land City,  N.  Y.;  h,  22nd  St.  and  Bay- 
side  Ave.,  Whitestone,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  12,  1877. 
Pupil  of  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member: 
Salma.  C.  Award:  Inness  book- 
plate  prize,   Salma.   C,   1912. 

GARRETT,  Anna,  Lansdowne,  Pa. 
I.— M  ember:    Plastic    Club. 

GARRETT,  Clara  Pfeifer  (Mrs.  Edmund 
A.  Garrett),  Bayside,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.  Pupil  of  St. 
Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts;  Ecole  des 
Beaux- Arts;  Mercie  and  Bourdelle  in 
Paris.  Awards  :  Bronze  medal, 
Louisiana  Purchase  Exp.,  St.  Louis, 
1904;  hon.  mention,  NSS,  1905;  prize, 
Artists'  Guild  of  St.  Louis,  1915;  St. 
Louis  Art  Lg.  prize,  1916.  Work: 
"Boy  Teasing  Turtle,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York  City;  "McKinley," 
City  of  St.  Louis;  "Children  at  Play," 
50  ft.  frieze,  Eugene  Field  School,  St. 
Louis. 

GARRETT,    Edmund    H(enry),    110    Tre- 

mont  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  Colonial 
Court,  Cambridge,  Mass. 
P.,  I.,  Etcher,  W.,  L.— Born  Albany,  N. 
Y.,  Oct.  19,  1853.  Pupil  of  Laurens, 
Boulanger,  Lefebvre  and  Leroux  in 
Paris.  Member:  Boston  AC;  Boston 
SWCP;  Copley  S.  1902;  Paris  AAA; 
Boston  SE.  Award  :  Silver  medal, 
Boston,  1890.  Work:  Paintings  in 
Public  Library  and  Calumet  Club,  Win- 
chester, Mass.;  etchings  in  Boston  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts;  Boston  Public 
Library;  decorations  in  Brookside 
Library,  Great  Barrington,  Mass. ; 
Conant  Memorial  Church,  Dudley, 
Mass.;    State   House,   Boston. 

GARRETT,   Theresa   A.,   410   South  Mich- 
igan Ave.,   Chicago,   111. 
E.— Born    June    8,     1884.       Member: 
Chicago  SE. 

GARRISON,  Robert,  1015  Logan  St.,  Den- 
ver,   Colo. 

S. — Pupil  of  Pennsylvania  Academy  of 
the  Fine  Arts.  Work:  Decorations 
Y.  M.  C.  A.  Building,  Estes  Park,  Colo.; 
2  Bronze  African  Lions  for  State  Office 
Bldg.   of  Colorado,   Denver,   Colo. 


GARVEY,  J(oseph   M.),  Alpine,  N.  J. 
P.— Born     New     York,     Sept.     28,     1877. 
Pupil    of    William    M.    Chase.      Mem- 
ber: S.  Indp.  A. 

GASAWAY,  John  W.,  Edgewood,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA. 

GASBARRO,  Nicola,  947  Steiner  St.,  San 
Francisco,    Calif.    (I.) 

GASCH,  Herman  E.,  1753  P  St.,  Washing- 
ton, D.  C. 
P.— M  ember:     S.  Wash.  A. 

GASPARD,    Leon,    Fine   Arts   Bldg.,    Chi- 
cago,  111. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

GATES,     Frank     E.,    155    West    29th    St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

GAUGENGIGL,  l(gnaz)  IVI(arcel),  5  Otis 
Place,  Boston,  Mass. 

P. — Born  Passau,  Bavaria,  July  29,  1855; 
came  to  United  States  in  1880.  Pupil 
of  Academy  of  Munich.  Member: 
SAA  1895;  ANA  1906;  Copley  S.  (hon.); 
Boston  GA.  Awards  :  Medal,  New 
Orleans  Exp.;  medal,  Mass.  Charitable 
Mechanics'  Assoc.  Work:  "An  Ama- 
teur," R,  I.  School  of  Design,  Provi- 
dence. "Une  Question  DlfRcile,"  Metro- 
politan Museum  of  Art. 

GAUL,   Arrah    Lee    (Mrs.   A.   L.    G.   Bren- 
nan).  Spruce  and  Sixteenth  Sts.,  Phila- 
delphia,    Pa.     Ludlow     Bldg.,     34     South 
IGth   St.,   Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:   Plastic  C. ;  AWCS. 

GAUL,  0.  G.,  4842  Hazel  Ave.,  Philadel- 
phia,  Pa.    (I.) 

GAUL,  Harvey  B.,  6213  Howe  St.,  Pitts- 
burgh,  Pa. 

P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  April  11, 
1881.     Pupil  of  Gilbert  Gaul  and   NAD. 

GAUL  (William)  Gilbert,  1947  Broadway, 
Room  605;  h.  150  West  105th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  I. — Born  Jersey  City,  N.  J.,  March 
31,  1855.  Pupil  of  NAD,  ASL  and  J.  G. 
Brown  in  New  York.  Member:  ANA 
1879;  NA  1882.  Awards:  Gold  medal. 
Prize  Fund,  1886;  bronze  medal,  Paris 
Exp.,  1889;  medal,  Columbian  Exp., 
Chicago,  1893;  bronze  medal,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  gold  medal,  Appa- 
lachian Exp.,  Knoxville,  1910.  Work: 
"Battery  H  in  Action,"  Toledo  Mu- 
seum; "Molly  Pitcher  at  Monmouth" 
and  "Exchange  of  Prisoners,"  Demo- 
cratic  Club,    New  York. 

GAULEY,  Robert  D(avid),  Hotel  Nassau, 
55  East  59th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T. — Born  Carnaveigh,  County  Mona- 
ghan,  Ireland,  March  12,  1875;  came  to 
United  States  in  1884.  Pupil  of  D.  W. 
Ross  in  Cambridge;  Benson  and  Tar- 
bell  in  Boston;  Bouguereau  and  Fer- 
rier  in  Paris.  Member:  NYWCC; 
ANA  1908;  AWCS.  Awards:  Bronze 
medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  hon.  mention. 
Pan-  Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  bronze 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Isidor  prize, 
Salma.  C,  1907;  Clarke  prize,  NAD  1908; 
third  prize,  Appalachian  Exp.,  Knox- 
ville, Tenn.,  1910;  Isidor  portrait  prize, 
Salma.  C.  1912;  silver  medal,  P.-P  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.    Work:    "The  Fur  Muff," 


427 


GAUSTA 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


GELERT 


National  Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C. ; 
Capitol,  Washington,  D.  C;  Public  Li- 
brary, Watertown,  N.  Y.;  Kolding,  Den- 
mark; Fine  Arts  Dept.,  Harvard  Univ., 
Cambridge,    Mass. 

GAUSTA,  H(erbjorn),  1706  Elliot  Ave., 
Minneapolis,    Minn. 

P. — Born  in  Norway,  June  16,  1854. 
Pupil  of  Royal  Academy  of  Munich. 
Member:  Minneapolis  A.  Lg. 

GAW,  William  A.,  2713  Ellsworth  St., 
Berkeley,    Calif.       (P.) 

GAY,  Edward,  Mt.  Vernon,  N.  Y.;  sum- 
mer, Cragsmoor,  Ulster  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Dublin,  Ireland,  Apr.  25,  1837; 
came  to  United  States  in  1848  and 
settled  in  Albany.  Pupil  of  J.  M.  Hart 
at  Albany,  N.  Y.;  Schirmer  and  Les- 
sing  in  Karlsruhe,  Germany.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1869,  NA  1907;  NYWCC; 
A.Fund  S;  Lotos  C.  Awards:  Prize 
of  $2,000,  American  Art  Assoc,  compe- 
tition 1887;  medal.  Midwinter  Exhibi- 
tion, San  Francisco;  medal,  New  Or- 
leans Exp.,  1885;  bronze  medal,  Pan- 
Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  Shaw  purchase, 
SAA  1903;  bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  Inness  gold  medal,  NAD 
1905.  Works:  Mural  paintings:  Wag- 
ner Hotel,  Canajoharie,  N.  Y.;  "Taor- 
mina,"  Mount  Vernon  (N.  Y.)  Public 
Library;  "The  Acropolis,  Athens," 
Frank  R.  Chambers  Library,  Crows 
Nest,  Bronxvilie,  N.  Y.  Paintings: 
"Washed  by  the  Sea,"  Lay  ton  Mu- 
seum, Milwaukee;  "Broad  Acres," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York; 
"Time  and  Tide,"  Public  Library, 
Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y.;  "The  Fields  at 
Eastchester,  N.  Y.,"  Mount  Vernon 
High  School;  "Waving  Grain,"  Min- 
neapolis Fine  Arts  GaUery;  "The  Hill- 
side," National  Gallery,  Washington; 
'-•The  Month  of  May,"  Chicago  Art  In- 
stitute; "Summer  at  Sound  Beach,"  Art 
Museum,  Montclair,  N.  J.;  "Mother 
Earth,"  High  School,  Mt.  Vernon,  N.Y. 

GAY,  George  Howell,  100  Kraft  Ave., 
Bronxvilie,   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  Aug.  2,  1858. 
Pupil  of  Paul  Brown  and  Henry  A. 
Elkins  in  Chicago.  Settled  in  New  York 
in  1889.  Specialty,  marines  and  land- 
scapes. 

GAY,    Lillie    H.,    5    West    39th    St.,     New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

GAY,  Walter,  11  Rue  de  I'Universite, 
Paris,  France;  summer,  Le  Breau-par- 
Dammarie  -  les  -  Lys,  Seine  -  et  -  Marne, 
France. 

P.— Born  Hingham,  Mass.,  Jan.  22,  1856. 
Pupil  of  Bonnfit  in  Paris.  Member: 
ANA  1904;  Societe  Nouvelle;  Nat.  des 
Beaux- Arts;  Societe  de  la  Peinture  u 
I'Eau;  Royal  Society  Water  Colors, 
Brussels;  i\at.  Inst.  A.  L.  Member  ex- 
ecutive committee  Societe  des  Amis  du 
Louvre,  Paris;  National  Inst,  of  Arts 
and  Letters.  Awards  :  Hon.  men- 
tion, Paris  Salon,  1885;  third  class 
medal,  Paris  Salon,  1888;  gold  medal, 
Vienna,  1893;  gold  medals,  Antwerp 
and  Munich,  1894;  gold  medal.  Ber- 
hn   and   Budapest,     18U5;     silver     medal, 


Paris  Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal,  Pan- 
Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  Chevalier  of 
the  Legion  of  Honor  1894,  officer  1906. 
Work:  Six  pictures  bought  by 
the  French  Government;  "White  and 
Blue"  and  "Las  Cigarreras,"  Luxem- 
bourg Museum,  Paris;  "Interior  of  the 
Palazzo  Barbaro,"  Boston  Museum  of 
Fine  Arts;  "Chez  Helleu,"  Pennsyl- 
vania Academy,  Philadelphia;  "The 
Spinners"  and  portrait  of  W.  H.  Hun- 
tington, Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  "Beiedicite,"  Museum  at  Amiens, 
France;  represented  at  Buffalo,  N.  Y.; 
Providence,  R.  I.;  Carnegie  Institute, 
Pittsburgh,  Pa.;  Pinacotheque,  Munich; 
"Interior  of  Petit  Trianon,"  R.  I.  School 
of  Design,  Providence;  "The  Green 
Salon,"  Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art, 
New  York;  "Interior,  Chateau  du  Breau 
(La  Commode),"  Art  Institute  of  Chi- 
cago. 

GAYLOR  (Samuel)  Wood,  142  West  127th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  E.,  L.— Born  Stamford,  Conn.,  Oct. 
2,  1883.  Pupil  NAD.  Member:  Pen- 
guins;   Modern   Artists    of  America. 

GEARHART,    Frances    H.,   18   West   Cali- 
fornia  St.,    Pasadena,    Calif. 
E.— M  ember:     Calif.  P.M. 

GEARHART,  May,  18  West  California  St., 
Pasadena,   Calif. 
E.— M  ember:     Calif.  P.M. 

GEER,    Grace    Woodbridge,    12    Pinckney 
St.,   Boston,  Mass. 

Port.  P.,  T.— Born  Boston,  1854.  Pupil  of 
Mass.  Normal  Art  School,  F.  H.  Tomp- 
kins, Triscott,  Tarbeil,  Vonnoh  and 
Lowell  Inst.  Member:  Copley  S.  1900. 
Represented  by  portrait  at  International 
Institute  for  Girls,  Madrid,  'Spain;  Girls' 
High   School,   Boston. 

GELERT,    J(ohannes    Sophus),    11    East 

14th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y 
S. — Born  Nybel,  Schleswig,  Denmark 
Dec.  10,  1852;  came  to  United  States 
1887;  citizen  1892.  Pupil  of  Royal 
Academy  of  Fine  Arts  in  Copenhagen. 
Member:  NSS  1899;.  N  Y.  Arch. 
Lg.  1898.  Awards  :  Scholarship 
from  Danish  Government  for  study 
in  Italy,  1882-83;  gold  medal,  Nash- 
ville Exp.,  1897;  gold  medal,  AC 
Phila.  1899;  hon.  mention,  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  hon.  mention,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  gold  medal, 
AAS  1902.  Work:  "Haymarket" 
monument,  Chicago;  Gen.  Grant  Statue, 
Galena,  111. ;  Hans  Christian  Andersen 
and  Beethoven  monument,  Chicago; 
"Denmark,"  for  U.  S.  Custom  House, 
New  York;  "Roman  Civilization,"  four 
statues.  Brooklyn  Institute  of  Arts  and 
Sciences;,  Furman  statue,  Vanderbilt 
University  and  Furman  Memorial  Cem- 
etery, Nashville,  Tenn.;  statue  of  Col. 
Stevens,  Minneapolis,  Minn.;  nine  stat- 
ues for  Bergen  County  Court  House. 
Represented  in  Art  Institute  of  Chi- 
cago and  museums  in  Denmark.  "Goth- 
ic Art"  and  "Napoleon,"  St.  Louis  Mu- 
seum; six  reliefs  on  Erenshaw  Me- 
morial, Cincinnati,  O.;  statue  of  C.  W. 
Post,    Battle   Creek,    Mich. 


428 


G  ELLEN  BACK 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


GIBSON 


GEL  LEN  BACK,  Edith  C,  407  Resor  Ave., 
Clifton,    O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnali  Woman's 
AC. 

GELON,  Marie  Martha  J.  See  Mrs. 
lildgar  Cameron. 

GENDROT,  Felix  Albert,  Buena  Vista  St., 
Koxbury,   Mass. 

P.,  S. — Born  Cambridge,  Mass.,  Apr. 
28,  1866.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art 
School,  Boston;  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris  under  Laurens  and  Constant; 
sculpture  with  Puech  and  Verlet. 
Member:  Boston  AC;  Paris  AAA; 
Copley  S. 

GENTH,  Lillian,  62  Washington  Sq.,  New 
Y^ork,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Fails  "Village,  Ct. 
P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
Phila.  School  of  Design  for  Women 
under  Elliott  Daingerlield;  Whistler  in 
Paris.  M  ember:  ANA  1908;  Assoc. 
Fellowship  PAFA;  NAC;  K.  Soc. 
Arts,  London;  Inter.  Soc.  AL. 
Awards  :  Mary  Smith  prize,  PAFA 
1904;  Shaw  memorial,  NAD  1908;  bronze 
medal,  Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910;  first 
Haligarten  prize,  NAD  1911;  bronze 
medal,  NAC  1913.  Work:  "Depths 
of  the  Woods"  and  "Adagio,"  National 
Gallery,  Washington;  "Springtime,"  Met- 
ropolitan Museum,  New  York;  "The 
Lark,"  Engineers'  Club,  New  York; 
"The  Bird  Song,"  Carnegie  Institute, 
Pittsburgh;  "Pastoral,"  Brooklyn  In- 
stitute of  Arts  and  Sciences;  "Venice" 
and  "In  Normandy,"  Philadelphia  Art 
Club,  Philadelphia;  and  in  Detroit 
(Mich.)  Club;  Grand  Rapids  (Mich.)  Art 
Association;  Muncie  (Ind.)  Art  Associa- 
tion; Rochester  (N.  Y.)  Museum;  Na- 
tional Arts  Club,  New  York;  Cremer 
Collection,  Dortsmund,  Germany;  Nash- 
ville AA. 

GEORGE,  H.  Margaret,  Newton  Center, 
Mass.    (S.) 

GEORGE,  Vesper  Lincoln,  120  Riverway, 
Boston;  h.  West  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P.,  T. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  June  4, 
1805.  Pupil  of  Constant,  Lefebvre 
and  Doucet  in  Paris.  Member: 
Boston  AC;  Head  of  Dept.  of  Design, 
State   Normal  Art   School,    Boston. 

GEORGESON,   Lloyd  W.,  22  West  9th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

GERDES,     Augustus     M.,     New     Canaan, 
Conn. 
P. — M  e  m  b  e  r  :     Salma.  C. 

GERE,  Nellie  Huntington,  123  South  Vir- 
gil Ave.,  Los  Angeles,  Cal, 
Ldscp.  P.,  Interior  Dec,  T. — Born  Nor- 
wich, Conn.  Pupil  of  AI  Chicago  under 
Frederick  Freer;  Pratt  Inst.,  Brooklyn; 
Ipswich  Summer  School  under  Dow. 
Member  :  Chicago  ASL.  Chairman 
Art  Dept.,  Southern  Branch,  University 
California,  Los  Angeles. 

GERNHARDT,  Henry  F.,  South  Framing- 
ham,    Mass. 
P.— M  ember:    Conn.AFA. 

GERRER,    Robert    Gregory,    St.    Benedict 
and  Kickapoo   Sts.,   Shawnee,   Okla. 
P.,    T. — Born    Alsace,    France,    July    23, 
1867.      Pupil   of   Ortiz,    Nobile,    Gonnella, 


and  Galliazzi.  Member:  Okla.  Assoc. 
Artists  (pres.).  Award:  Silver  medal, 
Okla.  State  Exh.,  1915.  Work:  "Por- 
trait of  Pope  Pius  X,"  in  the  Vatican, 
Rome. 

GERSTENHEIM,  Louis,  344  East  57th 
bt..  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  T.— Born  in  Poland,  June  10,  1890. 
Pupil  of  National  Academy  of  Design. 
Member:  S.Indp.A.;  Soc.  of  N.Y. 
Artists. 

GERSTLE,    Miriam    Alice,   2360   Washing- 
ton St.,   San  Francisco,   Cal. 
P.,     I.,    E. — Born    San    Francisco,     Cal., 
Mar.    9,    1898.      Member:      San  Fran- 
cisco AA.;  Whitney  Studio  Club  of  N.  Y. 

GERSTLE,  William  L(ewis),  617  Mont- 
gomery St.,  h.  310  Sansome  St.,  San 
ii'iancisco,    Calif. 

P. — Born  San  F'rancisco,  Jan.  28,  1868. 
Pupil  of  George  Weiss,  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
San  Francisco  School  of  Fine  Arts. 
M  ember:     San  Francisco  AA. 

GEST,  J(oseph)  H(enry),  Art  Museum, 
Eden  Park;  h.  2144  Grandin  Road,  Cin- 
cinnati,   O. 

P. — Born  Cincinnati,  1859.  Member: 
NAC;  Cin.  Municipal  AC.  Director 
Cincinnati  Museum;  President  Rook- 
wood  Pottery. 

GETCHELL,  Edith  Loring,  6  Linden  St., 
Worcester,    Mass. 

E.— Born  Bristol,  Pa.  Pupil  of  Phila. 
School  of  Design  for  Women;  PAFA. 
Member:  N.  Y.  EC;  Chicago  SE; 
Boston  SE.  Work  in:  Library  of 
Congress,  Washington,  D.  C. ;  New 
York  Public  Library;  Boston  Museum 
of  Fine  Arts;  Worcester  Art  Museum; 
Smithsonian  Institute,  Washington,  D. 
C;   Walters  Collection,   Baltimore. 

GETTIER,   C.   R.,  Tudor  Hall,  Baltimore, 

Md. 

I.— M  ember:   Char.   C. 

GETTIER,  G.  Wilmer,  855  North  Howard 
St.;  h.  1019  West  Lanvale  St.,  Balti- 
more, Md. 

P.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Feb.  23,  1877. 
Studied  in  Baltimore  and  Munich. 
Member:  Char.  C. ;  Baltimore  Alli- 
ance. 

GETTY,   Francis   E.,  Winchester,   Mass. 
P.— M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

GIBBONS,   Caroline   L.,   4421   Osage  Ave., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

GIBBS,  George,  1520  Chestnut  St.,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa.;  h.  Rosemont,  Pa. 
I.,  P. — Born  New  Orleans,  La.,  March 
8,  1870.  Pupil  of  Corcoran  School  and 
ASL  in  Washington,  D.  C.  Member: 
S.  Wash.  A;  Wash.  WCC;  AC.  Phila.; 
Author  and  Illustrator  of  "American 
Sea  Fights,"    "Tony's   Wife,"    etc. 

GIBSON,  Charles  Dana,    Carnegie  Studios; 
'   h.   127  East  73d  St.,   New  York,   N.  Y. 

1.,    P. — Born    Roxbury,    Mass.,    Sept.    14, 

1867.     Pupil  of  ASL.     Member:  ANA; 

SI  1902  (pres.);  AI  Graphic  A.;  Nat.  Inst. 

AL;    Port. P.     Author  and   illustrator  of 

"Education   of   Mr.    Pipp." 


429 


GIDDINGS 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


GILPIN 


GIDDINGS,    Albert    F.,   Hotel   Del   Prado, 

1400  East  59th  'St.,  Chicago,  III. 
P.,  E.— Born  Brenham,  Texas,  Feb.  12. 
1883.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Frederick  W.  Freer. 
Member:  Chicago  ASL,;  Alumni 
Asso.  AIC.  Decoration  in  Wendell 
Phillips  High  School,  Chicago. 

GIDDINGS,  Frank  A.,  74  Webster  St., 
Hartford,    Conn. 

P.,  E.— Born  Hartford,  Conn.,  Dec.  3, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Chase.  Member: 
Conn.  AFA. 

GIEBERICH,  O(scar)  H.,  care  of  Haw- 
thorne Art  School,  Provincetown,  Mass, 
P.,  E.,  T.— Born  New  York  City,  Mar. 
25,  1886.  Pupil  of  Bridgman,  Cox,  Mora, 
Du  Mond  and  Hawthorne.  Member: 
S.  Wash.  A.;  Salma.  C.  Teacher  in 
Summer  School  of  Charles  W.  Haw- 
thorne, Provincetown,  Mass.,  and  at 
Notre    Dame,    Ind. 

GIES,  Joseph  W.,  14  West  Adams  Ave., 
Detroit,   Mich. 

P. — Born  Detroit.  Pupil  of  Bouguereau 
and  Robert-Fleury  in  Paris;  Royal 
Academy  in  Munich.  Member: 
Scarab.  C.  Work:  "Lady  m  Pinit  * 
and  "Portrait  of  Robert  Hopkin," 
Detroit  Institute. 

GIESE,    Augustus    F.,    1852   Jerome   Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

GIFFEN,  Lilian,  1004  North  Charles  St., 
Baltimore,  Md. ;  summer,  East  Glouces- 
ter, Mass. 

P.,  W. — Born  New  Orleans,  La.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :     Balto.  WCC;  Washington  AC. 

GIHON,  A(lbert)  D(akin),  59  Avenue  de 
Saxe,   Paris,   France. 

Ldscp.P.,  T.— Born  Portsmouth,  N.  H., 
Feb.  16,  1866.  Pupil  of  Eakins  in  Phila- 
delphia; Constant,  Laurens  and  Ecole 
des  Arts  Decoratifs  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Fellowship  PAFA;  Paris  AAA. 
Award:   Second  prize,  Paris  AAA,  1900. 

GIHON,  Clarence  Montfort,  51  Blvd.  St. 
Jacques,  Paris,  France. 
P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Oct.  25,  1871. 
Pupil  of  Chase  and  Cox  in  New  York; 
Laurens  and  Constant  in  Paris. 
Member:    Paris   AAA. 

GILBERT,  Caroline,  Mechanic  Arts  High 
School,  St.  Paul,  Minn.;  summer.  White 
Bear,    Minn. 

D.,  E.,  C— Born  Pardeeville,  Wis.,  in 
1864.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber:    St.  Paul  Inst.  Artists'  S. 

GILBERT,  Charles  Allan,  251  East  61st 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.,  P.— Born  Hartford,  Conn.,  Sept.  9, 
1873.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Constant 
and  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member:  SI 
1904;  Conn. AFA.  Illustrated  "Women 
of   Fiction,"    "A   Message   from    Mars." 

GILBERT,  Dorothy,  490  21st  St.,  Port- 
land,  O.    (P.) 

GILCHRIST,    Meda.    1152    West    51st    St., 
Los    Angeles,    Calif. 
P.— M  ember:     Calif.  AC. 


GILCHRIST,  W.  Wallace,  Jr.,  Brunswick. 
Me. 

P.— Born  Mar.  2,  1879.  Studied  at  PAFA 
and  in  Munich,  Paris  and  London. 
Member:  AC  Phila. ;  Fellowship 
PAFA;  Phila. WCC;  Salma.C.  Award: 
Third  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1908;  gold 
medal,  Wash.SA  1914.  Work:  "The 
Model's  Rest,"   Cincinnati  Museum. 

GILDER,  Robert  F(letcher),  World- 
Herald  Bldg.;  h.  4604  Florence  Blvd., 
Omaha,   Neb. 

P.— Born  Flushing,  L.  I.,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  6, 
1856.  Pupil  of  August  Will  in  New 
York.  Member:  Omaha  Art  G. 
Work:  "Where  Rolls  the  Broad  Mis- 
souri," University  Club,  Omaha;  "Sun- 
shine and  Shadow,"  Omaha  Friends  of 
Art  Association;  "Winter  Morning,"  St. 
Paul  Institute;  "Desert  Clouds,"  Philip 
Payne  Memorial,  Amherst  College; 
"Arizona  Desert"  and  "San  Gabriel 
Canyon,  Calif.,"  Omaha  Public  Library. 
On  Staff  of  the  Omaha  "World-Herald." 

GILES,  Howard,  35  West  14th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Forest  Hill,  N.  J. 
P.,  L,  T.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Feb. 
10,  1876.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.'Y.  under 
Mowbray.  Member:  ANA;  AWCS; 
A.  Fund  S.;  Allied  AA.;  AI  Graphic  A.; 
Phila.  AC;  Salma.  C;  NAC  (life);  Lg. 
of  N.Y.A.;  Guild  of  Free  Lance  Artists; 
Century  Asso.  Awards  :  Shaw  Pur- 
chase Prize  ($500),  Salma.  C,  1915; 
Shaw  illustration  prize,  Salma.  C, 
1915;  Beck  prize,  Phila.  WCC,  1917;  In- 
ness  gold  medal,  NAD,  1918;  hon.  men- 
tion Chicago  Art  Institute,  1918;  Silver 
medal  Carnegie  Inst.,  1921;  Water  Color 
Purchase  Prize,  AIC,  1921.  Represented 
in  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine 
Arts;  Chicago  Art  Institute.  Director, 
Dept.  of  Fine  Ai'ts,  N.  Y.  School  of  Fine 
and  Applied  Arts. 

GILKISON,   Mrs.  A.   H.,  226  West  Swiss- 
vale  Ave.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Pitts.  AA. 

GILLESPIE,     George,     711     Penn     Ave., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA. 

GI'lLESPIE,    Jessie,     5909    Wayne    Ave., 
German  town,    Philadelphia,    Pa.;    sum- 
mer,  Hurryville,   Monroe   Co.,   Pa. 
I. — Born     Brooklyn,     N.     Y.       Pupil    of 
PAFA.     Member:     Plastic  C. 

GILLIAM,  Marguerite  Hubbard,  1216  20th 
St.;  h.  2100  Pennsylvania  Ave.,  Boulder, 
Colo. 

P.,  T.— Born  Boulder,  Colo.,  Dec.  22, 
1894.  Pupil  of  Edwin  H.  Blashfield, 
Emil  Carlsen,  John  Sloan,  Hugh  H. 
Breckenridge.  Member:  Fellow- 
ship PAFA. 

GILMORE,  Ada,  Provincetown,  Mass. 
P.,  Wood  Engr. — Born  Kalamazoo, 
Mich.,  June  17,  1882.  'Studied  with  Hen- 
ri in  New  York;  AIC;  and  in  Paris. 
Work:  "Parasols,"  purchased  by  Mu- 
nicipal Art  Commission,   Chicago. 

GILPIN,  Charles  Armour,  5818  Alder  St., 
Pittsburgh,    Pa. 

P.— Born  Cumberland,  Md.,  Oct.  7.  1867. 
Member:  Pittsburgh  AA.  Work: 
"Relic  of  1824,"  owned  by  Hundred 
Friends  of  Pittsburgh  Art. 


430 


GIMENO 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


GOFF 


GIMENO,  P(atricio),  807  Jenkins  Ave., 
Norman,  Okla. 

P.,  L..  T. — Born  Arequipa,  Peru,  S.  A., 
Dec.  25,  1865.  Pupil  of  M.  Rosas  and 
Valencia  in  Spain.  Member:  Okla. 
Art  League.  Award:  $500  prize 
for  Allegorical  Painting  awarded  by 
Okla.  City  R.  R.  Co.  Work  :  Portrait 
of  Pres.  Pierola  in  Gov.  Palace,  Lima, 
Peru. 

GINTHER,  Mary  Pemberton.  See  Mrs. 
M.    P.    G.    Heyler. 

GIRARDIN,  Frank  J.,  532  San  Francisco 
Ave.,  Redondo  Beach,  Calif. 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Louisville,  Ky.,  Oct.  6, 
1856.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Academy 
under  Noble.  Member:  Cincinnati 
AC;  Richmond  AA;  Richmond  Group 
of  Painters.  Award  :  First  prize, 
Cincinnati  AC  1903;  Foulke  prize,  Rich- 
mond Art  Association,  1912.  Work: 
"The  Hillside"  and  "Lingering  Snow," 
Public  Gallery,  Richmond,  Ind.;  also  in 
Marion  Art  League,  Connersville  Art 
League,  and  Queen  City  Club  of  Cin- 
cinnati. 

GLACKENS.  William  J.,  care  Daniel 
Gallery,  2  West  47th  St.;  h.  10  West  9th 
St.,  NeAV  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I. — Born  Philadelphia,  March  13, 
1870.  Pupil  of  PAFA  and  studied  in 
Europe.  Member:  SI  1902;  SAA 
1905;  ANA  1906;  Am.PS;  Fellowship 
PAFA.;  Port.  P.;  Society  Independent 
Artists;  Los  Angeles  Modern  AS. 
Awards:  Gold  medal  for  drawings 
at  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver 
medal  for  painting  and  bronze  for 
illustration,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  hon. 
mention,  CI  Pittsburgh,  1905;  bronze 
medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.  1915.  Work- 
Drawings  in  Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;   Minneapolis  Institute  of  Arts. 

GLADDING,    Mary,  20  Arnold   St.,   Provi- 
dence, R.  I. 
P.— M  ember:    Providence  WCC. 

GLAMAN,  Mrs.  Eugenie  Fish,  2850  Lex- 
ington St.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.— Born  St.  Joseph,  Mo.,  Jan.  25,  1873. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  Simon,  Cottet  and  Fre- 
miet  in  Paris.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;  Chicago  WCC.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
.  Butler  purchase  prize  ($200),  AIC,  1913. 
Work  purchased  by  Chicago  Municipal 
Commission.     Specialty,  animal  subjects. 

GLEESON,  Adele  Schulenberg  (Mrs. 
Charles  K.  Gleeson),  115  Edwin  Ave., 
Kirkwood.   Mo. 

S. — Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  Jan.  18,  1883. 
Studied  with  George  J.  Zolnay;  St. 
Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts;  Grafly;  and 
in   Berlin.     Member:    St.   Louis  AG. 

GLEESON,  C(harles)  K.,  115  Edwin  Ave., 
Kirkwood,  Mo. 

P.,  E.— Born  St.  Louis.  Mo.,  March 
5,  1878.  Pupil  of  Theo.  Steinlen;  School 
of  St.  Louis  Museum  of  Art;  ASL  of 
N.  Y.;  Colarossi  Academy  in  Paris. 
M  em  b  e  r  :  Chicago  SE;  St.  Louis  AG. 
Work  in:  Herron  Art  Institute,  In- 
dianapolis; Worcester  Art  Museum; 
Chicago  Art  Institute;  St.  Louis  Mu- 
seum  of   Fine  Arts;   New   York  Public 


Library;  Library  of  Congress,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C;  Toledo  Art  Museum. 

GLENNY,  Alice  Russell  (Mrs.  John 
Glenny),  1150  Amherst  St.,  Buffalo. 
N.  Y.;  and  132  East  19th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.,  S.— Born  Detroit,  Mieh.,  1858.  Pupil 
of  Chase  in  New  York;  Boulanger  in 
Paris.  Member:  Buffalo  SA;  ASL 
of  Buffalo;  N. A. Women  PS.  Award: 
Prize  for  mural  decoration,  Buffalo  His- 
torical Soc. 

GLINSKY,  Vincent,  13  East  14th  St.,  New 
York,    N.   Y.    (S.) 

GLOETZNER,   Josephine    P.,   1228   M   St., 
N.   W.,   Washington,    D.    C. 
P.,  D.— -Born  Washington,  D.  C.     Me  m- 
b  e  r  :  Wash.  WCC;  S.  Wash.  A.;  Wash. 
AC;   Kiinstterinen  Veriein,   Munich. 

GLUECK,    Charles    M.,   342   West   Portsea 
St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

GODDARD,    Florence   M.,   Southern   Calif. 
Br., IT.  of  Calif.,  Los  Angeles,  Calif. 
E.— M  ember:     Calif.  P.M. 

GODDARD,  Margaret.  See  Mrs,  John 
Carlson. 

GODDARD,  Ralph  (Bartlett),  290  Broad- 
way, New  York,  N.  Y. ;  and  Madison, 
Conn. 

S.— Born  Meadville,  Pa.,  June  18,  1861. 
Pupil  of  NAD  and  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
Dampt  in  Paris.  Member:  NSS  1899. 
Work:  Statuettes  of  Carlyle  and  of 
Tennyson  and  bronze  portrait  medal- 
lions. Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York; 
"Premiere  Epreuve,"  Detroit  Institute; 
Statue  of  Gutenberg,  Hoe  Building, 
New  York. 

GODDING,    Mary    P.,    "The   Albermarle." 
Washington,    D.    C. 
P.— M  ember:   Wash.   WCC. 

GODWIN,  Frank,  61  West  12th  St.,  New 
York,    N.   Y.    (I.) 

GOETSCH,  Gustav  F.,  20  Elm  Ave.,  Glen- 
dale,  Mo.;  School  of  Fine  Arts,  Wash- 
ington University,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 
P.,  E.,  T. — Born  Minneapolis,  March  15, 
1877.  Pupil  of  Koehler  in  Minneapolis; 
Chase  and  Beckwith  in  New  York; 
Blanche  and  Julian  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: SFA;  St.  Louis  AG;  Chicago  SE; 
Calif.  SE;  St.  L.  AL;  2  x  4  Soc. 
A  wa  r  d  :  First  prize  ($100)  for  paint- 
ing, Minneapolis  AI;  hon.  mention,  St. 
Paul  Inst.,  1917;  first  prize  for  best 
work  of  art,  and  first  prize,  thumb  box 
exhibition,  St.  L.  AL,  1918;  first  prize 
for  best  work  of  art,  and  first  prize  for 
pastel,  St.  L.  AG,  1918.  Work  in: 
City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis;  Minne- 
apolis Inst,  of  Arts;  and  Worcester  Art 
Museum.  ; 

GOETSCH,  Mrs.  Gustav  F.  See  Weedell, 
Hazel. 

GOFF,  Clifton  D.,  Manhasset,  L.  L,  N.  Y. 
P.— ]\r  e  m  her:     S.Indp.A. 

GOFF,  Sudduth,  441  West  2nd  St.,  Lex- 
ington, Ky. 

P. — Born  Eminnce,  Ky.,  Aug.  6,  1887. 
Pupil  of  Meakin,  Nowottny,  Benson,  and 
Hale.        M  em  b  e  r  :        Alumni      Boston 


431 


GOFFE 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


GOSHORN 


School  of  Museum  of  Fine  Arts.  AV  o  r  k 
in  collection  of  Kentucky  Federation  of 
Women's  Clubs. 

GOFFE,    Gladys,    403   AVest    St.,    Wilkins- 
burg,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

GOHL,    Edward    Heinrich,   Pearson  Bldg., 

Auburn,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Harrisburg-,   Pa.,  Nov.  3,  1862. 

Pupil  of  Constant,  Laurens,  Bashet  and 

Schommer  in  Paris.     Member:  Paris 

AAA. 
GOLDBECK,    W(alter)     D(ean),    70    West 

45th    St.,    New    York,    N.    Y.;    summer, 

Little  Neck,   L.   I.,   N.   Y. 

P.,    S.,   E. — Born   St.   Louis,   Mo.,    Oct.   7, 

1882.  Award  :  Cahn  hon.  mention, 
AIC,   1911. 

GOLDBERG,     Reuben     Lucius,    "Evening 
Mail,"    25    City   Hall   Place,    New   York, 
N.  Y, 
L — Born    San    Francisco,    Cal.,    July    4, 

1883.  Cartoonist  on  "Evening  Mail" 
since   1907. 

GOLDIE,  J.  Liddel,  31  Hancock  St., 
Springfield,    Mass.    (P.) 

GOLDSWORTHY,  Emelia  M.,  Art  Direc- 
tor, Western  States  Normal  School,  Kal- 
amazoo,  Mich. 

P.,  T. — Born  Platteville,  Wis.,  June  3, 
1869.  Pupil  of  AIC  and  of  Otis  Art 
Inst.,  Los  Angeles,  and  Pratt  Inst, 
under  Dow,  Forsyth,  Snell,  Freer,  Bat- 
chelder  and  Jean  Mannheim.  Mem- 
ber: Fine  Art  Study  Club  of  Kalama- 
zoo; Indiana  Painters;  Kalamazoo  Art 
Assoc,  (pres.).  Art  instructor,  Cali- 
fornia Univ.,  Berkeley,  summer  1915; 
Art  director,  AVestern  State  Normal, 
Kalamazoo    (1905-1920). 

GOLDTHWAITE,  Anne,  35  West  10th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  E. — Born  Montgomery,  Ala.  Pupil 
of  NAD  under  Mielatz  in  New  York; 
Academie  Moderne  in  Paris.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS;  P-G.;  NYWCC; 
Eclectics;  Calif.  P.M.  Awards  :  Mc- 
Millin  landscape  prize  ($100);  N.  A. 
Women  PS,  1915;  bronze  medal  for  etch- 
ing, P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work 
in  Library  of  Congress,  Washington, 
D.  C. 

GOLTZ,   Walter,  Woodstock,   N.  T. 

P.,  T.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  June  20, 
1875.  Pupil  of  Mowbray  and  Birge  Har- 
rison. 

GONZALES,  Boyer,  3327  Avenue  O,  Gal- 
veston, Tex. ;  summer,  AVoodstock,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Houston,  Tex.,  Sept.  22,  1867. 
Pupil  of  Wm.  J.  Whittemore  in  New 
York;  Walter  Lansel  in  Boston;  ASL  at 
AVoodstock,  N.  Y. ;  studied  in  Holland, 
Paris  and  Florence;  painted  with  Wins- 
low  Homer.  Member:  Galveston 
A.  Lg.  NYAVCC;  Salma.  C;  NAC; 
AVash.  AC.  Awarded  Arthur  Evarts 
gold  medal,  Dallas,  1921.  Represented 
in  Galveston  Art  League;  Municipal 
Schools  of  Galveston;  Delgado  Museum, 
New  Orleans,  La. 

GOODELMAN,  Aaron,  25  East  14th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.     (S.) 


GOODHEART,    Anna,    52    S    St.,    N.    W., 
AVashington,   D.    C. 
P.— M  ember:    Wash.    WCC. 

GOODRICH,  J(ames)  H(arry),  2119-24th 
Ave.,  North,  Nashville,  Tenn.;  Scotch 
Plains,   N.  J. 

P.— Born  Colon,  St.  Joseph  Co.,  Mich., 
Nov.  29,  1878.  Pupil  of  Gies  in  Detroit; 
Freer  in  Chicago. 

GOODWIN,    Arthur   Clifton,    41   AVashing- 
ton  Sq.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P., I.— Born    Portsmouth,    N.     H.,     Sept. 
12,    1866. 

GOODWIN,  Frances,  320  South  Main  St., 
Newcastle,    Ind. 
■S.— M  ember:  Ind.  SS. 

GOODWIN,  Gilberta  D(aniels),  847  East 
Blvd.,  AVeehawken,  N.  J. 
P.— Born  Burlington,  Vt.,  Aug.  20,  1888. 
Pupil  of  John  F.  AYeir,  Edwin  Taylor, 
G.  A.  Thompson,  Hayes  Miller.  Mem- 
ber: NYWCC ;  New  Haven  PCC ; 
Conn.    Soc.    of  Painters. 

GOODWIN,  Mrs.  Harold.  See  Alice  Hap- 
good. 

GOODWIN,  Helen  M.,  320  South  Main 
St.,    Newcastle,    Ind. 

Min.  P. — Born  Newcastle,  Ind.  Pupil 
of  Collin  and  Courtois  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Paris  Woman's  AAA;  Indiana 
AA. 

GOODWIN,  Myrtle.  See  Mrs.  Nicola 
D'Ascenzo. 

GOODWIN,    Philip    R(ussell),    Grove   and 
Louis  Sts.,  Mamaroneck,  N.  Y. 
P.,    I. — Born    Norwich,    Conn.,    Sept    16, 
1882.      Pupil  of  R.   I.    School  of  Design; 
Howard    Pyle;    ASL    of    N.    Y. 

GOOSEY,  G.  Turland,  care  of  The  Salma- 
gundi   Club,    47   Fifth    Ave.,    New   York, 
N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Salma.C. 

GORDON,     F(rederick)     C(harles),     High 

Orchard,  Westfield,  N.  J. 
I. — Born  Coburg,  Ont.,  Canada,  June  30, 
1856.  Pupil  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Julian  and 
Colarossi  academies  in  Paris.  Decora- 
tor and  illustrator  of  books  and  maga- 
zines. 

GORDON,  Leon,  80  W.  40th  St..  New 
A^ork,  N.  Y. ;  h.  5  Thurioe  Square, 
S.AV.F.,   London,    Eng. 

P.— Born  Bonsor,  Russia,  May  25,  1888. 
Pupil  of  AIC,  ASL.  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber:   Salma.  C;  SI. 

GORE,  Thomas  H.,  211  Pleasant  St., 
Covington,   Ky. 

P.,  D. — Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Oct.  1, 
1863.  Studied  with  Duveneck.  Mem- 
ber:   Cincinnati  AC. 

GORSON,  Aaron  Harry,  8  Wood  St.;  h. 
56  Pasadena  St.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P.— Born  in  Russia,  July  2,  1872;  came 
to  America  in  1889.  Pupil  of  PAFA; 
Julian  Academy,  Constant  and  Laurens 
in  Paris.  Member:  Pittsburgh  AA. 
Specialty,  views  of  factories. 

GOSHORN,    John     T(homas),    512    Wash- 
ington Bank  Bldg.,   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — Born    near    Independence,    la.,    Feb. 
16,   1870.     Pupil  of  AIC  and   Smith  Art 
Academy. 


432 


I 


GOSS 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


GRANT 


GOSS,    John,    384A    Boylston    St.,    Boston, 
Mass.;    h.    Walpole,    Mass. 
P.,     I.— Born    Lewiston,    Me.,     Sept.     19, 
1886.     Member:     Boston  AC;   Boston 
SWCP. 

GOSSELIN,  Lucien  H.,  52  Rue  Vercinge- 
torix,  Paris,  France;  1061  Elm  St.;  h. 
430  Notre  Dame  Ave.,  Manchester,  N.  H. 
S.— Born  Whitefield,  N.  H.,  Jan.  2,  1883. 
Pupil  of  Verlet,  Bouchard,  Landowski, 
and  Mercie.  Member:  Societe  Libre 
des  Artistes  Francais. 

GOTTHOLD  Florence  W(olf)  (Mrs. 
Frederick  Gotthold),  Carnegie  Studios; 
h.  165  West  58th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
summer,  Cos  Cob,  Conn. 
P.,  C— Born  Uhrichsville,  O.,  Oct.  3, 
1858.  Pupil  of  B.  R.  Fitz,  H.  Siddons 
Mowbray  and  H.  G.  Dearth.  Mem- 
ber: N.Y.Pen  and  Brush  C;  MacD. 
C;    Greenwich    SA. 

GOTTHOLD,     Rozel,    1421    Marengo    St.. 

New   Orleans,   La. 

P.,   S.,  C,  W. — Born  New  Orleans,  La., 

Jan.  26,  1886.     Inventor  of  palm  baskets. 

GOTTWALD,  F(rederick)  C(arl),  2031 
East  100th  St..  Cleveland,  O. 
P.,  T.— Born  in  1860.  Pupil  of  ASL  of 
N.  Y.;  Royal  Academy,  Munich.  Mem- 
ber: Cleveland  SA  (pres.).  Work: 
"The  Umbrian  Valley,  Italy,"  Cleve- 
land Museum.  Instructor  in  Cleveland 
School  of  Art. 

GOUDY,   Frederick  W.,  114  East  13th  St., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

GOULD,  Carl  Frelinghuysen,  710  Hoge 
Bldg.,  Seattle,  Wash.;  summer.  Port 
Blakely,  Wash. 

P.,  Arch.,  L.,  T.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y., 
Nov.  24,  1873.  Pupil  of  M.  Victor  Laloux. 
Member:  Beaux- Arts  Architects; 
Seattle  Fine  Arts  Soc. ;  AIA.  Work: 
Campus  Bldgs.,  University  of  AVashing- 
ton;  New  Seattle  Times  Bldg.;  Instruc- 
tor of  architecture.  University  of  Wash- 
ington. 

GRABACH,  John  R.,  900  South  Grove  'St., 
Irvington,   N.    J. 

P.,  S. — Born  Newark,  N.  J.,  March  2, 
1886.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber:    Lg.    of  N.Y.A.;    S.Tndp.A. 

GRAEF,  Robert  A.,  70  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,    N.    Y.     (L) 

GRAF,  Carl  C.  43  Union  Trust  Bldg., 
Indianapolis,   Ind. 

P.— Born  Sept.  24,  1890.  Pupil  of  Her- 
ron  Art  Inst.,  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  and 
Cincinnati  Academy.  Member:  Ind. 
AC;  Ind.  SS. 

GRAFLY,  Charles,  131  North  20th  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer,  Lanesville 
Station,  Gloucester.  Mass. 
S.— Born  Philadelphia,  Dec.  3,  1862. 
Pupil  of  Eakins  in  Philadelphia;  Chapu 
and  Dampt  in  Paris.  Member:  NSS 
1893;  ANA  1902,  NA  1905;  N.Y.Arch.Lg. 
1902;  AC.Phila.;  Nat.Inst.A.L.;  Fellow- 
ship PAFA;  Municipal  Art  Jury  of  Phila. 
Awards:  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1891;  hon.  mention.  Temple  Trust  Fund, 
PAFA  1892;  medal,  Columbian  Exp., 
Chicago,     1893;     silver    medal,     Atlanta 


Exp.,  1895;  gold  medal  of  honor,  PAFA 
1899;  gold  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  gold 
medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
gold  medal,  Charleston  Exp.,  1902; 
grand  prize,  Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910; 
AVidener  Memorial  medal,  PAFA  1913; 
Lea  prize  ($300),  Phila.  W.  C.  C,  1916; 
Watrous  gold  medal,  NAD,  1918. 
Work:  "Mauvais  Presage,"  Detroit 
Institute;  "Vulture  of  War."  St.  Louis 
Museum;  "Gen.  Reynolds,"  Smith 
Memorial,  Fairmount  Park,  Philadel- 
phia; "England"  and  "France,"  Cus- 
tom House,  New  York;  "In  Much  Wis- 
dom," "Bust  of  Dsedalus,"  busts  of  Dr. 
Joseph  Price  and  Thomas  P.  Anshutz, 
Pennsylvania  Academy,  Philadelphia; 
"Pioneer  Mother  Monument,"  San  Fran- 
cisco; "Bust  of  Duveneck,"  Carnegie 
Institute,  Pittsburgh.  Head  of  Model- 
ing Dept.,  School  of  the  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts,  Boston,  and  Pennsylvania  Aca- 
demy of  the  Fine  Arts. 

GRAFTON,  Robert  W.,  131  West  Second 
St.,  Michigan  City,  Ind. 
P.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Dec.  19,  1876. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris; 
studied  in  Holland  and  England. 
Awards:  Marv  T.  R.  Fonlke.  prize, 
Richmond  AA,  1910  and  1919.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SA  (ex-pres.);  Palette 
and  Chisel  C. ;  Chicago  AC;  Chicago 
AG.  Work  in  :  Delgado  Museum  and 
New  Orleans  Art  Assoc,  New  Orleans; 
LaFayette  Art  Assoc;  Union  Lg.  C. 
Chicago;  North  Western  Univ.;  Purdue 
Univ.;  Earlam  College;  Public  Art  Gal- 
lery, Richmond,  Ind.;  mural  panels  in 
State  House,  Springfield,  111.;  Tulane 
University,    New   Orleans,   La. 

GRAHAM,  Miss  Payson,  251  West  81st 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S..  I.,  W. — Born  London,  Ontario,  Can- 
ada, Apr.  26,  1878.  Pupil  of  Bourdelle 
in  Paris;  Eraser  and  Aitken  in  New 
York.      Member:    ASL    of    N.    Y. 

GRAHAM,  Robert  A(lexander),  Miller 
Bldg.,  1931  Broadway,  New  York.  N.  Y. ; 
4540  West  Hayward  Place,  Denver, 
Colo. 

P.— Born  Brooklyn,  la.,  June  29,  1873. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
NYWCC;    Sahna.    C. 

GRANDIN,  Elizabeth,  154  Carnegie  Hall, 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Hamden,  N.  J.; 
summer.  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P.,  C. — Born  Hamden,  N.  J.  Pupil  of 
Henri  and  Dow;  Guerin  in  Paris. 
Member:   MacD.  C. ;  Lg.   of  N.  Y.  A. 

GRANT,   Blanche  C,  Taos,  N.  M. 
P.,    I.,    E.,    L.,    T. — Born    Leavenworth, 
Kan.,    Sept.   23,    1874.      Pupil   of   Paxton, 
Hale,    McCarter,    Johansen.     Award  : 
Hon.  mention,   St.  Paul  Inst.,  1917. 

GRANT,  Charles  H(enry),  Bohemian 
Club,  San  Francisco,  Cal. 
Marine  P. — Born  Oswego,  N.  Y.,  Feb. 
6,  1866.  Pupil  of  deHaas,  and  NAD. 
M  e  m  b  e  r  :  San.  F.  AA. :  Bohemian 
Club;  Sequoia  Club.  Work:  "Salute 
to  the  Flag,"  Oswego  (N.Y).  City  Hall; 
"Safe  in  Port,"  Syracuse  Museum  of 
Art;  "After  the  Rain,"  Sequoia  Club, 
San  F. ;  "Arrival  of  Atlantic  Battleship 
Fleet    in    Golden    Gate,    San    Francisco, 


433 


GRANT 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


GREEN 


1908,"  Memorial  Museum,  SanF.;  "They 
Made  the  World  Safe  for  Democracy," 
Bohemian  Club,  San  Francisco. 

GRANT,  Frederic  M.,  139  East  Ontario 
St.,  Chicago,  111. 

P.,  I.,  E.,  T.— Born  Sibley,  Iowa,  Oct.  6, 
1886.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Miller,  Vander- 
poel  and  Jonas  Lie.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;  Chicago  AG;  Chicago  AC. 
Awards:  Goodman  prize,  AIC,  1914; 
Fine  Arts  Bldg.  prize,  Chicago  AG,  1916; 
Cahn  prize  and  Butler  prize,  AIC,  1917; 
Municipal  AL  prize,  AIC,  1917;  popular 
prize,  Chicago  AC,  1918;  hon.  mention, 
Chicago  AG,  1918;  Eisendrath  prize, 
AIC,  1919. 

GRANT,  Gordon,  137  East  66th  'St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Port  Jefferson, 
L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  June 
•7,  1875.  Pupil  of  Heatherley's  and  Lam- 
beth's Schools,  in  London.  Member: 
AWCS;  SI  1911;  Salma.  C.  1901. 

GRANT,   Isaac   H.,  10  Olds  PL,  Hartford, 
Conn. 
P. — M  ember:    Conn.   AFA. 

GRANT,  Lawrence  W.,  Studio  Arcade, 
Bronxville,  N.  Y. ;  Provincetown,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Cleveland,  O.,  June  10,  1886. 
Pupil  of  Chase  in  New  York;  Laurens 
and  Lefebvre  In  Paris.  Member: 
Salma.C. 

GRANVILLE. SMITH.  See  Smith,  W. 
Granville. 

GRAVES,  Abbott  (Fuller),  Kennebunk- 
port,  Me. 

P.,  Arch. — Born  Weymouth,  Mass.,  Apr. 
15,  1859.  Pupil  of  Inst,  of  Technology, 
Boston;  Cormon,  Laurens  and  Gervais 
in  Paris.  Member:  Boston  AC; 
Copley  S.;  Salma.  C.  1909;  Paris  AAA. 
Specialty,  paintings  of  gardens.    , 

GRAY,  Abby,  1545  Blair  Ave.,  Cincin- 
nati,   O. 

P. — M  ember  :  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

GRAY,    Kathryn,   Van  Dyck   Studios,   939 
Eighth   Ave.,    New    York,    N.    Y. 
P. — Born    Jefferson    Co.,    Kansas,    Nov. 
18,  1881.    Pupil  of  Weber;  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
and  La  Forge  in  Paris. 

GRAY,  Mrs.  Leonia  Perin,  211  Chelsea 
Place,    Delhi,   O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

GRAY,   Lidie   E.,  400  Atlantic  Ave.,  Pitts- 
burgh,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

GRAY,  Percy,  628  Montgomery  St.,  San 
Francisco,  Cal.;  h.  Burlingame,  Cal. 
P.— Born  San  Francisco,  Oct.  3,  1869. 
Studied  in  San  Francisco  and  New 
York.  Member:  Bohemian  C;  Se- 
quoia C. ;  San  F.  AA.  Award  :  Bronze 
medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 

GRAY,     W(illiam)     F(rancls),     10     South 
18th  St.;  h.  .2014  Mt.  Vernon  St.,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa. 
P.,  L.,  T. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  May 


9,  1866.  Pupil  of  Pa.  Museum  and 
PAFA.  Member:  Phila.  AC;  Phila. 
Sketch  C.  (pres,);  Art  Teachers'  Assoc, 
of  Phila.  Head  of  Art  Department, 
Central  High  School. 

GRAYSON,  Clifford  P(revost),  262  South 
15th  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Philadelphia,  July  14,  1857. 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  Gerome  and  Bonnat  in 
Paris.  Member:  Phila.  A. C;  Cen- 
tury Assoc.  Awards  :  $2,000  prize, 
American  Art  Galleries,  New  York,  1886; 
Temple  gold  medal,  PAFA  1887. 
Work:  "Mid-Day  Dreams,"  Corcoran 
Gallery,  Washington;  "Rainy  Day  in 
Pont  Aven,"  Art  Institute,   Chicago. 

GREACEN,  Edmund  W.,  142  East  18th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  New  York,  1877.  Pupil  of 
Chase  and  Du  Mond  in  New  York; 
studied  in  Europe.  Award  :  Shaw 
Purchase  Prize,  Salma.  C,  1921.  Mem- 
ber: ANA.;  Salma.  C.  1910;  Soc.  des 
Artistes  Independants,  Paris;  Allied  Arts 
Assoc,  London;   Allied  AA;  NAC. 

GREASON,  W.,  1504  Broadway,  Detroit, 
Mich.    (P.) 

GREATHEAD,  Miss  K.,  Norwood,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Phila.  AA. 

GREBEL,  Alphonse,  174  St.  Nicholas  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

GRECO,  Daniel,  608  Fifth  Ave.,  New  Ken- 
sington, Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

GREEN,  Bernard  I.,  1058  South  Blvd., 
The  Bronx,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer, 
Gloucester,  Mass. 

P.,  E.,  T. — Born  Swerzen,  Russia,  Feb. 
12,  1886.  Pupil  of  Douglas  Volk,  Fran- 
cis Jones,  Edgar  M.  Ward  and  Pressig. 
Member:  N.  Y.  SE;  Chicago  AG. 
Work:  "Girl  Reading,"  Museum  of 
Oakland,   Cal. 

GREEN,     Elizabeth    Shippen.      See    Mrs. 

Huger  Elliott. 

GREEN,    Mrs.    Erik    H.,    Oldtown,    North 

Attleboro,   Mass. 

P. — M  ember:   Providence  AC. 

GREEN,  Frank  Russell,  care  of  Salma- 
gundi Club,  45  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Chicago,  Apr.  16,  1856.  Pupil 
of  Boulanger,  Lefebvre,  Collin  and 
Courtois  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA 
1897;  AWCS;  NYWCC;  Salma.C.  1887; 
Lotos  C.  Awards:  Lotos  Fund,  NAD 
1896;  hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1900; 
Morgan  prize,  Salma.C.  1903;  bronze 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Shaw  prize, 
Salma.C.  1908. 

GREEN,  Harold,  284  Asylum  St.;  h.  50 
Ashley  St.,  Hartford,  Conn. 
P. — Born  Montreal,  Canada,  Nov.  10, 
1883.  Pupil  of  Flagg  and  Brandagee. 
Member:  Conn.  AFA.  Awards: 
Dunham  prize,  Conn.  AFA,  1918.  Hon. 
mention,  Farmington,  1904;  Dunham 
prize.   Conn.  AFA,  1918. 


434 


GREEN 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


GRIFFIN 


GREEN,  H(iram)  H(arold),  Fort  Erie. 
Ont..  Can. 

P.,  I.,  E. — Born  Paris,  Oneida  Co.,  N. 
Y.,  Nov..  15,  1865.  Punil  of  H.  ■&.  Mow- 
bray, Cox,  Bridgman.  Award  :  Al- 
bright Prize,  Albright  Art  Academy, 
1898. 

GREEN,    Mildred   C,  Fort  Erie,   Ontario, 

Canada;  summer,  Clayville,  N.  Y. 
P.,  L,  T.— Born  Paris,  Oneida  County, 
N.  Y.,  Apr.  18,  1874.  Pupil  of  Bridg- 
man, Hitchcock  and  Dufner.  Mem- 
ber: Buffalo  SA;  Buffalo  Guild  of 
Allied  Arts;  Buffalo  Fine  Arts  Academy. 
Instructor,  Buffalo  School  of  Fine  Arts. 

GREEN,    William     Bradford,     151    North 
Beacon  St.,  Hartford,   Conn. 
P. — M  ember:    Conn.   AFA. 

GREENBAUM,      Mrs.      Edward      S.       See 

Schwarcz,   Dorothy. 

GREENBERG,     Benjamin,     4221     Florida 
Ave.,   Northside,   Cincinnati,   O. 
P. — M  em  b  e  r  :     Cincinnati    AC. 

GREENBERG,  Maurice,  608  South  Dear- 
born St.;  h.  5759  South  Michigan  Ave., 
Chicago,  111. 

I. — Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  in  1893, 
Pupil  of  Wisconsin  School  of  Art;  AIC. 
Member:    Palette  and  Chisel  C. 

GREENBERG,  Morris,  563  Howard  Ave., 
Brooklyn,   N.   Y. 

E.,  W.,  T. — Pupil  of  Birge  Harrison  and 
Maynard.  Member:  Brooklyn  Mu- 
nicipal   AS;    Brooklyn    SE. 

GREENE,  Albert  V(an  Nesse),  223  N. 
11th  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer, 
Chester  Springs,   Pa. 

P.,  I.,  E.— Born  Jamaica,  L.  I.,  N.  Y., 
Dec.  14,  1887.  Pupil  of  Corcoran  Gal- 
lery, ASL.  of  N.  Y.,  PAFA.  Mem- 
ber: Phila.  Sketch  C,  Fellowship 
PAFA. 

GREENE,  Fred  Stuart,  Ye  Hollie  Studio; 

h.  115  High  St.,  Westerly,  R.  I.;  summer. 
North  Stonington,  Conn. 
P. — Born  North  Stonington,  Conn.,  June 
23,  1876.  Pupil  of  R.  I.  School  of  De- 
sign; ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
Alumni  Assoc,  R.  I.  School  of  Design; 
Providence   WCC. 

GREENE,  Helen,  1840  Madison  Road,  Cin- 
cinnati, O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

GREENE,  Mary  Shepard.  See  Mrs.  E.  L. 
Blumenschein. 

GREENE,  Sarah  Morris,  7  West  9th  St., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 

P. — M  e  m  b  e  r  :  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Con- 
temporary. 

GREENFIELD,  E.  J.  Forrest,  The  Wil- 
lows, Point  Pleasant,  N.  J. 
P.,  C,  W..  T.— Born  London,  England, 
June  24,  1866.  Pupil  of  Karl  Scheaver. 
Member:  S.  Indp.  A.;  Needle  and 
Bobbin  Club. 

GREENING,  Harry  Cornell,  9  N.  Grove 
St.,  E.  Orange,  N.  J. 

I.— Born  Titusville,  Pa.,  May  30,  1876. 
Pupil  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Comic  cartoons 
for  "Herald,"   "Judge,"  etc. 


GREENLAW,  Emma  V.,  34  Bull  St.,  New- 
port,   R.   I.      (P.) 

GREENLEAF,     Ray,    263    West    11th    St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
I. — Member:    SI. 

GREENLEAF,  Richard  C(ranch),  Law- 
rence,  L.   L,   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Berlin,  Germany,  Nov.  15,  1887. 
Pupil  of  Collin,  Courtois,  Simon  and 
Menard    in    Paris. 

GREENOUGH,   Buhler.     See  Mrs.  Hardy. 

GREENWOOD,    Joseph    H.,    2    Woodbine 

St.;  h.  21  Merrick  St.,  Worcester,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Spencer,  Mass.,  Oct.  8,  1857. 
Pupil  of  R.  Swain  Gifford  in  New  York. 
Member:  Conn.  AFA.  Award  : 
Hon.  mention.  Conn.  AFA.  1918.  Work: 
"Autumn,"  Worcester  Art  Museum. 

GREER,  Blanche.  1840  Mintwood  PL, 
Washington,  D.  C. 

P.,  I.,  Dec. — Born  Eldora,  la.,  Aug.  9, 
1884.  Pupil  of  Chase  and  Eben  F.  Com- 
ins.  Member:  Phila.  WCC;  Plastic 
C;  Fellow.ship  PAFA;  Wash.  WCC; 
Phila.  Alliance.  Award  :  Beck  prize, 
Phila.  WCC,   1916. 

GREGORY,  John,  38  West  66th  St.,  Ne\T 
York,   N.  Y. 

S. — Born  London,  Eng.,  May  17,  1879. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Beaux-Arts, 
Paris;  American  Academy,  Rome. 
Member:  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of 
Design  (hon.);  NSS;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg. 
Awards  :  American  Acad,  in  Rome 
Fellowship,  1912-15;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg. 
medal  in  Sculpture  1921.  Director  of 
Sculpture  Dept.,  Beaux-Arts  Inst,  of 
Design;  Associate  in  Modeling,  Columbia 
University. 

GREGSON,  Marie  E.  (Mrs.  A.  C.  Greg- 
son),  Bell  Ave.  and  Rocky  Hill  Road, 
Bayside,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  New  York  City,  Dec.  16,  1886. 
Pupil  of  Twachtman  and  Cox.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :   N.   A.   Women  PS'. 

GREIMS,  Mary  Hearn  (Mrs.  Herbert  S. 
Greims),  Ridgefield,  Conn. 
P. — Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  Cooper 
Union  and  George  Smillie  in  New  York; 
Philadelphia  School  of  Design  for  Wo- 
men and  PAFA.  Member:  Plastic 
C;  Fellowship  PAFA;  N.  A,  Women  PS. 

GRENHAGEN,    Merton,  Oshkosh.  Wis. 
Port.  P. — Born  near  Oshkosh,  Wis.     Pu- 
pil of  Chase  in  Phila.;  Laurens  in  Paris; 
Chicago  AI,     Member:   Chicago   SA; 
Wis.  PS. 

GRIEST,  Mary  C.  Johnson,  Westview  St., 
Germantown,    Philadelphia.    Pa. 
P. — M  ember:      Fellowship   PAFA. 

GRIFFIN,  J(ames)  M(artin),  3342  Chest- 
nut St..  Oakland,  Calif. 
P.,  E.,  T.— Born  Cork,  Ireland,  Feb.  20, 
1850.  Pupil  of  James  Brenan  at  School 
of  Art,  Cork.  Member:  WCS  of 
Ireland. 

GRIFFIN,  Walter,  care  Portland  Society 
of  Art,   Portland,  Me. 

P.— Born  Portland,  Me.,  1861.  Pupil  of 
Collin  and  Laurens  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1912;  Allied  AA;  NYWCC; 
Paris     AAA;      Salma.      C.       Award: 


435 


GRIFFITH 


WHO'S   WHO  IIS  ART 


GROSS 


Medal  of  honor.  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F., 
1915.  Represented  in  Memorial  Art  Gal- 
lery, Rochester,  and  Buffalo  Fine  Arts 
Academy. 

GRIFFITH,  C.  Beatrice  B.  (Mrs.  C.  F. 
Griffith),  1830  South  Rittenhouse  'Sq., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

S. — Born  Hoylake,  Cheshire.  Eng-.,  Aug-. 
6,  1890.  Pupil  of  Giuseppe  Donato. 
Member  :  Phila.  Alliance.  Work  : 
Marble  portrait  of  Edith  Wynne  Mathi- 
son,  Bennett  School.  Millbrook;  marble 
portrait,  President  Ewing-,  Lahore  Union 
College,  T/ahore.  India;  portrait  of  How- 
ard B.  French  in  College  of  Pharmacy, 
Philadelphia. 

GRIFFITH,  Edward  N.,  Avon  Park,  Fla. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

GRIFFITH,  Louis  Oscar,  1702  Auditorium 
Tower,   Chicago,  111. 

Ldscp.  P.,  Etcher. — Born  Greencastle 
Ind.,  Oct.  10,  1875.  Pupil  of  Frank 
Reaugh;  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts; 
AIC;  studied  in  New  York  and  Paris. 
Member:  Palette  and  Chisel  C. 
(pres.);  Chicago  SA;  Chicago  SE;  Chi- 
cago AG.  Award  :  Bronze  medal  for 
etching,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Rep- 
resented in  Union  League  Club  of  Chi- 
cago. "Winter,"  Chicago  Commission 
purchase;  Delgado  Museum,  New  Or- 
leans,   La.;    Oakland    (Cal.)    Museum. 

GRIFFITH.    W(illiam)    A(lexander),    La- 

guna  Beach,  Calif. 

P.,     L. — Born     Lawrence,     Kan.;     Aug. 

19,   1866.     Pupil  of   St.   Louis   School   of 

Fine    Arts;    Lefebvre    and    Constant    in 

Paris.       Member:       Laguna     Beach 

AA. 
GRIFFITHS,     Elsa     Churchill,     1114     9th 

Ave.,  West,   Seattle,  Washington. 

Min.P. — A  ward  : 

GRIGWARE,  Edward  T.,  1204  Century 
Bldg.,  202  State  St.;  h.  162  Taylor  Ave., 
Oak  Park,  111. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Caseville,  Mich.,  Apr. 
3,  1889.  Pupil  of  Chicago  AFA. 
Member:    AIC. 

GRIMES,  Frances,  229  East  48th  St., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 

S.— Born  Braceville,  O.  Pupil  of  Pratt 
Inst,  in  Brooklyn.  Me  m  b  e  r  :  NSS 
1912;  N. A. Women  PS.  Award:  Sil- 
ver medal  for  medals,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San 
P.,  1915;  McMillin  sculpture  prize,  N.A. 
Women  PS,  1916.  Association  Medal, 
NA  Women  PS,  1920.  Work:  Over- 
mantel, Washington  Irving  High  School, 
New  York  City;  "Girl  by  Pool"  and 
"Boy  with  Duck,"  Toledo  Museum  of 
Art. 

GRINAGER,  Alexander,  Mohegan  Heights, 
Tuckahoe,  N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Minneapolis,  Minn.  Pupil  of 
Royal  Academy,  Copenhagen,  Denmark; 
Laurens  and  Constant  in  Paris; 
studied  also  in  Norway,  Italy  and 
Sicily.  M  ember:  Allied  AA;  Sal- 
ma.C.    1908;    Minneapolis   A.Lg. 

GRIN  NELL,  G.  Victor,  40  East  Main  St., 
Mystic,    Conn. 
P. — M  ember:  New  Haven  PCC. 


GROLL,  Albert  L(orey),  222  West  59th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Ldscp. P. —Born  New  York,  Dec.  8,  1866. 
PupiA  of  Gysis  and  Loefftz  in  Munich. 
Member:  ANA  1906,  NA  1910; 
NYWCC;  AWCS;  A.Fund  S.;  Salma.C. 
1900;  Lotos  C;  NAC.  Awards:  Mor- 
gan prize,  Salma.  C.  1903;  hon.  mention, 
Munich;  Shaw  prize,  Salma.C.  1904; 
silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Ses- 
nan  medal,  PAFA  1906;  medals,  Buenos 
Aires  and  Santiago  Exp.,  1910;  Inness 
gold  medal,  NAD  1912;  silver  medal, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work:  "No 
Man's  Land — Arizona,"  Corcoran  Gal- 
lery, Washington;  "California  Red- 
woods" and  "Washoe  Valley,  Nevada," 
Brooklyn  Institute  Museum;  "Acoma 
Valley,  New  Mexico,"  National  Gallery, 
Washington;  "Hopi  Mesa,"  Public  Gal- 
lery, Richmond,  Ind.;  "Laguna  River, 
New  Mexico,"  Art  Museum,  Montclair, 
N.  J.;  "Silver  Clouds,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  "The  Milkv  Way," 
Minneapolis  Institute  of  Arts;  "On  the 
Beach,"  and  "The  Garden  of  the  Gods," 
Lotos  Club;  "'Storm  Cloud,  Arizona," 
Fort  Worth  (Tex.)  Museum;  "In  New 
Mexico,"  Boston  Museum;  "Arizona 
Desert,"  St.  Louis  Museum;  "Passing 
Shadows,"  National  Arts  Club,  New 
York;  "In  Arizona,"  St.  Paul  Museum. 
Specialty,  Western  scenes.  "Land  of 
the  Sage  Brush,"  Carnegie  Museum, 
Pittsburgh. 

GRONHOLDT,    A.,     458     Pearl    St.,     New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

GROOIV!,  Emily,  Genesee  Depot;  h.  325 
Cambridge  Ave.,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 
P. — Born  Wayland,  Mass.,  Mar.  17,  1876. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  Brangwyn  in  London. 
Member:  Wis.  PS;  Concord  AA; 
NYWCC;  N.A.Women  PS.  Awards: 
Gold  Medal,  St.  Paul  Inst.,  1917;  hon. 
mention,  Milwaukee  Art  Inst.,  1918; 
Medal  of  honor,  Milwaukee  Art  Inst., 
1920.  Work:  "Hillside— November,"  St. 
Paul  Inst.;   and  in  Milwaukee  Art  Inst. 

GROOME,  Esther  M.,  Library  Bldg., 
State  Normal  School,  West  Chester, 
Pa.;  h.  Carlisle,  Pa.;  summer,  Glou- 
cester,  Mass. 

P.,  E.,  T.— Born  York  County,  Pa.  Pu- 
pil of  Fuchs,  Castaigne,  William  M. 
Chase,  Henri,  and  Cecilia  Beaux. 
Member:    Fellowship   PAFA. 

GROSBECK,  Dan  Sayre.  care  of  Foster 
and  Kleiser,  287  Valencia  St.,  San  Fran- 
cisco, Calif.      (P.,  I.) 

GROSS,     Albert     R.,     1230     St.    Paul    St., 
Baltimore,    Md. 
F. — M  ember:    Char.    C. 

GROSS.  Mrs.  Juliet  White,  1720  Sansom 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer,  Sellers- 
ville,   Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  .Tune  19. 
1882.  Pupil  of  Philadelphia  'School  of 
Design;  PAFA.  Member:  Fellow- 
ship PAFA.  Award:  Mary  Smith 
piize,  PAFA,  1919;  Fellowship  PAFA 
prize,   1920. 

GROSS,  Oskar,  19  East  Pearson  St.,  Chi- 
cago, 111. 
P. — Born  in  Vienna,  Austria,  1870.     Pu- 


436 


GROSSE 


WHO*S   WHO  IN  ART 


GUDEBROD 


pil  of  Imperial  Royal  Academy  of  Fine 
Arts,  Vienna;  studied  in  Munich  and 
Paris.  Member:  Wiener  Kunstler- 
Genossenschaft;  Austrian  Artists' 
Assoc,  (hon.);  Chicago  SA.  Work: 
"Dreams  of  Future,"  Chicago  Municipal 
Commission  purchase;  "At  the  Mar- 
ket,"  Municipal   Gallery,   Vienna. 

GROSSE,  J.  L.,  906  Union  Avenue,  Bronx, 
N.   Y.      (P.) 

GROSSMAN.  Edwin  Booth,  133  East  21st 
St.,   New  York,  N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Boston.  Mass..  Apr.  9.  1S8? 
Pupil  of  W.  M.  Chase  and  Richard 
Miller.     M  e  m  b  e  r  :     S.Indp.A. 

GROSSMAN,  J(oseph)  B(ernard),  1722 
Chestnut  St.;  h.  2508  North  33rd  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P.,  T. — Born  Szagory,  Russia,  July  2, 
1888.  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA. 

GROSVENOR,  Thelma  Cudlipp,  128  East 
61st  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
York  Harbor,   Me. 

I.— Born  Richmond,  Va.,  Oct.  14,  1891. 
Studied  ASL.  of  N.  Y.,  St.  John's  Wood 
School,  London,  England.  Member: 
SI.  Covers  for  "Vanity  Fair,"  "Town 
and  Country."  Illustrations  for  "Satur- 
day Evening  Post,"  "Harper's,"  "Cen- 
tury,"   "McClure's,"    "Vanity  Fair." 

GROUT,  H.  L.,  care  of  Pedlar,  Inc.,  246 
Fifth  Ave.,   New  York,   N.   Y.    (I.) 

GROVER,  Oliver  Dennett,  9  East  Ontario 
St.,  Chicago,  111. 

P.— Born  Earlville,  111.,  Jan.  29,  1861. 
Pupil  of  Frank  Duveneck  in  Munich; 
Boulanger,  Lefebvre  and  Laurens  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1913;  Art 
Service  Lg. ;  Chicago  SA  (ex-pres.); 
Salma.C;  Alumni  Assoc.  AIC  (pres.); 
Port. P.;  NAC;  Cliff  Dwellers,  Chicago. 
Awards  :  First  Yerkes  prize,  Chi- 
cago SA,  1892;  silver  and  bronze 
medals,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Fine 
Arts  Bldg.  prize,  Chicago,  1906;  Munici- 
pal Art  League  and  Fortnightly  prize, 
Chicago,  1910;  Cahn  prize,  AIC  1913; 
Fine  Arts  Bldg.  prize,  SWA  1914; 
silver  medal,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915; 
French  memorial  gold  inedal,  AIC  1918. 
Work:  Decoration  of  Branford  (Conn.) 
Public  Library;  "The  Arts,"  Chicago 
Public  Library;  "Mending  the  Nets," 
Union.  League  Club,  Chicago;  "On  the 
Riva,"  "Mountain,  Sea  and  Cloud"  and 
"June  Morning,  Lake  Orta,"  Art  In- 
stitute of  Chicago;  "A  Fresh  Breeze," 
Art  Museum,  St.  Louis;  "Street  Scene, 
•Venice,"  Art  Institute.  Detroit;  "Gen- 
oese   Coast,"    Cincinnati    Art    Museum. 

GROVES,  Hannah  Cutler,  Pressor  Bldg., 
1710  Chestnut  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  h. 
214  King's  Highway,  East,  Haddonfield, 
N.  J. 

P.,  T.— Born  Camden,  N.  J.,  Dec.  30, 
1868.  Pupil  of  William  M.  Chase  and 
School  of  Design,   Phila. 

GRUB,  Henry,  Studio  53,  Greenwich  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  S.,  I.,  Arch.— Born  Baltimore,  Md., 
Dec.  10,  1884.  Pupil  of  Maynard,  Ward 
and  Bridgman.  Member:  Lg.  of 
N.Y.A.;    S.Indp.A. 


GRUBB,     Ethel     McAllister,    224    Presidio 
Ave.,  San  Francisco,  Calif. 
P. — Born    San   Francisco,    Calif.    Feb.   IS, 
1890.      Pupil   of    San   F.    AI;    ASL   of   N. 
Y.     M  e  m  1)  e  r  :      San  Francisco  AA. 

GRUENFELD,  Caspar,  209  East  31st  St., 
Los    Angeles,    Cal. 
P. — M  ember:    Cal.    AC. 

GRUPPE,  C(harles)  P(aul),  106  West  55th 
St.;  h.  138  Manhattan  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Picton,  Canada,  Sept.  3,  1860. 
Studied  in  Holland;  chiefly  self-taught. 
Member  :  NYWCC;  AWCS;  AC 
Phila.;  Salma.C.  1893;  NAC;  Rochester 
AC;  Pulchre  Studio,  The  Hague. 
Awards:  Gold  medal,  Rouen;  gold 
medal,  AAS  1902;  two  gold  medals, 
Paris;  silver  medals  for  oils  and 
for  water  color,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
bronze  medal,  Appalachian  Exp.,  Knox- 
ville,  1910;  Tuthill  prize,  AIC,  1917. 
Work:  "The  Old  Water  Wheel," 
Brooklyn  Institute  Museum;  "A  Dutch 
Canal,"  Inst,  of  Arts.  Detroit;  Na- 
tional Arts  Club,  New  York;  Art  Club 
of  Philadelphia;  "The  Meadow  Brooks," 
National  Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C. ; 
"Homeward  Way,"  Reading  (Pa.),  Mu- 
seum; water  color  in  Butler  Museum, 
Youngstown,   O. 

GRUPPE,  Emile  A(li3ert),  158  Manhat- 
tan Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  Nov. 
23,  1896.  Pupil  of  Bridgman,  John  F. 
Carlson ;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
Salma.C. 

GRUPPE,  Karl  H(einrich),  141  Sixth 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.,  P.— Born  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  Mar.  18, 
1893.  Pupil  of  Karl  Bitter.  Member: 
YS;  NSS  (asso.);  NL  Arch.  Lg.  (asso.). 
W  o  r  k  :  Final  figure,  Italian  towers, 
P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Memorial  Tab- 
let, City  Club,  New  York;  Memorial 
Tablet,   Princeton  Charter  Club. 

GUARINA,  Salvatore  Anthony,  care  of 
Salmagundi  Club,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,   N.  Y. 

P.,  E. — Born  Girgenti,  Sicily,  May  16, 
1883.  Pupil  of  Whittaker  and  Blum. 
Member:  Salma.C;  P-G.;  Wash. 
AC.  Award  :  Chevalier  of  the 
Crown  of  Italy.  Work:  "II  Mago 
della  Via  C,"  in  the  Modern  Art  Gal- 
lery,   Palermo,    Sicily. 

GUDEBROD,  Louis  A(lbert),  69  Silver 
St.,    Meriden,    Conn. 

S.— Born  Middletown,  Conn.,  Sept.  20, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Yale  Art  School;  ASL 
of  N.  Y.,  under  Mary  Lawrence  and 
Augustus  Saint  Gaudens;  Dampt  in 
Paris.  M  e  m  b  er  :  NSS  1902;  N.Y. Arch. 
Lg.  1902;  Conn.  AFA.;  New  Haven 
PCC.  Awards  :  Silver  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  gold  medal,  Pan- 
ama-Pacific Exp.,  San  Francisco,  Calif., 
1915.  Assistant  to  Saint  Gaudens  in 
Paris.  Director  of  Sculpture,  Charles- 
ton Exp.,  1902.  Work:  "Anderson 
Prison  Monument"  for  New  York  State 
at  Andersonville,  Ga. ;  "Henry  Clay 
Work  Memorial,"  Hartford,  Conn. 


437 


GUENTHER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


HAFFNER 


GUENTHER,     Lambert,     162     West     48th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I. — M  ember:     Salma.  C. 

GUERIN,  Jules,  50  E.  23rd  St.;  h.  24 
Gramercy  Park,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.,  P.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  Nov.  18, 
1866.  Pupil  of  Constant  and  Laurens 
in  Paris.  Member:  AWCS;  NYWCC; 
SI  1901;  Nat.Inst.AL;  The  Players; 
N.Y.Ach.Lg-.  1911;  Mural  P.;  ANA  1916; 
N.  Y.  Art  Com.  Awards  :  First 
Yerkes  medal,  Chicago;  hon.  mention, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  hon.  mention  for 
drawings,  Pan- Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Beck 
prize,  Phila.  WCC.  1913;  gold  medal, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Specialty, 
architectural  subjects  and  decoration. 
Director  of  color,  Panama-Pacific  Exp., 
San  Francisco,  1915.  Painted  decora- 
tions, in  Lincoln  Memorial,  Washington, 
D.  C,  and  Pennsylvania  Station,  New 
York. 

GUERNSEY,  Eleanor  Louise,  James  Mil- 
liken  University,  Decatur,  111.;  h.  2943 
Wabash  Ave.,  Chicago,  111.;  and  Fargo, 
N.  Dak. 

S.,  T.— Born  Terre  Haute,  Ind.,  Mar.  9, 
1878.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  ASL 
of  Chicago;  Ind.  SS.  Award:  Wal- 
ton prize,   AIC   1909. 

GUINNESS,    Mrs.    Benjamin,   8  Washing- 
ton  Sq.,   N.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember  :     N.A. Women  PS. 

GUINZBERG,    Frederic    Victor,    21    West 

89th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 
GUISLAIN,    J.     M.,    725    West    172nd    St., 

New  York,  N.  Y..  h.  178  rue  Americaine, 

Brussels.   Belgium. 

P.,  W. — Born  Louvain,  Belgium,  Mar.  27, 

1882. 

GULLEDGE,    Josephine,    Fairmont    Sem- 
inary,   Washington,    D.    C. 
P.— M  ember:   Wash.  WCC. 

GULLIVER,  IVIary,  1101  Orange  Ave., 
Eustis,   Florida. 

P.,  T.— Born  Norwich,  Conn,,  Sept.  9, 
1860.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts  School  under  Grundmann.  Vonnoh 
and  Crowninshield;  Whistler,  Collin, 
Delance,  Callot,  Lazar  and  Prinet  in 
Paris.       Member:     Copley     S.     1883. 

GUNN,  Archie,  120  West  49th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Inglesea  Bunga- 
low, East  Rockaway,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  E.,  T. — Born  Taunton,  Somerset- 
shire, England,  Oct.  11,  1863.  Pupil  of 
Archibald  Gunn,  P.  Calderon  in  London. 

GUNN,    Edwin,    252   Mt.   Hope   Ave.,    New 
York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

GUSSOW,  Bernard,  54  Charles  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Irvington,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T.— Born  in  Russia,  Jan.  1880.  Pu- 
pil of  Bonnat  in  Paris.  Member: 
S.  Indp.  A.;  Modern  Artists  of  America. 

GUSTIN,     Paul      Morgan,     1113-35th     St., 

Seattle,  Wash.      (P.) 
GUTHERSON,     F.     Gerome,     2007    Forbes 

St.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  A  A. 


GUTMANN,  Bernhard,  Silvermine  (R.  F. 
D.  No.  43),  New  Canaan,  Conn. 
I.,  P.,  T. — Born  Hamburg,  Germany, 
Sept.  26,  1869.  Studied  in  Diisseldorf 
and  Karlsruhe,  Germany,  and  in  Paris. 
Member:  Allied  AA;  S.Indp.A.; 
Salma.   C. 

GUYSI,    Alice    V.,    209    Longfellow    Ave., 
Detroit,   Mich. 

P.,  T.,  L.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.  Pupil 
of  Colarossi  Academy  and  of  Harry 
Thompson  in  Paris.  Lecturer  on  the 
history  and  criticism  of  art.  Mem- 
ber: Cincinnati  Woman's  AC;  Detroit 
SAC.  Supervisor  of  drawing  in  Public 
Schools,   Detroit. 

GUYSI,    Jeannette,    209    Longfellow   Ave., 
Detroit,  Mich. 

P.,  C,  T. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.  Pupil  of 
Colarossi  Acad,  and  of  Harry  Thomp- 
son in  Paris.  Member:  Cincinnati 
Woman's    AC;  Detroit    SAC;    Grafters, 

HAAG,  Charles,  Winnetka,  111.;  summer, 
Silvermine,  Norwalk,  Conn. 
S. — Born  Norrkoping,  Sweden,  1867. 
Pupil  of  Junghaenel  Ziegler  and  Injal- 
bert.  Awards  :  Bronze  and  silver 
medal;  first  prize,  Swedish-American 
Exhibition.  Work:  "Cornerstone  of 
the  Castle"  in  Winnetka;  "Accord," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York;  se- 
ries of  fountains,  among  them  the 
"American  Fountain,"  at  Johnstown, 
Pa,  Sculptor  of  Symbolic  and  Poetic 
Art. 

HAAS,    Fridolin,    41    Union    Square,    New 
York,  N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:  Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

HACK,  Gwendolyn   Dunlevy   Kelley   (Mrs. 

Charles  Wesley  Hack),  12  West  93rd 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Min.  P. — Born  Columbus,  O.,  Nov.  10, 
1877.  Pupil  of  Mme.  Debillemont,  Mme. 
Gallet  and  Julian  Academy  and  Col- 
arossi Academy  in  Paris.  Decorated  by 
Queen  Margherita  of  Italy  for  miniature 
painting. 

HACKETT,    Grace    E(dith),    297   Newbury 

St.,   Boston,   Mass. 

P.,  L— Born  Boston,  Sept.  22,  1874.  Pu- 
pil of  Mass.  Normal  Art  School  in  Bos- 
ton; H.  B.  Snell  in  Europe.  Member: 
Boston  SAC;  NYWCC.  Supervisor  of 
drawing   in   public   schools,    Boston. 

HADEN,   Elmer  S.,  Nyack,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born    in    United    States.      Pupil    of 
Flameng    in    Paris. 

HADLEY,     Mary     Hamilton,     355    Willow 

St.,   New   Haven,   Conn. 

P. — M  ember:  New  Haven  Paint  and 

Clay   Club. 

HADLEY,  Paul,  44  Union  Trust  Bldg.,  In- 
dianapolis; h.  Mooresville,  Ind. 
P..  D. — Born  Indianapolis,  Ind.  Pupil 
of  Pa.  Museum,  Phila.  Member: 
Ind.  AC.  Work:  Decoration  In 
Eagle's  Club,  Indianapolis,  Ind.;  design 
for  Indiana  flag  accepted  by  the  legis- 
lature,  1917. 

HAFFNER,   F.  J.,  684  Downing  St.,  Den- 
ver,  Colo. 
I. — M  ember:      Denver   AA. 


438 


1 


HAPTEL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


HALE 


HAFTEL,     Charles,     9     East     Tenth     St., 
New   York,    N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:  Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

HAGEN,  Louise,  130  West  57th  St.;  112 
Waverly  Place,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h. 
1300  North  Dearborn  St.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Mar.  16,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Henri,  Hawthorne,  and  Jonas 
Lie, 

HAGENDORN,  Max,  Bullard  St.,  Sharon, 
Mass. 

P.,  D.,  T.— Born  Stuttgart,  Germany, 
June  27,  1870.  Pupil  of  Faller,  Kurtz, 
Seubert  in  Stuttgart;  Gebhard  Fugel  in 
Munich;  Royal  Academy  of  Fine  and 
Industrial  Arts,  Stuttgart.  Award  : 
Prize,   St.  Louis  Exp.,   1904. 

HAGGIN,  Ben  All,  875  Madison  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P. — A  ward  :  Third  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD  1909.    Member:  ANA  1912;  Port. P. 

HAGIUDA,     Shinyo,    131    West    23rd    St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

HAGUE,  Maurice  S(tewart),  1194  Oak  St., 
Columbus,   O. 

Ldscp.  P. — Born  Richmond,  Jefferson 
Co.,  O.,  May  12,  1862.  Me  m  b  e  r  :  S. 
Indp.A.  Work  in  Columbus  Gallery 
of  Fine  Arts. 

HAIGH,  Eliza  V.,  Citizen  Bldg.,  Winsted, 
Conn. 
P. — M  ember:   Conn.   AFA. 

HAIGHT,  Mrs.  Charles  V.,  Norwood,  O. 
P. — Member:     Cincinnati  Woman's   AC. 

MAILMAN,  Johanna  K,  Woodwell  (Mrs. 
James  Hailman),  7010  Penn  Ave.,  Pitts- 
burgh,  Pa. 

P. — Born  Pittsburgh,  1871.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS;  Pittsburg  AA. 
Awards  :  Second  prize,  Pittsburgh 
AA,  1911;  silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915. 

HAINES,  B(owen)  Aylesworth,  402  Hay- 
ward  Bldg.,  Rochester,  N.  Y.;  h.  Hilton, 
N.    Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  in  Canada,  Dec.  21,  1858. 
Pupil  of  Frank  Smith  and  Mrs.  Emma 
Lampert  Cooper.  Member:  Roches- 
ter AC. 

HAINES,  Marie  Bruner,  "Studio  House," 
368  Peachtree  St.;  h.  45  Gammon  Ave., 
Atlanta,    Ga. 

P.,  I.,  C,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Cincinnati, 
Ohio,  Nov.  16,  1885.  Pupil  of  Noble, 
Volk,  Francis  Jones,  DuMond,  Dimitri 
Romanofsky,  Member:       Atlanta 

AA.;  PBC;  Arts  and  Crafts,  Atlanta. 
A  w"  a  r  d  :  1st  portrait  prize.  Southern 
Artists  Exhibition,  Atlanta,  1917;  1st 
prize  figure  painting,  Macon,  1920. 
Work:  "Dr.  F.  B.  Clark,"  "The 
Path,"   State  College,  Texas. 

HAKE,  Otto  E.,  29  Quincy  St.,  Chicago, 
111. 

P.,  I. — Born  in  Germany  in  1876.  Pupil 
of  AIC;  Matisse  in  Paris;  Debschitz  in 
Munich.  Member:  Palette  and 
Chisel  C;  Chicago  SA. 


HALBERG,  Charles  Edward,  1114  North 
Parkside  Ave.,  Austin,  111. 
Marine  P. — ^Born  Gothenburg,  Sweden, 
Jan.  15,  1855.  Member:  Chicago  SA; 
Swedish-American  AS.  Award  : 
Rosenwald  purchase  prize  ($200),  AIC 
1914,  Represented  in  Stockholm  Mu- 
seum and  Gothenburg  Museum. 

HALE,  Ellen  Day,  1748  N  St.,  Washing- 
ton, D.  C;  summer,  Lanesville  Station, 
Gloucester,    Mass. 

P. — Born  Worcester,  Mass.,  Feb.  It, 
1855;  daughter  of  Rev.  Edward  Everett 
Hale.  Member:  Wash.  SA;  Wash, 
WCC.  Award  :  Third  Corcoran  prize, 
S.Wash.A.,  1905.  Work:  "The  Lily," 
St.   Paul  Institute. 

HALE,    Gardner,    25    Charlton    St.,    New 
York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

HALE,  Lilian  Westcott  (Mrs.  Philip  L. 
Hale),  Federal  Hill,  Dedham,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Hartford,  Conn.,  Dec.  7,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Tarbell  and  Chase.  Mem- 
ber: Conn.  AFA;  Boston  GA. ;  Con- 
cord AA. ;  Port  P.  Award:  Bronze 
medal,  Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910;  gold 
medal  and  medal  of  honor,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  gold  medal,  Phila.,  AC, 
1919;  Potter  Palmer  Gold  medal,  AIC, 
1919.  Represented  in  the  collection  of 
the  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine 
Arts  and  the  Philadelphia  Club, 

HALE  (Mary  Powell)  Helme  (Mrs.  Wil- 
liam Hale),  45  Middle  St.,  Gloucester, 
Mass, 

P.,  S.,  T. — Born  Kingston,  R.  I.,  Apr.  12, 
1862.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  R.  I. 
School  of  Design;  Chase;  Saint  Gau- 
dens;  Duveneck;  Knowlton.  Member: 
Alumni  Assoc.  R.  I.  School  of  Design; 
Cape  Ann   Artists. 

HALE,  Philip  L(eslie),  Fenway  Studios, 
30  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  Fed- 
eral Hill,  213  Highland  St.,  Dedham, 
Mass. 

P.,  T.,  W.— Born  Boston,  May  21,  1865; 
son  of  Rev.  Edward  Everett  Hale.  Pu- 
pil of  J.  Alden  Weir  in  New  York. 
Member:  Phila.  AC;  St.  Botolph  C; 
Boston  GA;  ANA,  1917;  San  F.  AC; 
Fellowship  PAFA  (assoc);  Eclectics; 
Port.  P.  A  w  a  r  d  s  :  Hon,  mention,  Pan- 
Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  bronze  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  gold  medal,  Buenos 
Aires  Exp.,  1910;  Harris  silver  medal 
($500),  AIC  1914;  hors  concours  (jury  of 
awards),  P,-P,Exp,,  San  F.,  1915;  Proc- 
tor prize,  NAD  1916;  Lea  prize,  Phila. 
WCC,  1916;  popular  prize,  PAFA. 
1919.  Instructor  at  Boston  Mu- 
seum School  and  PAFA,  Work: 
"The  Crimson  Rambler,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy,  Philadelphia;  "Spirit  of  An- 
tique Art,"  Museum  of  Montevideo, 
Uruguay;  "Girl  with  Muff,"  Corcoran 
Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C;  "Girl  with 
Pearls,"  Philadelphia  AC. 

HALE,  Robert,  670  Portland  Ave..  St. 
Paul,   Minn. 

P.,  E.,  W.,  L.,  T,— Born  Chicago,  111., 
Feb.  26,  1876.  Work:  "Triptych  of 
Villaggio  Regina  Elena,"  in  Royal 
Palace,    Rome, 


439 


HALL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


HAMILTON 


HALL,  Florence  S(locum),  63  West  On- 
tario St.,  Chicago,  III.;  summer,  General 
Delivery,  Denver,  Colo. 
P.,  T. — Born  Grand  Rapids,  Mich.  Pupil 
of  AIC  and  Johansen.  Member: 
Chicago  ASL. 

HALL,  Mrs.  Frances  Devereux  Jones, 
"Spring-aide,"  Chestnut  Hill,  Philadel- 
phia,  Pa. 

P.,  S.,  Arch. — Born  New  Orleans,  La. 
Pupil  of  Sophie  Newcomb  College,  New 
Orleans;  John  Twachtman,  Howard 
Pyle,  Charles  Grafly.  Member  : 
Phila.  Alliance. 

HALL,  Frederick  G.,  120  Riverway,  Bos- 
ton,   Mass.    (P.) 

HALL,  George  F.,  806  Union  Trust  Bldg., 
Providence,    R.    I. 
P. — -M  ember:    Providence    AC. 

HALL,  Margaret,  Central  Ave.,  Wilmette, 
111. 
P.— M  ember:    Chicago   WCC. 

HALL,    Susan,    130    West    57th    St.,    New 
York,    N.    Y. 
S. — M  ember:       N.    A.    Women    PS, 

HALL,    T.    Victor,    115    East    34th    St.,    57 
West  37th   St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — Member:     Salma.  C. 

HALL,  Thomas,  Holbein  Studio,  63  West 
Ontario  St.;  h.  5757  Fifth  Ave.,  Chicago, 
111. 

P.— Born  in  Sweden,  Apr.  23,  1883.  Pu- 
pil of  Freer,  Wolcott,  Reynolds.  M  e  m- 
ber:  S.IndpA. ;  Swedish  Soc,  Chi- 
cago; Scandinavian  Am.  Soc,  New 
York. 

HALL,  W.  W.,  235  South  11th  St.,  Phila- 
delphia,   Pa.    (P.) 

HALLADAY,  Milton  R.,  Providence  Jour- 
nal Co.,  Providence,  R.  I. 
I. — M  ember:    Providence   AC. 

HALLER,    Alfred    J.,    2203    Center    Ave., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

HALLIDAY,  Laura.  See  Mrs.  L.  H.  De 
Beukelaer. 

HALLOWELL,  George  H(awley),  299 
Park  Ave.,  Arlington  Heights,  Mass.; 
summer,  Jefferson  Highlands,  N.  H. 
P.,  I.,  C,  Arch.— Born  Boston,  Dec.  5, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Benson  and  Tarbell  in 
painting;  Rotch  and  H.  L.  Warren  in 
architecture.  Member:  Boston  WCC; 
NYWCC  1904.  Awards:  Beal  prize, 
NYWCC  1904;  gold  medal,  St.  Louis 
Lxp.,  1904;  gold  medal  tor  water  colors, 
P.-P.Exp.,    San   F.,    191&. 

HALLOWELL,    May.     See  Mrs.  Loud. 

HAMACHI,  Seimatsu,  53  Kast  59th  St. 
New  York,   N.   Y.      (P.JI 

HAMBIDGE,  Jay,  Yale  tTnlverslty  Press, 

New  Plaven,    Conn. 

I.,  P.,  W.,  L. — Born  Slmcoe,  Canada, 
Jan.  13,  1867.  Pupil  of  ASL  and  Chase 
in  New  York.  Member:  Graphic  AC 
of  Toronto.  Discoverer  of  Dynamic  Sym- 
metry. 

HAMILTON,  Agnes,  Ft.  Wayne,  Ind.;  and 
146  W.  Lehigh  Ave.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:      Fellowship   PAFA. 


HAMILTON,  Mrs  Ethel  Heaven,  9  West 
14th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Pontoosuc  Studio,  Lanesboro,  Mass. 
P.  T.— Born  in  Mexico,  July  14,  1871. 
Pupil  of  Chase,  MacMonnies,  Colorossi 
School,  Paris.  Member:  N.  A. 
Women  PS;   NYWCC. 

HAMILTON,  George  (Theodore),  37  East 
Hancock  Ave.,  Detroit,  Mich. 
I.,  T.,  W.,  L.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa., 
Feb.  25,  1882.  Pupil  of  Pa.  Museum 
School  of  Industrial  Art  and  Denman 
Ross.  Member:  Detroit  SAC;  De- 
troit FAS;  Alliance.  Director  of  De- 
troit School  of  Design  since   1911. 

HAMILTON,  Hamilton,  R.  F.  D.  43,  Nor- 
walk,    Conn. 

P.— Born  1847.  Member:  ANA  1886, 
NA  1889;  AWCS.  Work  :  "The  Valley 
of  Fountains,"  "Sunset  After  a  Storm" 
and  '"Summer  in  the  North  Woods," 
Fine  Arts   Academy,    Buffalo,    N.    Y. 

HAMILTON,  Helen,  Silvermine,  Nor- 
walk,   Conn.    (P.) 

HAMILTON,      J(ames)      Whiteiaw,      The 

Grange,  Helensburgh,  Scotland. 
P. — Born  Glasgow,  Scotland,  Nov.  26, 
1860.  Pupil  of  Dagnan-Bouveret,  A. 
Morot.  Member:  ARSA;  RSS  of 
Painters  in  Water  Color;  Chevaher  of 
the  Order  of  the  Crown  of  Italy, 
Associate  of  the  Royal  Scottish  Acad- 
emy, Royal  Glasgow  Institute  of  Fine 
Arts.  Award:  Gold  medal.  Int.  Exp., 
Munich,  1905.  Works:  "Richmond 
Castle",  the  Corporation  of  Glasgow; 
"Landscape  Kircudbright,"  the  Scottish 
Modern  Arts  Asso.,  Edinburgh;  "Clyde 
Ship  Yard",  City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis; 
"Venice",  Albright  Art  Gallery,  Buf- 
falo; "A  Scottish  Farm",  Carnegie  Inst., 
Pittsburgh;  "Summer  Night",  Royal 
Pinakothek,   Munich. 

HAMILTON,     Jessie,     Clinton     St.,     Fort 
Wayne,   Ind. 
P. — M  ember:      Fellowship    PAFA. 

HAMILTON,  John  McLure,  Hermitage, 
Kingston-on-Thames,  England;  and 
Stone  Hall,  Wolf  Castle,  Pembrokeshire, 
England. 

Port.  P.,  I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Jan. 
31,  1853.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Royal  Acad, 
in  Antwerp;  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  in 
Paris.  Member:  Phila. WCC  (hon.); 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Royal  Soc.  of  Port. 
P.;  Pastel  Soc.  Award  :  Hon.  men- 
tion, Paris  Salon,  1892;  gold  medal, 
Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  gold  medal, 
St.  Loizis  Exp.,  1904;  hors  concours 
(jury  of  awards),  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F., 
iyi5;  gold  medal  of  honor,  PAFA,  1918. 
Work:  "Gladstone  at  Downing  Street," 
"Hon.  Richard  Vaux,"  "George  Mere- 
dith," "William  T.  Richards,"  "Henry 
Thouron"  and  "Cardinal  Manning," 
Pennsylvania  Academy,  Philadelphia; 
"Sketch  No.  4,"  Carnegie  Institute, 
Pittsburgh,  "Gladstone,"  Luxembourg 
Museum,  Paris;  "Prof.  Tyndall,"  "Ais- 
low  Ford,"  "Cosmo  Monkhouse";  Ridley 
Corbet,"  Nat.  Gallery,  London. 


440 


HAMILTON 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


HANSELL 


HAMILTON,  Norah,  62  Washington  Sq., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  Hull  House,  Chi- 
cago, 111. 

E.— Born  Fort  Wayne,  Ind.,  1873.  Pupil 
of  Cox  in  New  York;  Whistler  in  Paris. 
Member:     Chicago    SE. 

HAMILTON,  Robert,  9  West  14th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Pontoosuc  Studio. 
I^anesboro,    Mass. 

P.,  T." — Born  County  Down,  Ireland. 
Studied   in  London   and  Paris. 

HAMILTON,  Wilbur  Dean,  Trinity  Court, 
Dartmouth  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P.,  I.,  C— Born  Somerfield,  Ohio,  1864. 
Pupil  of  Eicole  des  Beaux-Arts  in  Paris. 
Member:  Copley  S.  1903 ;  Boston  GA; 
St.  Botolph  C.  Awards:  Jordan 
prize  in  Boston;  medal,  Atlanta  Exp., 
1895;  gold  medal,  P,-P.  Exp.,  San  F., 
1915.  W  o  r  k  :  "Beacon  Street,  Bos- 
ton," R.  I.  School  of  Design,  Providence. 
Instructor  at  Mass.  Normal  Art  School. 
W  o  r  k  in  Boston  Museum,  Boston 
University,   American  University,   etc. 

HAMMELL,    Mrs.    George    M.,    2    Collins 
PI.,    Cincinnati,    O. 
P. — M  ember:    Cinn.   Woman's  AC. 

Hammer,   Oscar  F.,   Leechburg,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:      Pittsburgh  AA. 

HAMMER,  Trygve,  1931  Broadway,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Douglaston,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
S.,  C. — Born  Arendal,  Norway,  Sept.  6, 
1878.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  and  NAD. 
Member:      S.Indp.A. ;    Lg.    of   N.Y.A. 

HAMMERSLOUGH,     Ruth     H(elprin),     31 

Rue  Campagne   Ire,   Paris,   France. 
P.— Born    Washington,    D.    C,    Sept.    3, 
1883.      Pupil   of   Chase. 

HAMMERSMITH,  Paul,  116  Michigan  St.; 
h.  567  Belleview  PL,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 
E.— Born  Naperville,  111.,  March  17,  1857. 
Self-taught.  Member:  Milwaukee  AS; 
Cal.  SE;  Chicago  SE;  Wisconsin  PS. 
Work  in:  New  York  Public  Library; 
Newark  Public  Library.  Award  : 
Bronze  medal  for  etching,  St.  Paul  Inst., 
1916;  silver  medal  for  etching,  St.  Paul 
Inst.,   1918. 

HAMMITT,  Clawson  S(hakespeare),  12th 
and  Jefferson  St.;  h.  1108  Jefferson  St., 
Wilmington,    Del. 

P.,  T.— Born  Wilmington,  Del.,  Nov.  7, 
1857.  Pupil  of  Eakins  and  Chase;  Con- 
stant and  Lefebvre,  Paris.  Member: 
Fellow.ship  PAFA;  AAS;  Phila.  Sketch 
C.  Work:  Portraits  of  James  Lati- 
mer and  Henry  Latimer,  in  Diplomatic 
Gallery,  U.  S.  Capitol;  25  portraits  in 
State  House,  Dover,  Del.;  4  portraits  in 
State  College,  Newark,  Del.;  portraits 
of  Delaware  naval  heroes  on  Battleship 
Delaware. 

HAMMON,  Walter  E.,  4003  Aurora  Ave., 
Seattle,    Wash.    (S.) 

HAMMOND,  Arthur  J.,  424  Humphrey  St., 
h.  81  King  St.,  Swampscott,  Mass.;  sum- 
mer, Deei-field,  N.   H. 

P. — Born  Vernon,  Conn.,  Apr.  3,  1875. 
Pupil  of  Eric  Pape,  Charles  Woodbury 
and  G.  L.  Noyes.  Member:  Conn. 
AFA.  A  wa  r  d  :  Hon.  mention.  Conn. 
AFA,   1919. 


H.^MMOND,  Edith,  1701  Chase  Ave., 
Rogers  Park,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  S.,  T.— Born  Omaha,  Neb.  Pupil  of 
Fursman,  Polasek,  Vanderpoel,  Clute, 
Mulligan.  Member:  Alumni  AIC; 
Chicago  ASL.  Work:  Painting  in 
civic  art  collection,  Chicago  Municipal 
Pier.  Assistant  instructor.  Summer 
School  of  Painting,    Saugatuck,    Mich. 

HAMOND,  Richard  Henry,  806  Barr  St., 
Cincinnati,    O. 

P. — Born  Cincinnati,  Aug.  2,  1854.  Pupil 
of  Noble,  Weber  and  Duveneck  in  Cin- 
cinnati. Member:  Cincinnati  AC; 
Poster  Artists'  Assoc,  of  America. 
Awards:  Silver  medal,  1873;  gold 
medal,   1877. 

HANCOCK,  Joseph  Lane,  Lakeside, 
Mich.;  and  5454  University  Ave.,  Chi- 
cago,   111. 

Ldscp.P.— Born  Chicago,  April  12,  1864. 
Pupil  of  AIC. 

HANDFORTH,  T.  S.,  421  North  Sixth  St., 
Tacoma,    Wash.    (P.) 

HANDY,   Ray   D.,  News-Tribune;   h.   1922 
E.   Superior  St.,  Duluth,  Minn. 
I- — Born     Minneapolis,     Aug.     21,     1877. 
Cartoonist   on  Duluth   News-Tribune. 

HANEY,    Irene  W.,   6828  Lyric   St.,   Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

HANEY,  James  Parton,  500  Park  Ave.: 
h.  1233  Third  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T.,  W.,  L.— Born  New  York,  Apr.  16, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Bell,  Du  Mond,  Mucha  and 
Woodbury.  Member:  Salma.C.  1901; 
N.Y.Municipal  A.S.;  MacD.C;  School 
Crafts  C.  (pres.  1901);  School  Art  Lg. 
Nat.  Educational  Assoc;  Council  of 
Supervisors  of  Manual  Arts  (pres.  1901- 
04);  Nat.  Soc.  for  Promotion  of  Indus- 
trial Education  (sect.  1908);  Int.  Fed. 
for  Art  Teaching;  Nat.  Asso.  Decora- 
tive Arts  and  Industries,  1918-19.  Dir. 
of  art,  elementary  public  schools  of  New 
York  (Manhattan  and  Bronx),  1896- 
1909;  Dir.  of  art,  high  schools  of  New 
York,  since  1909;  Dir.  of  art.  N.  Y 
Univ.    Summer    School    since    1907. 

HANNA,    Theodore,    212   Lexington   Ave., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

HANNA, 

N.  J. 

I.,  P.— Born  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  Apr.  10, 
1872.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber: SI  1904;  Salma.  C;  Guild  of  Free 
Lance  Artists.  Work  in  National  Art 
Gallery,   Sydney,  N.   S.  W.,  Australia. 

HANNAFORD,     Alice     Ide     (Mrs.    Foster 

Hannaford),  1900  Dupont  Ave.,  South, 
Minneapolis,  Minn.;  summer,  Manitou 
Island,  White  Bear,  Minn. 
S. — Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Aug.  28,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Eraser  and  ASL  of  N.Y. 
Work:  "Wigwam  Dance,"  Brooklyn 
Institute  Museum. 

HANSELL,     Ingeborg,     Lawrence     Park, 
Bronxville,   N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 


T(homas)      K(ing),      Caldwell, 


441 


HANSEN 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


HARHDERGER 


HANSEN,  Armin  Carl,  716  Pacific  St.; 
h.  621  Cass  St.,  Monterey,  Calif. 
P.,  E.,  T.— Born  San  Francisco,  Calif. 
Oct.  23,  1886.  Pupil  of  Mathews;  Grethe 
at  Royal  Academy,  Stuttgart,  Germany. 
Member:  San  F.  AA;  Calif.  SE; 
Salma.  C;  Allied  AA,  Wis.  PS. 
Societe  Royale  des  Beaux-Arts,  Brus- 
sels. Awards  :  Prize  International 
Exp.,  Brussels.  1910;  silver  medal,  Pan- 
ama-Pacific Exp.,  1915;  silver  medals 
for  drawing  and  painting,  San  F.  AA. 
purchase  prize,  San  F.  AA.  1918;  gold 
medals  for  drawing  and  painting,  San 
F.  AA,  1919;  first  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD,  1920.  Represented  in  Memorial 
Museum,  San  Francisco;  Los  Angeles 
Museum  of  History,  Science  and  Art; 
Palace  of  Fine  Arts,   San  Francisco. 

HANSEN,  Hans  Peter,  467  West  159th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T.— Born  in  Denmark,  Oct.  4,  1881. 
Member:  Kunst  Gewerbe  Verein. 
Award  :  Mention,  collaborative  com- 
petition, N.Y.Arch.Lg.,  1915.  Instructor 
Art  Students'  League,  New  York. 

HANSON,    Floy    Katherine,    1947    Broad- 
way, New  York,  N.  Y.   (P.) 

HANSON,  Henry  T(hurland),  225  West 
39th  St.;  h.  867  West  181st  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  228  2nd  Ave., 
Laurel  Beach,  Milford,  Conn. 
P.,  I.— Born  Chicago.  111.,  Aug.  12,  1888. 
Pupil  of  DuMond,  Bridgman,  Snell  and 
John  Carlson. 

Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
NYWCC,   Art    Direc- 


HANSON,  Maude, 
P. — M  ember: 
tors'  Club. 

Leopold,  114  Roland  Ave. 


Pittsburgh   AA. 


HANWELL,  T. 
Crafton,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember 

HAPGOOD,  Alice  Hathaway  (Mrs.  Harold 
Goodwin,  Jr.),  3927  Locust  St.,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa. ;  summer,  Weekapang,  R.  I. 
P.,  I.,  C,  T. — Born  Hartford,  Conn., 
Nov.  5,  1893.  Pupil  of  Breckenridge 
and   Emil   Carlsen. 

HARBESON,  Georgiana  (Newcomb) 
Brown,  (Mrs.  John  F.  Harbeson),  5301 
Knox  St.,  Germantown,  Pa. 
P.,  I.,  C. — Born  New  Haven,  Conn.,  May 
13,  1894.  Pupil  of  Hugh  Breckenridge, 
Joseph  T.  Pearson,  Jr.,  Dan.  Garber, 
Violet  Oakley.  Member:  Fellow- 
ship PAFA;  Philadelphia  Alliance; 
Plastic  C. 

HARDENBERGH,  H.  Elizabeth  R(ut. 
gers),  939  Eighth  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  Byrdcliffe,  Woodstock, 
Ulster  Co.,  N.  Y. 

P.,C. — Born  New  Brunswick,  N.  J.  Pu- 
pil of  H.  B.  Snell  and  Mrs.  E.  M.  Scott. 
Member:  Boston  SAC;  N.  A.  Wo- 
men PS;  NYWCC.     Specialty,  pottery. 

HARDING,  Charlotte.  See  Mrs.  James 
A.    Brown. 

HARDING,  George,  10  South  18th  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Mural  Dec,  I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa., 
Oct.  2,  1882.  Pupil  of  PAFA  and  Howard 
Pyle  and  studied  abroad.  Member: 
SI;  Salma.  C;  Phila  WCC;  Phila.  AC; 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila.  Sketch  C;  N.  Y. 


Arch.  Lg. ;  Phila.  Alliance.  Special  artist, 
"Harper's  Magazine,"  around  the  world, 
1913.  Mural  decorations.  Hotel  Traymore, 
Atlantic  City,  N;  J.  "Sourabaya  Har- 
bor," Phila.  Art  Club;  Stanley  Theatre, 
Philadelphia  and  Capitol  Theatre,  Tren- 
ton; War  Dept.  Collection,  Smithsonian 
Institution,  Washington,  D.  C.  Imperial 
War  Museum  Library,  London.  M  e  m  - 
b  er  of  Faculty,  Architectural  Dept., 
Univ.  of  Pa.  Official  artist,  A.  E.  F., 
1918.  Member  of  Faculty  of  the 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts, 
and  Arch.  Dept.,  University  of  Pa. 

HARDWICK,  Alice  R.  (Mrs.  Melbourne 
H.  Hard  wick),  486  Boylston  St.,  Boston, 
Mass.;  summer,  Annisquam,  Mass. 
P.,  W.,  T.— Born  Chicago,  Jan.  18,  1876. 
Pupil  of  Du  Mond,  Birge  Harrison,  Mel- 
bourne H.  Hardwick;  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
studied  in  Holland  and  Belgium.  Mem- 
ber:  Concord  AA;  S.  Indp.  A.;  Copley  S. 

HARDY,  Anna  E.,  South  Orrington,  Me. 
P.— Born  Bangor,  Jan.  26,  1839.  Pupil 
of  George  Jeanin  in  Paris;  Abbott  H. 
Thayer  in  Dublin,  N.  H.  Specialty, 
flowers. 

HARDY,  Mrs.  Beulah  Greenough,  Pelham 
Court,  Mt.  Airy,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  sum- 
mer, 30  Court  St.,  Westfield,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Providence,  R.  I.  Pupil  of 
Collin,  Merson,  Courtois  and  Virginia 
Reynolds  in  Paris;  studied  also  in 
Boston  and  London.  Member:  Soc. 
of  Miniaturists,  London;  Plastic  C.; 
Phila.  Alliance. 

HARDY,   Charles,   27  East  22nd   St.,   New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  White  Plains,  N.  Y. 
L— Born     in     England,     May     29,     1888. 
Pupil    of   E.    P.    Kinsella.      Member: 
Guild   of  Free  Lance  A. 

HARDY,  Horace  W.,  3555  North  11th  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

HARDY,  Walter  Manly,  159  Wilson  St., 
Brewer,   Me. 

P.,  L— Born  Brewer,  1877.  Pupil  of 
Lazar  in  Paris;  Blum,  Brush,  Cox, 
Clark   and   Bridgman   in   New   York. 

HARE,    Elizabeth    Sage,    35    Fifth    Ave., 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — M  ember:    Conn.    AFA. 

HARE,  J.  Knowles,  27  East  27th  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

I.— Born  Montclair,  N.  J.,  Jan.  19,  1882. 
Designer  of  covers  for  "Saturday  Even- 
ing Post",  "American  Magazine",  etc. 

HARER,  Frederick  W.,  319  Walnut  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

E. — Born  Blossburg,  Pa.,  Nov.  15,  1880. 
Pupil  of  PAFA  vmder  Anshutz  and 
Chase.  Member:  Chicago  SE;  Fel- 
lowship PAFA.  Represented  in  Penn- 
sylvania Acedemy  of  the  Fine  Arts. 

HARGENS,    Charles,    Jr.,    216    South    45th 

St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 
HARHBERGER,        Mrs.        Florence        E. 

Smith,  223  West  Fayette  St.,   Syracuse, 

N.    Y. 

P.,  L,  T.— Born  Freetown,  Cortland  Co., 

N.  Y.,  Nov.  19,  1863.     Pupil  of  ASL  and 

Cooper     Union     in     New     York,     under 


442 


HARLAND 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


HARRISON 


Brush,  J.  Alden  Weir,  Shirlaw  and 
Frederick  Freer.  Member:  Utica 
Art  C;  Utica  Sketch  C. 

HARLAND,  Mary,  1323  14th  St.,  Santa 
Monica,   Cal. 

P.— Born  Yorkshire,  Eng.,  Oct.  8,  1863. 
Studied  in  London,  Dresden  and  Paris. 
Member:  Cal.Soc.Min.P.  Award  : 
Silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 

HARLES,  Victor  Joseph.  Hanley  Road  & 
Canton  Ave.,  Clayton,  Mo. 
P.,    T.— Born    St.    Louis,    Mo.,    Feb.    22, 
1894.       Pupil    of    St.    Louis    School    FA. 
Member:     St.  Louis  AL. 

HARLEY,  Charles  R(ichard),  709  West 
169th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  New  Hope, 
Pa. 

S. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  March  25, 
1864.  Pupil  of  Spring  Garden  Inst,  and 
of  PAFA  in  Philadelphia;  Julian 
Academy,  Chapu,  Falguiere  and  Dampt 
in  Paris,  Member:  Boston  SAC; 
N.Y.ArchLg.  1902;  Fellowship  PAFA. 
Award  :  Bronze  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp., 
Buffalo,    1901. 

HARLOW,  H(arry)  IVl(errlck)  S(utton), 
47  Fourth  Ave.,  Haverhill,  Mass. 
P.,  C— Born  Haverhill,  July  19,  1882. 
Pupil  of  Eric  Pape  in  Boston.  Mem- 
ber: Haverhill  SAC.  Work:  Mural 
decorations.  Trinity  Church,  Haverhill, 
Mass.;  St.  Martin  banner,  St.  Augustine 
and  St.  Martin  Mission  Church,  Boston, 
Mass.;  panels  in  Chapel  of  the  Society 
of  the  Divine  Compassion,  New  York 
City;  panels  in  Christ  Church,  Ports- 
mouth,  N.   H.     Specialty,    illumination. 

HARIVION,  Evelyn  Shaylor,  147  Pine  St., 
Portland,    Me.    (Min.  P.) 

HARPER,   Lois,  612  West  115th  St.,   New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

HARPER,  Marian  Dunlap,  847  Grove  St., 
Giencoe,  111. 

Min.  P. — Studied  at  AIC  and  in  Paris. 
Member:  Chicago  SA;  Chicago  S. 
Min.  P.;  Chicago  AG, 

HARRIS,       A(lexandrina)        R(obertson), 

Quincy  Arms,  186  Quincy  St.,  Brooklyn, 
N.  Y. 

Min.  P. — Born  Aberdeen,  Scotland,  July 
11,  1886.  Pupil  of  Phila.  Art  School 
under  Whitaker;  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Am. 
School  of  Min.  P.  Member:  N. 
A.  Women  PS;  Brooklyn  S.  Min.  P.;  Pa. 
Soc.   Min.   P. 

HARRIS,  Charles  X.,  356  Mountain  Road, 
West  Hoboken,  N.  J. 
P.— Born  Foxcroft,  Me.,  1856.  Pupil  of 
Cabanel  in  Paris.  Work  in:  Me- 
morial Hall,  Philadelphia;  portraits 
in  Manor  Hall,  Yonkers;  Mercantile 
Library;  Lambs'  Club,  New  York; 
stained  glass  window,  Doylestown,  Pa.; 
Perc6,   Quebec,   Canada. 

HARRIS,  George  E(dgerly),  356  Mountain 
Rd.,  West  Hoboken,  N.  J. 
P. — Born    Milford    Hundred,    Del.,    Oct. 
22,   1898.      Pupil  of  NAD. 

HARRIS,     Sarah     L.,     5538     Camelia     St., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 


HARRIS,  William  Laurel,  120  Central 
Park  South,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
R.  F.  D.  No.  1,  Lake  George,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P.,  C,  W.,  L.— Born  New  York, 
N.  Y.,  Feb.  18,  1870.  Pupil  of  T.  W. 
Dewing  in  New  York;  Gerome,  Gallan"37 
Lefebvre  and  Doucet  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Mural  P. ;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg. 
1898;  NAC;  N.Y.Municipal  AS  (pres. 
1912-14;  A.  Aid  S. ;  MacD.C;  Fine  Arts 
Fed.  of  N.  Y.  Director  of  the  Art  Center; 
contributing  editor,  "Good  Furniture 
Magazine."  Work:  "St  Francis  de 
Sales  before  Pope  Clement  VIII,"  Cath- 
olic University,  Washington;  "The 
Holy  Sacrifice"  and  "Our  Lady  of 
the  Lake,"        St.        Mary's,        Lake 

George,  N.  Y.;  "The  Crucifixion"  and 
thirty  other  large  mural  paintings  with 
the  entire  decorative  scheme  of  the 
Paulist  Church,  New  York;  Tapestry 
back  to  the  Cardinal's  Throne,  St. 
Patrick's  Cathedral,  New  York;  decora- 
tive scheme  and  mural  paintings  for 
Corpus  Christi  Chapel,  New  York;  decor- 
ations and  color  harmonies  at  St.  Nich- 
olas of  the  Children,  Passaic,  N.  J.; 
decorations  in  the  Catholic  Club,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

HARRISON,  Helen,  477  State  St.,  Bridge- 
port,  Conn. 
P. — M  ember:  New  Haven  PCC. 

HARRISON,    (Lovell)    Birge,    New    Hope, 
Pa. 

P.,  I.,  T.,  W.— Born  Philadelphia,  Oct. 
28,  1854.  Pupil  of  Cabanel  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1902,  NA  1910;  SAA 
1882;  Nat. Inst. A.L.;  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Century  Assoc;  NAC  (life);  MacD.C; 
NYWCC;  Allied  AA;  Salma.C;  Ends 
of  the  Earth  Club;  Rochester  AC. 
Award  :  'Silver  medal,  Paris  Exp., 
1889;  medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago, 
1893;  bronze  medal.  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  2nd  Corcorcan  prize,  S.  Wash- 
ington A.,  1904;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis, 
Exp.,  1904;  gold  medal,  AAS  Phila.,  1907; 
1st  medal,  Dallas,  Tex.,  1912;  "Hors  Con- 
cours,"  Paris  Salon.  Founder,  summer 
school  of  ASL  of  N.Y.  Author  of 
"Landscape  Painting."  Work:  "The 
Mirror,"  Wilstach  Gallery,  Philadelphia; 
"Autumn  Sunset"  and  "A  Glimpse  of 
the  St.  Lawrence."  Pennsylvania 
Academy,  Philadelphia;  "Fifth  Avenue 
at  Twilight,"  Institute  of  Arts,  Detroit; 
museums  at  Quimper  and  Marseilles, 
France;  Spartanburg,  S.  C;  "Wood- 
stock Meadows,"  Toledo  Museum  of 
Fine  Arts;  "Rose  and  Silver  Moonrise," 
Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C; 
"The  Flatiron  After  Rain,"  City  Art 
Museum,  St.  Louis;  "Drifting,"  St.  Paul 
Institute;  "Summer  Night,"  Omaha  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts;  "Early  Lamplight," 
municipal  collection,  Spartanburg,  S.  C; 
"Moonlight  on  the  St.  Lawrence,"  mu- 
nicipal collection,  Oakland,  Cal.;  "Sun- 
set on  the  St.  Charles,"  Art  Association, 
Lincoln,  Neb.;  "The  Harbor  Light," 
Herron  Art  Institute,  Indianapolis; 
"Quebec  from  the  Harbor,"  Atlanta 
Art  Association;  "Early  Candle-light," 
Brooks  Memorial  Art  Gallery,  Memphis, 
Tenn,;  "Floating  Ice,"  California  Club, 
Los  Angeles;  "The  Soaring  Cloud,"  Na- 


443 


HARRISON 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


HARTSON 


tional  Arts  Club.  New  York;  "St. 
Michael's,  Charleston,"  and  "Bridge  at 
Cos  Cob,"  Mahoning  Institute  of  Art, 
Youngstov^^n,  O.;  "Bryant  Park  Twi- 
light," Lawrence  (Kan.)  Art  Museum; 
"Calling  Home  the  Cows,"  Chicago  Art 
Institute.  Represented  in  collections  of 
Dallas  (Tex.)  Art  Asso.;  Richmond 
(Ind.)  Art  Asso.;  Calumet  Club.  New 
York;  Chicago  Club,  Chicago;  "Moon- 
light on  the  River,"  Luxembourg,  Paris. 

HARRISON,  (Thomas)  Alexander,  6  Rue 
du  Val  de  Grace,  Paris,  France;  and 
Century  Assoc,  7  West  43d  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Jan.  17, 
1853.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Ecole  des  Beaux- 
Arts,  Bastien-Lepage  and  Gerome  in 
Paris.  Member:  SAA  1885;  ANA 
1898,  NA  1901;  AC  Phila. ;  Paris  SAC; 
Fellowship  Penna.  Acad,  of  Fine  Arts; 
Century  Assoc;  Phila.WCC(hon.) ;  Cer- 
cle  d'Union  Artistique;  SocNat.des 
Beaux- Arts;  Royal  Inst,  of  Painters  in 
Oil  Colors,  London;  Socof  Secessionists, 
Berlin  and  Munich  (cor.);  Nat.Inst.A.L. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1885;  Temple  silver  medal,  PAFA  1887; 
gold  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1889;  second 
medal,  Munich  Salon,  1891;  medal  of 
honor,  Brussels  and  Ghent  1892;  gold 
medal  of  honor,  PAFA  1894;  medals  of 
honor  at  Vienna  and  Berlin.  Chevalier 
of  Legion  of  Honor  1889,  Officer  1901; 
Officer  of  Public  Instruction,  by  French 
Government.  Work:  "L'Arcadie"  and 
"Solitude,"  Luxembourg  Museum,  Paris; 
"The  Wave,"  Pennsylvania  Academy, 
Philadelphia;  "Crepuscule,"  St.  Louis 
Museum;  "Crepuscule,"  Corcoran  Gal- 
lery, Washington,  D.  C. ;  "Sables  et 
Lune,"  Quimper  Museum,  France;  "Les 
Amateurs,"  Art  Institute,  Chicago; 
"Nude,"  Royal  Gallery,  Dresden;  "A 
Festival  Night,"  "Boys  Bathing,  East 
Hampton,"  "Le  Grand  Miroir"  and 
"Marine,"  Wilstach  Gallery,  Phila- 
delphia; "Castles  in  Spain,"  Metropoli- 
tan Museum,  New  York;  "Golden 
Dunes,"   St.   Paul  Institute. 

HARRITON,  Abraham,  272  Third  Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  E. — Born  Bucharest,  Roumania,  Feb. 
9,  1893.  Pupil  of  J.  W.  Maynard  and 
C.  F.  Mielatz.  Member:  S.  Indp.  A. 
Represented  in  Oakland  (Cal.)  Public 
Museum. 

HARSH  E,  Robert  B.,  2764  Hampton  Ct., 
Chicago,   111. 

P.,  E.,  T.,  W.— Born  Salisbury,  Mo.,  May 
26,  1879.  Pupil  of  AIC;  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
Univ.  of  Mo.;  Teachers  Col.,  New  York, 
under  Dow;  Laszlo  in  London;  Cola- 
rossi  Academy  in  Paris.  Member: 
Cal.SE  (hon.);  Brooklyn  SE  rhon); 
Chicago  SE;  N.Y.SE.  Work  in: 
Luxembourg  Museum,  Paris.  Asst. 
chief,  Dept.  of  Fine  Arts,  Panama- 
Pacific  Exp.,  San  Francisco,  1915;  ex- 
asst.  director,  Dept.  of  Fine  Arts,  Car- 
negie Institute,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Director 
of  AIC. 

HART  (George  Overbury),  Coytesville, 
N.  J. 

P.— Born  Cairo,  111.,  May  10,  1868.  Self- 
taught.      Member:     AWCS. 


HART,  Lance  W.,  36 1/,  Heron  St.,  Aber- 
deen,  Wash.    (P.) 

HART,     Leon,    311    West    24th    St.,    New 
York.   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 

HART,  Letitia  B(ennet),  94  First  Place, 
Brooklyn,  New  York;  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Lakeville,   Conn. 

P. — Born  New  York,  Apr.  20,  1867.  Pu- 
pil of  her  father,  Jam.es  M.  Hart;  NAD 
under  Edgar  M.  Ward.  Award  : 
Dodge  prize,  NAD  1898.  Work:  Miss 
Mattie  Harris,  Virginia  College, 
Roanoke. 

HART,  William  H(oward),  131  East  66th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Fishkill-on-Hudson,  N.  Y., 
1863.  Pupil  of  ASL  and  J.  Alden  Weir 
in  New  York;  Boulanger  and  Lefebvre 
in    Paris.      Member:    Salma.C.    1898. 

HARTING,  G(eorge)  W.,  51  West  10th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.,  P.,  T.— Born  Little  Falls,  Minn.,  Dec. 
11,  1877.  Pupil  of  Henri,  Chase,  Mora, 
Miller  and  Koehler.  Member:  SI 
1912;  Dutch  Treat  C;  'Salma  C,  1917. 
Illustraiions  in  magazines — "McClure's," 
"Harper's,"  "Vogue,"  "House  and  Gar- 
den," etc. 

HARTLEY,  Joseph,  1442  Minford  PL,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

S.— Born  Albany,  N.  Y.,  May  19,  1842. 
Member:     Salma.    C. 

HARTLEY,    Marsden,    550    East    85th    St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 

HARTLEY,    Thomas    R.,   5825   Fifth  Ave., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

HARTMAN,  C.  Bertram,  care  of  the 
Montross  Gallery,  550  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  Dec. — Born  Junction  City,  Kan., 
Apr.  18,  1882.  Studied  at  AIC;  Royal 
Acad.,  Munich;  and  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SA;  AWCS;  N.  Y.  Arch. 
Lg. ;    Mural    P. 

HARTMAN,  Sydney  K.,  13  West  30th  St., 
New  York,  N.   Y. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  in  Germany,  Aug.  2, 
1863.  Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Benjamin 
Constant   in   Paris. 

HARTRATH,  Lucie,  4  East  Ohio  St., 
Chicago,  111. 

P.,  T. — Born  Boston.  Pupil  of  Rixens, 
Courtois  and  Collin  in  Paris;  Angelo 
Jauk  in  Munich.  Member:'  Chi- 
cago SA;  Chicago  WCC;  Cordon 
C;  Chicago  AC;  Chicago  AG;  Kiinst- 
lerinen  Verein,  Munich.  Awards: 
Butler  purchase  prize,  AIC  1911;  Young 
Fortnightly  prize,  AIC  1912;  Rosenwald 
purchase  prize  ($200),  AIC  1915;  Carr 
landscape  prize,  AIC  1916. 

HARTSON,  Walter  C,  Was.saic,  Dutchess 
Co.,   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Wyoming,  la.,  Oct.  27.  1866. 
Member:  NYWCC;  Salma.C;  S. 
Indp.  A.;  Allied  AA.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal  and  hon.  mention, 
Atlanta  Exp.,  1895;  third  Hallgarten 
prize,  NAD  1898;  gold  medal,  AAS  1902; 
first  landscape  prize,  Osborne  compe- 
tition   1904. 


444 


HART  WELL 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


MASS  AM 


HARTWELL,     Edith,    27    East    35th     St., 
New   York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

HARTWELL,     G(eorge)      K(enneth),     556 

West  180th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  C. — Born  Fitchburg,  Mass.,  June 
6,  18;)1.  Pupil  of  Frank  DuMond,  Ken- 
neth Miller,  W.  R.  Leigh.  Member: 
American  Fakirs.  Award  :  Fakir 
prize,  1920.  Work:  Covers  for 
"Architectural  Record,"  "Century," 
"Scribner's,"    "Farm    and    Fireside." 

HARTWELL,   Marjorie,  44  Casper  Street, 
Hartford,    Conn.      (P.; 

HARVEY,   Eli,  50  Cliarles  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

S.,  P.,  C— Born  Ogden  O.,  Sept.  23, 
1860.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Academy 
under  Leutz,  Noble  and  Rebisso;  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris  under  Lefebvre,  Con- 
stant and  Doucet;  Delecluse  Academy 
under  Delance  and  Callot,  and  of  Fre- 
miet  at  the  Jardin  des  Plantes.  M  e  m- 
ber  :  NSS  1902;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  1903; 
Paris  AAA;  School  Art  Lg.  Awards: 
First  class  gold  medal  for  painting, 
Paris-Province  Exp.,  1900;  Wanamaker 
prize  for  sculpture,  Paris  AAA  1900; 
bronze  medal  for  sculpture.  Pan. -Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  bronze  medal  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  bronze  medal  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work:  "Maternal 
Caress"  and  American  bald  eagle  for 
honor  roll,  Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  sculpture  for  Lion  House,  New 
York  Zoo;  recumbent  lions  for  Eaton 
Mausoleum;  portrait  of  "Dinah," 
gorilla,  for  New  York  Zoological  So- 
ciety; medal  commemorating  entry  of 
the  United  States  into  the  war,  for 
American  Numismatic  Society;  repre- 
sented in  museums  of  St.  Louis,  London, 
Liverpool,    Newark,    Cinciniati. 

HARVEY,  George  W(ainwright),  47  River 

Road,  Annisquam,   Mass. 
,  P.,  E. — Born  Gloucester,  Mass.,  Jan.  13, 

1855.     Studied  in  Holland. 

HARVEY,    Paul,    R.    F.    D.    No.    1,    Santa 
Barbara,   Cal. 

P.— Born  Chicago,  111.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
Boston  Museum  School.  Member: 
Boston  AC;  Cal.  AC.  Work:  "The 
Cedars,"   Boston   Art   Club. 

HARWOOD,   J(ames)   T.,  9232  Cherry  St., 
Oakland,  Calif. 

P.,  T.— Born  Lehi,  Utah,  1860.  Pupil 
of  Laurens  and  Bonnat  in  Paris. 
Member:      Soc.    Utah   Artists. 

HARWOOD,   Sara   B.,   8  West  Hill  Place, 
Boston,   Mass.    (S.) 

HASKELL,     Ernest,     540   Sutter   St.,    San 
Francisco,    Calif. 

P.,  Lith.,  Etcher,  W. — Born  Woodstock, 
Conn.,  July  30,  1876.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SE.;  P.-G.  Award:  Bronze 
medal  for  etching,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F., 
1915. 

HASKELL,     Ida     C,    232    East    15th    St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Brookhaven, 
L.   I.,    N.    Y. 
P.— Born  in  California.     Studied  in  Chi- 


cago, Philadelphia  and  Paris.  Mem- 
ber:    N.A.Women  PS. 

HASLER,      William      N.,      Hillside     Ave., 
Caldwell,    N.    J. 

Ldscp.P. — Born  Washington,  D.  C,  May 
9,  1865.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber:   Salma.C.   1908. 

HASSAM,  Childe,  130  West  57th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  E.— Born  Boston,  Oct.  17,  1859.  Pupil 
of  Boulanger  and  Lefebvre  in  Paris. 
M  e  m  b  e  r:  ANA  1902;  NA  1906;  AWCS; 
NYWCC;  Boston  AC;  Ten  Am. P.; 
P.-G.;  Munich  Secess.  (cor.);  Assoc. 
Soc.Nat.des  Beaux-Arts;  Nat.Inst.A.L.; 
Am.  Acad.  A.L.  Awards  :  Bronze 
medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1889;  gold  medal, 
Munich,  1892;  medal,  AC  Phila.  1892; 
bronze  medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago, 
1893;  prize,  Cleveland  Art  Assoc.  1893; 
Webb  prize,  SAA  1895;  prize,  Boston  AC 
1896;  second  class  medal,  C.I.Pittsburgh, 
1898;  Temple  gold  medal,  PAFA  1899; 
silver  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  gold 
medal,  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Clarke 
prize,  NAD  1905;  third  class  medal,  C.L 
I'ittsburgh,  1905;  Lippincott  prize, 
PAFA  1906;  Carnegie  prize,  SAA  1906; 
third  prize,  Worcester,  1906;  Sesnan 
gold  medal,  PAFA  1910;  third  W.  A. 
Clark  prize,  Corcoran  AG  1910;  Evans 
prize,  AWCS  1912;  first  W.  A.  Clark 
prize  ($2,000)  and  Corcoran  gold  medal, 
Washington,  1912;  Altman  prize  ($500), 
NAD  1918;  Hudnut  prize,  AWCS, 
1919;  Phila.  WCC  prize  1919;  Converse 
gold  medal,  PAFA  1920.  Work:  "Isles 
of  Shoals"  and  "Golden  Afternoon,  Ore- 
gon," "The  Brush  House"  and  "Street  in 
Portsmouth,  New  Hampshire,"  Metro- 
politan Museum,  New  York;  "North- 
east Headlands — New  England  Coast" 
and  "New  York  Window,"  Corcoran 
Gallery,  Washington;  "Pont  Royal," 
"The  Calker"  and  "House  on  the 
Place  Lannion,"  Cincinnati  Museum; 
"Fifth  Avenue  in  Winter"  and  "Spring 
Morning,"  also  set  of  twenty-nine 
drawings,  Carnegie  Institute,  Pitts- 
burgh; "Summer  Sea,"  Museum  of 
Art,  Toledo;  "Church  at  Old  Lyme" 
and  "Brook  Back  of  New  Canaan," 
Fine  Arts  Academy,  Buffalo;  "The 
Messenger  Boy"  and  "Street  Scene," 
Rhode  Island  School  of  Design,  Provi- 
dence; "The  Breakfast  Room,  New 
York,"  "Yonkers  from  the  Palisades" 
and  "Sylph's  Rock,  Appledore," 
Worcester  Art  Museum;  "Spring — 
Navesink  Highlands"  and  "The  Geor- 
gian Chair"  (Evans  Col.)  and  "The 
Chinese  Merchants"  (Freer  Col.),  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Washington;  "Cat  Boats 
— Nev^'port,"  Pennsylvania  Academy, 
Philadelphia;  "Cliffe  Rock — Appledore," 
Art  Association,  Indianapolis;  "Place 
Centrale  and  Fort  Cabanas  Havana," 
Institute  of  Arts,  Detroit;  "Contre- 
Jour."  Art  Institute,  Chicago;  "Isles  of 
Shoals,"  Minneapolis  Institute  of  Arts; 
"View  of  Central  Park,"  Brooklyn  In- 
stitute Museum;  "Diamond  Cove,  Isles 
of  Shoals,"  "The  East  Window"  and 
"The  Fete  of  Lannion,  Gray  Evening," 
City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis. 


445 


HASSELBUSCH 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


HAWTHORNE 


Arch    St., 
Pa.;  sum- 


1863. 
under 
Royal 
Phila. 


San 


HASSELBUSCH,     Louis,    1026 
Philadelphia,  Pa.;  h.  Logan, 
mer,  Edison,  Pa. 
P. — Born     Philadelphia,     Nov.     8, 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  Academy  Julian 
Constant  and  Lefebvre  in  Paris; 
Academy  in  Munich.    Member: 
Sketch  C.     Specialty,  portraits. 

HASTE,     L.     B.,     1411     Sixth    Ave., 
Francisco,  Calif.    (I.) 

HASWELL,  Ernest  Bruce,  148  East  4th 
St.;  h.  818  Oak  St.,  W.  H.,  Cincinnati,  O. 
S.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Kentucky,  July  25, 
1887.  Pupil  of  Barnhorn,  Meakin,  Du- 
bois. Member:  Cin.  MacD.  S.;  Cin- 
cinnati AC;  Crafters'  Guild.  Work: 
"Spinoza,"  bas-relief.  Hebrew  Union 
College  and  Spinoza  House,  The  Hague; 
"Northcott  Memorial,"  Springfield,  111.; 
Cincinnati  Museum,  Cincinnati  Mac- 
Dowell  Society,  Rookwood  Pottery;  St. 
Coleman's  Church,   Cleveland. 

HATCH,    Emily    Niciiois,    62    Washington 
Sq.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Newport,  R.  I.     Pupil  of  John 
Ward   Stimson,   Chase  and  Hawthorne. 

Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  SPNY; 
P.B.C.  Award  :  McMillin  prize,  N.  Y. 
Woman's  AC,  1912.  Represented  in  Na- 
tional Museum,   Washington. 

HATFIELD,  Joseph  Henry,  Canton  Junc- 
tion,  Mass. 

P. — Born  near  Kingston,  Canada,  June 
21,  1863.  Pupil  of  Constant,  Doucet  and 
Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Awards:  Silver 
medal,  Mass.  Charitable  Mechanics' 
Assoc,  Boston,  1892;  second  Hallgarten 
prize,  NAD  1896.  W  o  r  k  in  Boston  Art 
Club. 

HATHERELL,  W.,  care  of  Harper  & 
Bros.,  London,  Eng.    (I.) 

HAUENSTEIN,  Eugenia,  105  Ashland 
Ave.,    Buffalo,    N.    Y.      (P.) 

HAUPT,  Erii<  G.,  care  of  the  Charcoal 
Club,  1230  St.  Paul  St.;  Baltimore,  Md. 
P. — Born  Cassel,  Germany,  Aug.  7, 
1891.  Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Richard 
Miller  in   Paris. 

HAUSEMAN,  George,  116  West  30th  St., 
New   York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

HAUSER,  Josephine,  128  East  54th  St., 
New    York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

HAUSHALTER,  George  M.,  Sheepscot, 
Maine;  New  Hope,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Portland,  Me.,  Jan.  9,  1862. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  and  Ecole  des 
Beaux- Arts,  Member:  AWCS;  Roch- 
ester AC.  Work:  Decorations  in  St. 
Andrew's  and  St.  Philip's  Church,  Roch- 
ester,  N.   Y. 

HAVENS,  Belle.     See  Mrs.  H.  M.  Walcott. 

HAWEIS,  Stephen,  Nassau,  N.  P.,  Ba- 
hama Islands,  B.  W.  I. 
P.,  C,  E.,  W — Born  London,  England. 
Pupil  of  Alphonse  Mucha  and  Eugene 
Carriere  in  Paris.  Work:  Mural  deco- 
rations in  War  Memorial  Chapel  of  St. 
Francis  Xavier,  Nassau,  Stone  Ridge 
Church,  New  York;  painted  windows  in 
St.  Anselm's  Church,  Bronx,  N.  Y. ; 
paintings  in  Detroit  Institute  and 
Toledo    Museum;    etchings    in    the    Na- 


tional Gallery,  Sydney,  Australia.  Au- 
thor of  "The  Book  about  the  Sea 
Gardens,    Nassau." 

HAWKS,  Rachel  M(arshall)  (Mrs.  Arthur 
W.  Hawks),  Ruxton,  Baltimore  Co., 
Md. 

S.,  T. — Born  Port  Deposit,  Md.,  March 
20,  1879.  Pupil  of  Maryland  Institute, 
Rinehart  School  of  Sculpture  under 
Ephraim  Keyser,  Charles  Pike.  Mem- 
ber: Handicraft  C.  of  Baltimore;  Mary- 
land Int.  Alumni.  Work:  Bust  of  Dr. 
Basil  Gildersleeve,  Johns  Hopkins  Uni- 
versity, Baltimore.  Specialty,  mural 
decorations  in  relief. 

HAWKINS,  Edward  M  (ack)  C(urtis),  120 
East  State  St.,  Ithaca,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  New  York,  Nov.  24,  1877.  Pu- 
pil of  Whistler,  Cazin,  Monet,  and 
Beardsle.  Awards  :  Silver  medal, 
Liege,  Belgium,  1899-1902;  Order  of 
Leopold  of  Belgium;  Iron  Crown,  Rou- 
mania.  Works  owned  by  Queen  of 
Rbumania,  King  of  Serbia  and  late  King 
Leopold  of  Belgium. 

HAWLEY,  Benjamin,  Queen  Lane  Manor, 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P.— M  ember:  AC  Phila. ;  Fellowship 
PAFA. 

HAWLEY,  Carl,  615  Walnut  Ave.,  Syra- 
cuse,  N.   Y.    (P.) 

HAWLEY,  Margaret  Foote,  20  St.  Botolph 
St.,    Boston,    Mass. 

Min.  P. — M  ember:  Am.S.Min.P.;  Pa. 
S.Min.P.;  Boston  GA;  Wash.WCC;  New 
Haven  PCC.  Awards  :  Medal  of  honor, 
PAFA,  1918;  Lea  prize  ($50),  PAFA, 
1920.  "Work  in:  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York. 

HAWLEY,   Theodosia,  141  East   40th   St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     NA.  Women  PS. 

HAWORTH,   Edith  E.,  96  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

HAWTHORNE,  Charles  W(ebster),  care 
of  Salmagundi  Club,  47  Fifth  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Province- 
town,  Mass. 

P.,  T.— Born  in  Maine,  1872.  Pupil  of 
NAD  and  ASL  in  New  York;  Chase  at 
Shinnecock,  L.  I.  Member:  ANA 
1908,  NA  1911;  Salma.C.  1900;  NAC; 
Lotos  C;  A.Fund  S.;  Players;  SocigtS 
Nat. des  Beaux-Arts,  Paris.  Awards: 
Obrig  prize,  Salma.C.  1902;  first  Hall- 
garten prize,  NAD  1904;  Evans  prize, 
Salma.C.  1904;  Shaw  prize,  Salma.C. 
1904;  second  prize,  Worcester,  1904;  sec- 
ond Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1906;  hon. 
mention,  C.I.Pittsburgh,  1908;  silver 
medal,  Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910;  Clarke 
prize,  NAD  1911;  Isidor  medal,  NAD 
1914;  Temple  gold  medal,  PAFA  1915; 
silver  medal,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  P., 
1915;  Altman  prize  ($1,000),  NAD  1915. 
Work:  "The  Trousseau,"  Metropoli- 
tan Museum,  New  York;  "Fisherman's 
Wife,"  Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington; 
"Mother  and  Child,"  Syracuse  Museum 
of  Fine  Arts;  "Net  Mender"  and  "Girl 
in  White,"  Rhode  Island  School  of 
Design,  Providence;  "Venetian  Girl," 
Worcester  Museum;  "The  Family,"  Buf- 


446 


J 


HAWTHORNE 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


HAZEN 


falo  Fine  Arts  Academy;  "Refining  Oil," 
Detroit  Institute;  "Madonna  of  the 
Fishermen,"  City  Art  Museum,  St. 
Louis;  "The  Florist's  Daughter,"  Hack- 
ley  Art  Gallery,  Muskegon,  Mich; 
"Little  Sylvia,"  Art  Institute  of  Chi- 
cago; "Fisher  Boys,"  Peabody  Institute 
of  Baltimore;  "Provincetown  Fisher- 
man," Herron  Art  Inst.,  Indianapolis; 
"The  Mother,"  Boston  Museum  of  Art; 
"Florist's  Daughter,"  Engineer's  Club 
of  New  York. 
HAWTHORNE,  Marion  G(ambell)  (Mrs. 
Charles  W.  Hawthorne),  care  Macbeth 
Gallery,  450  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N. 
Y.;  Provincetown,  Cape  Cod,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Joliet,  111.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
Chase.  Member:  N.  A.  Women's 
PS. 

HAY,   Alice.     See  Mrs.   Clay. 

HAYDEN,  Eila  Frances,  160  Taber  Ave., 
Providence,    R.    I.;    summer,    Blandford, 

P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Mar.  21,  1860. 
Pupil  of  NAD;  Delecluse  School,  Paris; 
National  Art  School,  Munich;  Cowles 
Art  School,  Boston.  Member:  Prov- 
idence AC;  Providence  WCC.  Specialty, 
landscapes. 

HAYDEN,    Florentine    H.,    146    Pine    St., 
AVaterbury,  Conn. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

HAYDEN,  Sara  S.,  3319  Michigan  Ave., 
Chicago.   111. 

P.,  L.,  T. — Born  Chicago.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
Collin,  Merson  and  Lazar  in  Paris; 
Chase  and  Duveneck.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA. 

HAYES,  Chester  C,  Etaples,  France.  (P.) 

HAYES,  Lee,  1020  West  Bldg.,  Butte, 
Mont. 

P.,  E.— Born  in  Platteville,  Wis.,  Oct.  13, 
1854.     Self-taught. 

HAYES,  Louisa,  217  North  St.,  Buffalo, 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  "Shore  Oaks,"  Ridge- 
v^^ay.  Ontario,  Cunada. 
P.,  S.,  C— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  15, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Buffalo  Albright  Art 
School,  Robert  Reid.  Member:  Buf- 
falo   SA;    Buffalo    GAA. 

HAYNES,  Caroline  Coventry,  Highlands, 
N.   J. 

P. — Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  ASL  of 
N.  Y. ;  Alfred  Stevens  and  Courtois  in 
Paris.  Member:  NYWCC. ;  N.  A. 
Women  PS. 

HAYMAKER,   Susan    I.,   35   King   Edward 
Apts..   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

HAYS,  George  A.,  Room  42,  Woods  Bldg., 
19  College  St.,  Providence,  R.  L 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Greenville,  N.  H.,  Nov. 
23,  1854.  Self-taught.  Member: 
Providence  AC;  Copley  S.  1892;  S. 
Indp.  A.  Specialty,  landscapes  with 
cattle. 

HAYS,  William  J(acob),  Millbrook.  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Catskill.  N.  Y..  July  1,  1872: 
son  of  Wm.  J.  Hays,  ANA.  Pupil  of 
NAD  in  New  York;  Julian  and  Colarossi 
academies  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA 
1909;  Salma.  C.  1900.  Award  :  Shaw 
prize,  Salma.  C.  1912. 


HAYWARD,  Alfred,  200  South  15th  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA.; 
Phila.  WCC.  Award  :  Dana  gold 
medal,  Phila.  WCC,  1919.  ^ 

HAZARD,  Artliur  Merton,  64  Common- 
wealth Ave.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  Brook- 
line,  Mass. 

P.,  T. — Born  North  Bridgewater,  Mass., 
Oct.  20,  1872.  Pupil  of  School  of  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts  and  Cowles' 
Art  School  in  Boston;  Prinet  and 
Henri  Blanc  in  Paris.  Member: 
St.  Botolph  C;  Copley  S.;  Awards: 
Medal,  Mass.  Charitable  Mechanics' 
Assoc,  1892.  Work:  "Israel,  the 
Light  of  the  Nations,"  mural  dec. 
Temple  Israel,  Boston;  work  in  State 
House,  Boston,  and  Court  House,  Bal- 
timore. Specialty,  portraits  and  mural 
decorations. 

HAZELL,   Frank,  130  East  31st  St.,   New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I. — Born  Hamilton,   Canada,  June  7, 

1883.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.,  Alphonse 
Mucha.  Member:  Saim.a.  C:  ST., 
NYWCC:  Guild  of  Am.  Painters;  Guild 
of  Free  Lance  Artists. 

HAZELTON,  I  (saac)  B(rewster),  2  East 
23rd  St.,  Nutley,  N.  J.;  summer.  Isle 
au  Haut,  Me. 

P.,  I.— Born  Boston,  Dec.  30,  1875.  Pu- 
pil of  Tarbell,  Benson,  and  W.  F. 
Brown.  Member:  Guild  of  Free 
Lance   A. 

HAZELTON,  Mary  Brewster,  304  Fen- 
way Studios,  Boston;  h.  Wellesley  Hills, 
Mass. 

P..  T.— Born  Milton,  Mass.  Pupil  of 
Edmund  C.  Tarbell.  Member:  Cop- 
ley S.;  Boston  GA.  Awards:  First 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1896;  Paige 
traveling  scholarship,  School  of  Boston 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  1899;  hon.  men- 
tion, Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901:  bronze 
medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F..  1915:  Popular 
Prize.  Newport  AA,  1916.  Work: 
Decoration  for  chancel,  Wellesley  Hills 
Congregational  Church,   1912. 

HAZELWOOD,       Ella,      Allegheny      High 
School,   N.  S.,   Pittsburgh,    Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

HAZEN,  Bessie  E(Ma),  care  of  Southern 
California  Branch  of  the  University  of 
California;  h.  1042  West  36th  St.,  Los 
Angeles.  Calif. 

P..  E.,  T.— Born  Waterford,  New  Bruns- 
wick, Canada.  Pupil  of  Columbia  Univ., 
New  York.  Member:  Cal.  AC; 
Calif.  P.M.;  Calif.  SE.;  Laguna  Beach 
AA.  Awards  :  Second  prize  for  Avater 
color,  Arizona  State  Fair,  1916;  second 
prize  for  watercolor  and  prize  for  black 
and  white,  Arizona  State  Fair,  1917; 
second  ]irize  for  water  color,  Arizona 
State  Fair.  1919. 

HAZEN  (Fannie)  Wilhelmina  (Mrs. 
P..  F.  Ledford),  240  Golden  Gate  Ave., 
San  Francisco.  Cal.;  summer,  care 
A.  T.  Hazen,  Santa  Cruz,  Cal. 
P.  S.,  T.— Born  Murphy's  Gulch,  Cal., 
Aug.  27,  1877.  Pupil  of  Hopkins  Inst., 
San  Francisco,  and  Academic  Moderne, 
Paris. 


447 


HAZZARD 


WHO'S    WHO  IN  ART 


HEKKING 


HAZZARD,  Sara,  29  East  29th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  516  Second  St.,  James- 
town,   N.    Y. 

P. — M  ember:  N.A.  Women  PS.;  Pa. 
S.  Min.P. 

HEARD,  Mrs.   Edith  V.  R.,  6314  Marchand 
St.,   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pitts.  AA. 

HEARN,  Mary  H.  See  Mrs.  Herbert 
Greims. 

HEATH,    Alice,    61    West    92nd    St.,    New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:    N.    A.   Women   PS. 

HEATH,  Howard  P.,  294  West  11th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Norwalk,  Conn. 
P.,  I.— Born  Boulder,  Colo.,  Oct.  2,  1879. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Frank 
Nankivell.  Member:  Salma.C;  SI 
1911;  NYWCC. 

HEATON,  (Augustus)  G(eorge),  1400 
South  Olive  St.,  West  Palm  Beach.  Fla. 
P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  April  28, 
1844.  Pupil  of  Cabanel  at  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts  1863  and  of  Bonnat  1879  in 
Paris.  Member:  Phila.  Sketch  C. 
(pres.  1867);  'S.  Indo.  A.;  Salma.  C.  1908, 
Amer.  Numismatic  Assoc,  (pres.  1888). 
Award:  Bronze  medal,  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago,  1893.  Work:  "The 
Recall  of  Columbus,"  U.  S.  Capitol, 
Washington;  "Washington's  First  Mis- 
sion," Union  League  Club,  Philadelphia; 
"Baron  Steuben  at  Valley  Forge,"  War 
College,  Washington;  portraits  in  State 
Dept.  and  Navy  Dept.,  Washington, 
D.  C;  Delaware  State  House;  New 
York  Historical  Society;  Tulane  Univ.; 
Cornell  Univ.  Author:  "The  Heart  of 
David,"  "Fancies  and  Thoughts  <  in 
Verse,"   "Mint  Marks,"   etc. 

HEAVEN,   Ethel   R.    See  Mrs.  Hamilton. 

HEBER,  Carl  Augustus,  51  West  10th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Nyack-on- 
Hudson,    N.    Y. 

S. — Born  Stuttgart,  Germany,  April  15, 
1874.  Pupil  of  Taft  in  Chicago.  M  e  m  - 
ber:  NSS  1904;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1911. 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  bronze  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915.  Work:  "Pastoral,"  Art  Insti- 
tute, Chicago,  111.;  "Champlain  Memo- 
rial," Crown  Point,  N.  Y. ;  "Champlain 
Statue,"  Plattsburg,  N.  Y.;  "Schiller 
Monument,"    Rochester,    N.    Y. ;    "Ben- 

,  jamin  Franklin,"  Princeton  University. 

HECHT,  Victor  D(avid),  205  East  Broad- 
way; h.  14  East  60th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P. — Born  Paris,  France,  May  15,  1873. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Lefebvre  and 
Robert-Fleury  in  Paris.  Member: 
Port.P. 

HECKMAN,  Albert  W.,  525  West  120th 
St.,   New  York.   N.   Y.      (P.) 

HEEBNER,   Ann.     See  Mrs.   McDonald. 

HEERMAN,  Norbert,  Ralston  Galleries,  4 
East  46th  St.,  New  York,  ■  N.  Y.;  sum- 
mer, Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
P.,  W. — Born  Frankfort-on-the-Main. 
Germany,  May  10,  1891.  Pupil  of  Rey- 
nolds, in  Chicago,  Fleury  in  Paris,  Cor- 
inth in  Berlin,  Duveneck  in  Cincinnati. 
Member:       Cincinnati    AC;    Colorado 


Springs  AS.  Works:  "The  Continental 
Divide"  (mural).  Evanston  School,  Cin- 
cinnati; "Cameron's  Cone,  Colorado", 
Hughes  High  School,  Cincinnati.  Author 
of  "Frank  Duveneck",  a  biography. 

HEIDEL,  Mrs.  Edith  Ogden,  2827-28th  St., 
N.W.,  Washington,  D.  C.     (S.) 

HEIFFEL,    Eugene,    153    Avenue    B,    New 
Y'ork,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

HEIL,  Charles  Emile,  1215  Grand  Con- 
course, New  Y''ork,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Boston,  Feb.  28,  1870. 
Studied  in  Boston  and  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Salma.C;  Boston  WCC;  S.Indp.A. 
Award:  Gold  medal  for  water  color, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Represented  in 
Worcester  (Mass.)  Art  Museum;  Maiden 
(Mass.)   Public  Library. 

HEILPRIN,  Gertrude,  2620  University  PI., 
Washington,   D.   C.    (P.) 

HEINTZELMAN,  Arthur  William,  care  of 
Frederick  Keppel  &  Co.,  4  East  39th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  4  Square  Des- 
nouttes  XV,  Paris,  France. 
P.,  E..  L.,  T.— Born  Newark.  N.  J.. 
Nov.  22.  1891.  Pupil  of  R.  I.  School 
of  Design;  studied  in  Holland,  France, 
Belgium,  Spain,  England  and  'Scotland. 
Member:  Chicago  SE;  Providence 
AC;  Calif.  P.M.;  Calif.  SE;  Canadian 
Soc.  P.-G;  Salma.  C  Awards: 
Logan  prize  AIC,  2  yrs. ;  Barnett  Prize, 
Brooklyn  SE,  1920;  1st  prize,  Calif.  P.M., 
1921.  Etchings  in  Metropolitan  Museum, 
N.  Y. ;  Chicago  Art  Inst. ;  New  Y''ork 
Public  Library;  Detroit  Institute  of 
Arts;  Library  of  Congress,  Washington; 
Newark  Public  Library;  Milwaukee  Art 
Inst.;  Los  Angeles  Museum;  Rhode 
Island  School  of  Design;  Cincinnati 
Museum;  Corcoran  Gallery,  Washing- 
ton, D.  C 

HEINZ,  Charles  L(loyd),  Shelbyville,  111. 
P.— Born  Shelbyville,  111.,  Jan.  8,  1885. 
Pupil  of  R.  M.  Root;  St.  Louis  School 
of  FA;  Chicago  Acad.  FA.  Awards  : 
Ten  first  and  seven  second  prizes  at 
Indiana  State  Fair,  Indianapolis;  two 
second  prizes.  State  Fair,  Springfield, 
111. 

HEINZMANN,    Samilla    L.    Jameson,    The 

Willow  Bridge  Studio,  28  Terrace  Ave., 
Princess  Bay,  S.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.,  S.,  I.,  C — Born  Indianapolis,  Ind., 
April  22,  1881.  Pupil  of  Chicago  Art. 
Institute,  Detroit  Fine  Arts  Academy; 
De  Lug  in  Vienna.  Member:  S. 
Ind. A.;   Lg.   of  N.Y'.A. 

HEITMULLER,  Marian  R(oeder),  1307 
Fourteenth  St.,  N.  W.,  Washington,  D. 
C 

P.— Born  Washington,  D.  C,  Dec.  22, 
1894.       Pupil    of   Howard    Helmick. 

HEKKING,  William  M(athews),  219  East 
11th  St.,  Kansas  City,  Mo.;  1447  Massa- 
chusetts St.,  Lawrence,  Kan. 
P.,  I.,  L.,  T.— Born  Chelsea,  Wis.,  Mar. 
10,  1885.  Pupil  of  Laurens.  Member: 
College  Art  Asso. ;  Wilmington  Soc. 
Painters.  Work:  Decorations  in 
Natural  History  Museum,  State  Univer- 
sity   of   Kansas,    Lawrence,      Instructor 


448 


HELD 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


HENS  HAW 


in  drawing-,  State  University  of  Kansas, 
Lawrence. 

HELD,  John,  Jr.,  R.F.D.  12,  Westport, 
Conn. 

P.,  E.,  I.— Born  Salt  Lake  City.  Utah, 
Jan.   10,   1889.     Member:     P-G. 

HELLER,    Eugenie    M.,    502    West    113th 
St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.,    S.,    C— Pupil    of   J.    Alden   Weir    in 
New    York;    Aman-Jean,     Grasset    and 
Whistler  in  Paris. 

HELLER,  Helen  West,  East  Walnut  St., 
Limits,   Canton,   111. 

P.,  W. — Born  Rushville,  111.  Member: 
S.Indp.A.     Subjective  painter. 

HELMUTH,  Jessie  L.,  4722  Calumet  Ave., 
Chicago,   111. 

S.,  P.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  July  20,  1892. 
Pupil  of  Mulligan,  Crunelle,  Polasek 
and   Charles   Schroeder. 

H  EL  WIG.  Albert  M(ettee),  Baltimore  Sun 
Bldg.,  Baltimore  and  Charles  Sts.;  h. 
1223  East  North  Ave.,  Baltimore,  Md. 
I.— Born  Baltimore.  Md.,  Sept.  27,  1891. 
Pupil  of  C.  Y.  Turner  and  Henry  B. 
S'nell.  Pupil  of  Maryland  Inst.  School 
of  Art.      Member  :       Charcoal    C. 

HETMING,  Arthur,  72  Madison  Ave.,  Tor- 
onto, Canada;  summer  Old  Lyme,  Conn. 
I.,  W. — Born  Paris,  Ontario,  Canada, 
Jan.  17,  1870.  Pupil  of  Frank  Brangwyn, 
Frank  V.  DuMond.  Member:  SI; 
Arts  and  Letters  Club  of  Toronto. 
Represented  in  Canadian  National  Gal- 
lery; 10  pictures  in  The  Royal  Ontario 
Museum.  Author  and  illustrator — 
"Spirit  Lake,"  "The  Drama  of  the 
Forests." 

HENCKE,  Albert,  Box  116,  Manas^uan, 
N.    J.       (I.) 

HENDERSON,  A.  Elizabeth,  79  Hamil- 
ton PL.  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Min.  P.— Born  Ashland,  Ky.,  Oct.  25, 
1873.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  New  York 
School  of  Art,  and  Cincinnati  Academy. 
Member:    N.    A.   Women   PS. 

HENDERSON,  William  Penhallow,  care 
of  the  Cliff  Dwellers,  Orchestra  Hall, 
Chicago,  111.;  Santa  Fe,  N.  M. 
Mural  P.,  T. — Born  Medford,  Mass., 
1877.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School 
under  Tarbell.  Holder  of  Paige  travel- 
ing scholarship,  Boston  Museum  School. 
Member  :  Denver  A  A.  Work  :  "The 
Green  Cloak";  series  of  Indian  dance 
pastels,  Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  Mar- 
quette and  Joilet  mural  decorations, 
High  School,  Joilet,  111.;  "Felipe  de  los 
Valles,"  Denver  Art  Association. 

HENDRICKSON,  David,  Occidental  Ho- 
tel,   San  Francisco,   Calif.    (I.) 

HENIUS,  L(illian)  G(race),  1315  Cordova 
Rd.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

P.— Born  Aug.  6,  1879.  Pupil  of  Henry 
Keller,  Chas.  W.  Hawthorne,  and  George 
Sotter.  Member:  Pittsburgh  AA; 
S.Indp.A. 

HENNING,    Ludwig     H.,    Valley    Engrav- 
ing Co.,   Johnstown,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pitts.  AA. 

HENNINGS,  E.  Martin,  Tree  Studio  Bldg., 
4  East  Ohio  St.;  h.  3705  West  Irving 
Pk.   Blvd.,   Chicago,   111. 


P. — Born  Pennsgrove,  N.  J.,  Feb.  5, 
1886.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Nat.  Acad.,  Munich. 
Member:  AIC;  Palette  and  Chisel  C. 
Award  :  Palette  and  Chisel  Club  gold 
medal,  1916;  Englewood  Woman's  Club 
prize   AIC   1916. 

HENOCH,    Hanley,    51    Chalton    St.,    New 
York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

HENRI,    Mrs.    Robert.      See   Organ,    Mar- 

jorie. 

HENRI,   Robert,  10  Gramercy  Park,   New 
York.   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  June  24,  1865. 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  Julian  Academy  and 
Ecole  des  Beaux- Arts  in  Paris;  .studied 
in  Spain  and  Italy.  Member:  SAA 
1903;  ANA  1904,  NA  1906:  Nat. Inst. AL; 
Port.P.:  Mac.D.C;  NAC  (life);  Am.  PS. 
Taos  'SA;  Los  A.  Modern  A.  Soc;  S. 
Indp.  A.;  Boston  AC;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A.; 
N.Y.Soc.A.  Awards:  Silver  medal. 
Pan. -Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Harris  prize 
($500),  AIC  1905;  gold  medal,  AC  Phila., 
1909;  silver  medal,  Buenos  Aires  Exp., 
1910;  Beck  medal.  PAFA  1914;  silver 
medal,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F..  1915;  Portrait 
Prize,  Wilmington  SFA,  1920.  Work: 
"La  Neige,"  Luxembourg  Gallery,  Paris; 
"Young  Woman  in  Black,"  Art  Insti- 
tute of  Chicago;  "The  Eqyestrian," 
Carnegie  Institute,  Pittsburgh;  "Girl 
with  Red  Hair."  Gallery  of  Spartan- 
burg, S.  C;  "Happy  Hollander,"  Art 
Association,  Dallas,  Tex.;  "Dancer  In 
Yellow  Shawl,"  Gallery  of  Fine  Arts, 
Columbus,  O.;  "Spanish  Gypsy  Girl," 
Art  Association,  New  Orleans;  "Laugh- 
ing Girl"  and  "Landscape,"  Brooklyn 
Institute  Museum;  "Girl  vv^ith  Fan," 
Pennsylvania  Academy,  Philadelphia; 
"Girl  of  Toledo,"  Carolina  Art  Associa- 
tion, Charleston,  S.  C. ;  "The  Blue  Neck- 
lace," Art  Institute  of  Kansas  City; 
"Lillian,"  San  Francisco  Institute  of 
Art;  "The  Spanish  Gipsy,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  "Romany  Girl," 
National  Arts  Club,  New  York;  "Por- 
trait of  a  Boy,"  Minneapolis  Institute 
of  Arts;  "Tam  Gan,"  Fine  Arts  Acad- 
emy, Buffalo;  "Spanish  Gipsy  Girl," 
Oberlin  (O.)  College  Gallery;  "Diegito 
Roybal,"  Museum  of  Art  and  Archae- 
ology, Snnta  Fe,  N.  M. ;  "Achille  Girl," 
Memphis    (Tenn.)   Museum. 

HENRY,   Alice,   2011   Murray  Ave.,   Pitts- 
burgh,  Pa. 

P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA;  S. 
Indp. A. 

HENRY.     J..    545     West     158th     St.,     New 
York,   N.    Y.    (I.) 

HENRY,     Sarah,     P.     O.     Box     28,     West 
Chester,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

HENSHAW,    Anne    Bigelow,    100    Bowen 
St.,    Providence,    R.   I. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence   AC. 

HENSHAW,    Gorham,    87   Weybosset    St., 
Providence,    R.    I. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence   AC. 


HENSHAW,      Julia. 

Dewey. 


See     Mrs. 


M. 


449 


HENTSCHEL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


HESS 


HENTSCHEL,  W.   E.,  care  of  Art  Alliance 
of  America,  19  East  47th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 
E. — M  ember:  Chicago  SE. 

HEPPENSTALL,  George  M.  P.,  1139  Mel- 
lon St.,   Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pitts,  AA. 

HERDLE,  George  Linton,  47  Clinton  Ave., 
N.;  h.  19  Sumner  Pk.,  Rochester,  N.  Y, 
P.,  C— Born  Rochester,  Aug.  27,  1868. 
Studied  in  Holland  and  in  Paris. 
Member:  Rochester  AC;  Rochester 
Municipal  Art  Com.;  Director,  Memorial 
Art  Gallery  of  Rochester  University. 

HERGESHEIMER,  Ella  S.,  8031/2  Broad 
St.,    Nashville,   Tenn. 

P. — Born  Allentown,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
PAFA  under  Cecilia  Beaux  and  Chase; 
Prinet  and  Mucha  in  Paris  and  in  Italy 
and  Spain.  Member:  Fellowship 
PAFA.  Awarded  traveling  schol- 
arship PAFA.  Director  of  art  schools 
in  Tennessee  and  Kentucky. 

HERING,  Elsie  Ward  (Mrs.  Henry 
Hering),  65  Irving  PL,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S. — Studied  in  Denver,  Colo.  Pupil  of 
Augustus  Saint  Gaudens.  M  e  ni  b  e  r  : 
Denver  AC.  Awards  :  Silver  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work:  Schermer- 
horn  memorial  font  in  Chapel  of  Our 
Savior,  Denver,  Colo.;  W.C.T.U.  drink- 
ing fountain,   St.  Louis  Museum. 

HERING,  Henry,  Waldorf  BIdg.,  16  West 
33d  St.;  h.  65  Irving  PL,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

S.— Born  New  York  City,  Feb.  15,  1874. 
Pupil  of  Augustus  Saint  Gaudens, 
Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1910;  NSS 
1913.  Awards  :  Silver  medal  for 
medals  and  bronze  medal  for  sculpture, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work: 
Civil  War  Memorial,  Yale  University, 
New  Haven;  Robert  Collyer  Memorial, 
Church  of  Messiah,  New  York;  Sculp- 
ture on  Field  Museum  of  Natural  His- 
tory, Chicago. 

HERMAN,  Leonora  Owsley,  1521  Pine  St., 
Philadelphia,   Pa. 

P.,  E.— Born  Chicago,  July  2,  1893. 
Pupil  of  Simon,  Menard,  Hellen,  Leon 
in  Paris.  Member:  Phila.  Alliance; 
Fellowship    PAFA, 

HERMAN,    Max,    246    Fulton    St.,    Brook- 
lyn, N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

HERN  DON,     Lawrence,    1947    Broadway, 
New   York,   N,    Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

HERR,    Laetitia    (Neff).     See   Mrs.    John 

E.  Malone. 

HERR,     Margaret,    244    Riverside    Drive, 
New    York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     N.  A.  Women  PS. 

HERRICK,      Margaret     Cox,     312     Pacific 

Ave,.    Piedmont     Calif. 
P. — Born  San  Francisco.  Calif..  June  24. 
1865.     Pupil  of  Carlsen.  Fred  Yates  and 
Mary  C.  Richardson.     Member:     San 

F.  AA.  Work:  Lunette  in  Y.  W.  C. 
A.,   Oakland,   Calif. 


HERSCHEL,    S.    Frances,    The    Dupont, 
Washington,  D.  C. 
P.— M  ember:  Wash.WCC. 

HERTER,  Adele  (Mrs.  Albert  Herter), 
130  East  67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  Cour- 
tois,  Bouguereau  and  Robert-Fleury 
in  Paris.  Member:  N.A.  Women 
PS.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention  Pan- 
Am.  Exp..  Buffalo,  1901;  bronze  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 

HERTER,  Albert,  114  Chapala  St.,  Santa 
Barbara,  Cahf.;  h.  East  Hampton,  L.  I., 
N.  Y. 

Mural  P.,  C— Born  New  York,  March  2, 
1871.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Under 
Beckwith;  Laurens  and  Cormon  in 
Paris.  Member:  SAA,  1894;  ANA. 
1906;  AWCS;  NYWCC;  Mural  P;  N.Y. 
Arch.Lg.l901;  Century  Assoc.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1890;  medaL 
Atlanta  Exp.,  1895;  Lippincott  prize, 
PAFA  1897;  hon.  mention,  Nashville 
Exp.,  1897;  Evans  prize,  AWCS  1899; 
bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  silver 
medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901. 
Work:  Painting,  "Two  Boys,"  Met- 
ropolitan Museum,  New  York;  "Hour 
of  Despondency,"  Brooklyn  Institute 
Museum.  Specialty,  mural  paintings 
and  portraits. 

HERTER,  Christine,  30  East  68th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Irvington-on-Hudson,  N.  Y., 
Aug.  25,  1890.  Pupil  of  Sergeant  Ken- 
dall. Member:  NYWCC;  New 
Haven  PCC;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Newport 
AA.  Award:  Second  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD,   1916. 

HERTHEL,  Alice,  3841  Flora  Blvd.,  St. 
Louis,  Mo. 

P.— Born  St.  Louis,  Pupil  of  St.  Louis 
School  of  Fine  Arts;  Simon  and 
Anglada-Camarasa  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Soc.  of  Ancients,  St.  Louis;  St. 
Louis   AG, 

HERZEL,  Paul,  Beaux-Arts  Institute  of 
Design,  126  East  75th  St,,  New  York, 
N,    Y. 

S.,  P.,  L— Born  Silesia,  Aug.  28,  1880. 
Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts; 
Beaux-Arts  Inst,  of  Design,  New  York. 
Member:  NSS.  (assoc.)  Awards: 
Mrs.  H.  P.  Whitney  "Struggle"  prize, 
1915;  Barnett  prize,  NAD.  1915, 

HERZOG,  Lewis,  80  West  40th  St„  New 
New.  N,  Y.;  h,  Scarsdale,  N,  Y. 
P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Oct.  15, 
1868,  Studied  in  London,  Rome,  Berlin, 
Diisseldorf,  Munich  and  Venice.  Mem- 
ber: AC  Phila.;  NAC;  Salma.C. 
Awards:  Gold  medal,  Munich;  hon, 
mention,  Berlin;  bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis   Exp.,    1904. 

HESS,  Alexander,  439  W.  123rd  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P.,  E.— Born  Bath,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  17,  1892. 

HESS,  Emma  Kipling.  See  Mrs.  D.  W. 
Ingersoll. 


450 


HESS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


HIGGINS 


HESS,  Mary  G.     See  Mrs.  Karl  A.  Buehr. 

HESS,   Sara   (M.),  Hillsdale,   N.  J. 
P.,    T.— Born   Troy   Grove,    111.,    Fj'o.    25, 
1880.      Pupil    of    Richard    Miller,    Ossip 
Linde,  AIC.     Member:    N.A.  Women 
PS;   Nanuet  Painters;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A. 

HETZEL,     Mrs.     Lila     B.,    Hetzel    Farm, 
Somerset,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pitts.  AA. 

HEUERMANN,  Magda,  Fine  Arts  Bldg.; 
h.  2031  Fremont  St.,  Chicago,  111.;  sum- 
mer. Palisades  Park,  Mich. 
P.,  I.,  W.,  L.— Born  Galesburg,  111.  Pupil 
of  F.  H.  C.  Sammons  in  Chicago;  Roth, 
von  Lenbach  and  Duerr  in  Munich. 
Member:  Chicago  S.Min.P.  (pres.) ; 
Chicago  AG;  Chicago  AC;  Chicago 
Woman's  C;  Cordon  C;  Schleswig- 
Holstein,  Kunstlerbund;  Chicago  Press 
League;  Chicago  SA.  Awards  :  Med- 
als at  New  Orleans,  Philadelphia,  At- 
lanta, Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893. 
Author  of  "How  I  Paint  A  Head,"  "Min- 
iatures Old  and  New,"  etc.  Represented 
in  Carnegie  Library,  Joliet,  111.,  and  in 
University  of  Iowa. 

HEUSY,  Charles  W.,  15  School  St.,  Etna, 
Pa 
P.— M  ember:    Pitts.  AA. 

HEUSTIS,    Edna   F.     See  Mrs.   Simpson. 

HEUSTIS,  Louise  L(yons),  53  East  56th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Port.  P.,  I. — Born  Mobile,  Ala.  Pupil  of 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Chase;  Julian 
Academy,  Lasar  and  MacMonnies  in 
Paris.  Member:  N.Y.Wioman's  AC; 
N.A.Women  PS. 

HEWES,  Horace  G.,  Technology  Cham- 
bers, Boston,  Mass.;  summer,  Ogun- 
quit,   Me. 

P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.  Pupil  of  Low- 
ell Inst,  and  Massachusetts  Inst,  of 
Technology.  Represented  in  the  Port- 
land Museum   of  Fine   Arts. 

HEWITT,  Edwin  H.,  716  Fourth  Ave.,  S.; 
h.  126  E.  Franklin  Ave.,  Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

A.,  P. — Born  Red  Wing,  Minn.,  March 
26,  1874.  Studied  architecture  at  Paris 
Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  under  Pascal. 
Member:  Fellow  AIA;  Minn.  State 
Art  Commission  (pres.)  Director,  Min- 
neapolis Art  Inst.  (bd.  of  directors). 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention  for  painting, 
Minn.  State  Art  Society,  1914;  gold 
medal   in   architecture. 

HEWLETT,  J.  Monroe,  345  Fifth  Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y.    (Mural  P.) 

HEWTON,    Otto,   294   Seward    St.,    Roch- 
ester, N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:  Rochester  AC. 

HEYER,  H(erman),  Douglaston,  L.  I., 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  Deer  Park,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  E.,  C. — Born  in  Germany,  July 
31,   1876. 

HEYLER,  Mary  P.  Ginther  (Mrs.  M.  P. 
G.  Heyler),  Gable  End,  Buckingham, 
Pa. 

P.,  I.,  C,  W.— Born  Phila.,  Pa.  Pupil 
of  PAFA.  Member:  Plastic  C. ; 
Fellowship  PAFA.  Stained  glass  win- 
dows, "St.  John  on  Patmos,"  Church  of 
the    Restoration,    Philadelphia;     "Peter 


and  John  at  the  Tomb,"  and  angel  pan- 
els below,  St.  John's  Church,  Suffolk, 
Va.  Illustrates  for  magazines  and 
books, 

HEYWOOD,  Mona,  5564  29th  St.,  N.  E., 
Seattle,  Wash.    (P.) 

HI  ATT,  Miss  Maurine,  2021  East  Mercer 
St.,   Seattle,  Wash.    (P.) 

HIBBARD,  Aidro  T.,  90  Somerset  St., 
Belmont,  Mass.;  summer.  Summer 
School,  71  A  Main  St.,  Rockport,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Falmouth,  Mass.,  Aug.  25, 
1886.  Pupil  of  De  Camp,  Major  and 
Tarbell.  Member:  Boston  GA.;  St. 
Botolph  C.  Award:  First  prize  at 
Duxbury,  1920.  Work:  "The  Moate 
Range,"  National  Academy  of  Design; 
"Winter,"-  Boston  Art  Museum. 

HIBBARD,  Frederick  Cleveland,  923  East 
60th  St.,  h.  6209  Ellis  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
S.— Born  Canton,  Mo.,  June  15,  1881. 
Pupil  of  AIC  under  Taft.  Member: 
Chicago  SA;  Cliff  Dwellers.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  AIC  1913;  'Shaffer  prize 
($100),  AIC  1914.  Work:  "Mark 
Twain,"  Hannibal,  Mo.;  "Gen.  James 
Shields."  CarroUton,  Mo.;  "The  Vir- 
ginian," Winchester,  Va. ;  "U.  D.  C. 
Shiloh  Memorial,"  Shiloh  National  Park, 
Tenn.;  "General  Grant,"  Vicksburg, 
Miss.;  "Dr.  G.  V.  Black,"  Lincoln  Park, 
Chicago,  111.;  "Volney  Rogers,"  Youngs- 
town,  O.;  "Gen.  H.  W.  Lawton,"  Ft. 
Wayne,  Ind. 

HIBBEN,  Helena,  5433  University  Ave., 
Indianapolis,   Ind. 

S. — Born  Indianapolis,  Nov.  18,  1882. 
Pupil  of  William  Forsyth  at  Herron  Art 
Inst.;  Lorado  Taft  at  AIC;  James  Earle 
Frazer  at  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
NSC;  Ind.  SS. 

HICKEY,  Isabel,  1820  Wallace  St.,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa. 

P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Oct.  25, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Pyle,  Hayley 
Lever  and  Martha  Walter.  Member: 
Plastic  C;  Fellowship  PAFA. 

HICKMAN,    Harriet,    Erie    and    Edwards 
Rd.,   Hyde  Park,   Cincinnati,   O. 
P. — M  ember:      Cincinnati      Woman's 
AC. 

HICKMAN,  Harry  L.,  Arnold,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

HICKS,  Amy  Mali,  9  East  17th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  C,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
Pupil  of  William  M.  Chase  and  J.  W. 
Stimson.  Member:  Boston  SAC; 
N.  Y.  Soc.  C;  Alliance;  S.  Indp.  A. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention.  World's 
Fair,  Chicago,  1893,  and  St.  Louis 
World's  Fair,  1904.  Work:  Memorial 
tablets  in  Bowdoin  College,  Maine.  Au- 
thor, "The  Craft  of  Hand-made  Rugs." 

HICKS,  Herbert,  1223  Sixth  St.,  S.  W., 
Washington,    D.    C.    (P.) 

HIGGINS,  Eugene,  182  Madison  Ave., 
New   York,    N.   Y. 

P.,  E.,  S.— Born  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  Feb., 
1874.  Pupil  of  Laurens,  Benjamin 
Constant,  GSrome  and  Ecole  des  Beaux- 
Arts  in  Paris.  Member:  P-G. ; 
NYWCC ;  Brooklyn  SE ;  ANA.    Work: 


451 


HIGGINS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


HILLS 


"The  Little  Mother,"  Carnegie  Inst., 
Pittsburgh;  etchings  in  New  York  Public 
Library  and  Brooklyn  Museum;  Con- 
gressional Library,  Washington,  D.  C. 

HIGGINS,  (W.)  Victor,  1700  Auditorium 
Tower;  220  South  Michigan  Ave.,  Chi- 
cago, 111.;  summer,  Taos,  N.  M. 
P.,  T.— Born  Shelbyville,  Ind.,  June  28, 
1884.  Pupil  of  AIC  and  Academy  of 
Fine  Arts  in  Chicago;  R6ne  Menard  and 
Lucien  Simon  in  Paris;  Hans  von 
Hyeck  in  Munich,  Member:  Chicago 
SA;  Palette  and  Chisel  C;  Chicago  Com- 
misson  for  Encouragement  of  Local  Art; 
Taos  Society  of  Artists;  P-G.;  Los 
Angeles  Modern  AS.  Awards  :  Gold 
medal.  Palette  and  Chisel  C,  1914; 
Municipal  Art  League  purchase  prize, 
1915;  Cahn  prize  ($100),  AIC -1915;  Butler 
purchase  prize  ($200),  AIC  1916;  Chicago 
SA  medal  1917;  Logan  medal,  AIC  1917; 
Hearst  prize,  AIC  1917;  Altman  prize 
($1,000),  NAD  1918.  Work:  "Moor- 
land Piper,"  Terre  Haute  Art  Associa- 
tion; "Moorland  Gorse  and  Bracken," 
Municipal  Gallery,  Chicago;  mural  deco- 
rations in  Englewood  Theater,  Chicago; 
"Women  of  Taos,"  Santa  Fe  Railroad; 
"Juanito  and  the  'Suspicious  Cat,"  Union 
League  C,  Chicago;  "The  Bread  Jar, 
City  of  Chicago;  "A  Shrine  to  St.  An- 
thony," collection  of  Des  Moines  Asso- 
ciation of  Fine  Arts,  etc.  Instructor, 
Chicago  Academy  of  Fine  Arts. 

HILDEBRANDT,  Cornelia  (Ellis),  39 
West  67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  sum- 
mer. New  Canaan,  Conn. 
P. — Born  Eau  Claire,  Wis,  Pupil  of  AI, 
Chicago;  Augustus  Koopman  and  Vir- 
ginia Reynolds  in  Paris.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS. 

HILDEBRANDT,  Howard  'L(ogan),  306 
East  51st  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Allegheny,  Pa.,  Nov.  1,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  under 
Constant  and  Laurens  in  Paris;  NAD 
in  New  York.  Member:  ANA; 
Salma.  C.  1899;  NYWCC;  Lotos  C; 
AWCS;  NAC;  Pittsburgh  AA;  Allied 
AA;  S.  Indp.  A.  Awards:  Evans 
prize,  AWCS  1906;  first  honor,  Asso- 
ciated Artists  of  Pittsburgh,  1911. 
Work  :  "Cleaning  Fish."  John  Her- 
ron  Art  Institute,  Indianapolis,  repre- 
sented in  Lotos  Club,  New  York;  Butler 
Art  Inst.,  Youngstown,  O. 

HILDER.  G.  Howard,  Charleston,  S,  C. 
P.,  I. — Born  London,  England,  Sept.  28, 
1868.  Pupil  of  Bouguereau,  Ferrier, 
Dagnan-Bouveret,  De  la  Gandara  and 
Jacque  in  Paris;  De  Bock  in  Amster- 
dam, Member:  St.  Lucas  Soc, 
Amsterdam,  Holland;  Newport  AA. 

HILDRETH.    Susan    W.,    425    ^West    llSth 
St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. ;   summer,   care  of 
A.  R.  Kimball,   Orange,   N.   J. 
P. — Born    Cambridge.    Mass.       Pupil    of 
Ross  Turner;   ASL  of  N.   Y. 

HILGENDORF,     Fred     C.     llSSVa     Island 
Ave.,   Milwaukee,   Wis. 
P.— Member:       Wis.    PS. 

HILL,  A(rthur)  T(urnbull),  33  West  67th 
St.,   New  York,  N.   Y. 
P.— Born  New  York,  April  26,  1868.    Pu- 
pil of  Brooklyn  Inst.  Art  School;  chiefly 

452 


self-taught;  studied  works  of  George 
Inness.  Member:  A.Fund  S,;  Brook- 
lyn AC;  NAC  (life);  Salma  C. ;  Lg.  of 
N.Y.A.  Work:  "The  Dunes— Ama- 
gansett"  and  "The  Marshes— Amagan- 
sett,"  Museum  of  the  Brooklyn  Insti- 
tute; "After  a  Storm,"  National  Gallery, 
Washington,  D.  C. ;  "Low  Tide — 
Amagansett,"  National  Arts  Club,  New 
York. 

HILL,  Clara,  Arts  Club,  2017  I  St.;  808 
17th  St.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
S. — Born  in  Massachusetts.  Pupil  of 
Augustus  Saint  Gaudens;  Julian  Acad- 
emy under  Puech,  and  Colarossi 
Academy  under  Injalbert,  in  Paris. 
Member:  S.  Wash. A.;  Allied  AA. 
Award:    Grand  prize,  Seattle  Exp.,  1909, 

HILL,    James    Jerome     II.,    260     Summit 
Ave.,   St.   Paul,  Minn. 
P.— M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 

HILL,  Pearl  L(avinia),  10  South  18th  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P.,  I. — Born  Lock  Haven,  Pa.,  Dec.  11, 
1884.  Pupil  of  Pa.  Museum  &  School  of 
Indus.  Art,  PAFA.  Member:  Plastic 
C;   Fellowship  PAFA;   Phila.  Alliance. 

HILL,  R(obert)  Jerome,  I8O2V2  Elm  St., 
Dallas,   Texas. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Austin,  Texas.  Pupil 
of  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  and  with  Kunz-Meyer. 
Mem  b  e  r  :  Dallas  AA;  Texas  Art  Lg. ; 
Dallas  AC. 

HILL.  Sara  B.,  135  East  66th  St.,  New 
York,  N.   Y. 

E.^Born  Danbury,  Conn.  Pupil  of 
Alphaeus  Cole.  Member:  American 
Bookplate    Soc,    Bookworkers    Guild." 

HILL,  W.  E.,  Hotel  Margaret,  97  Colum- 
bia  Hgts.,    Brooklyn,    N.    Y.    (I.) 

HILLBOIVI,  Henrik,  Wallingford,  Conn,; 
summer,  Shady-in-the-Catskills,  N,  Y. 
P.,  C— Born  Sweden,  Apr.  3,  1863.  Pu- 
pil of  Lef ebvre  and  Constant.  Mem- 
ber: Conn.  AFA;  NeXv  Haven  PCC. 
Silver  designer  with  Wallace  Mfg.  Co. 
since  1899. 

HILLER,    Lejaren   A.,  135  West  44th  St.; 
h.  332  West  28th  St.,  New  York,   N.  Y. 
I.,    P. — Born    Milwaukee,    Wis.,    July    3, 
1880.     Pupil  of  AI  Chicago.    Member: 
SI   1910. 

HILLS,  A(nna)   A(lthea),  Laguna  Beach, 

Calif. 

P.,  L..  T.— Born  Ravenna,  Ohio.  Pupil 
of  AIC,  Cooper  Union;  Julian  in  Paris, 
Member:  Calif.  A(j;  Laguna  Beach 
AA.  Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  Pan- 
ama-Calif. Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915; 
Bronze  medal,   Calif.   State  Fair,   1919. 

HILLS,    Laura   Coombs,   66   Chestnut   St., 

Boston   Mass. 

Min.P. — Born  Newburyport,  Mass.,  Sept, 
7,  1859.  Pupil  of  Helen  M.  Knowlton; 
Cowles  Art  School  in  Boston;  ASL  of 
N.  Y.  Member:  SAA  1897;  ANA 
1906;  Boston  WCC:  Coplev  S.  1892; 
Boston  GA;  Am.S. Min.P.  Pa.S. Min.P. 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp., 
1900;  second  Corcoran  prize,  S. Wash. A. 
1901;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  silver  medal,  Charleston  Exp., 


I 


HIMMELSBACH 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


HOBBS 


1902;  gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
medal  of  honor,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F., 
1915;  medal  of  honor,  PAFA  1916;  Lea 
prize  ($100),  PAFA,  1920.  Work: 
"Persis,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New- 
York. 

HIMMELSBACH,     Paula     B.      See     Mrs. 
Balano. 

H  INCH  MAN,   John    H.,  Woodmont,   Conn. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

HINCHMAN,  Margaretta  S.,  3635  Chest- 
nut St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P., I., Dec. — Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of 
Howard  Pyle  and  Kenyon  Cox.  Mem- 
ber: Plastic  C;  Phila  ACG.;  Phila. 
Alliance;    Fellowship   PAFA;    Print   C. 

HINEY,    Elsie    I.,    4046    Powelton   Avenue, 
Philadelphia,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

HINSDALE,  Mrs.  Mabel  F.,  2654  Madison 
Rd.,    Cincinnati,    O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

HINTERMEISTER,  H(enry),  4622  14th 
Ave.,  Brooklvn.  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.— Born  New  York.  N.  Y.,  June  10, 
1897.  Pupil  of  Will  Taylor,  Otto  Wal- 
ter Beck,  Anna  Fisher.  Member: 
NYWCC;   AWCS. 

HINTON,  Charles  Louis,  74  Card  Ave., 
Armour  Villa  Park,  Bronxville,  N.  Y. 
P.,  L,  S.— Born  Ithaca,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  18, 
1869.  Pupil  of  NAD  under  Will  H. 
Low;  Gerome  and  Bouguereau,  in 
Paris.  Member:  Mural  P.  (treas.); 
NSS;  A.  Aid  S.  (sec);  N.  Y.  Arch. 
Lg.  1911;  ANA  1916.  Award  :  Trav- 
eling scholarship,  NAD  1893.  Work: 
Mural  decoration  in  court  house, 
Wilkes-Barre,  Pa.  Illustrated  "Emmy 
Lou."  etc. 

HIRAMOTO,  Masaji,  102  W.  123rd  St., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 

P.,  S.— Born  Tokyo,  Japan,  Dec.  8,  1882. 
Pupil  of  A.  Dow.  Member:  S.  Indp. 
A. 

HIRSCH,   Stefan   A.,   Hotel  Ansonia,   72nd 
St.  and  Broadway,   New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

HIRSCHBERG,    Carl,   Kent,    Conn. 
P.,    I.— Pupil    of   ASL    of    N.    Y.;    Ecole 
des  Beaux-Arts  under  Cabanel  in  Paris. 
Member:    Salma.C. 

HIRSH,    Alice,    51   West   10th    St.;    h.    161 
West  76th   St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     N.   A.   Women  PS. 

HIRSIG,    Alma    M.      See   Mrs.    Bliss. 

HIRST,  Claude  Raguet  (Mrs.  W.  C.  Fit- 
ler),  65  West  11th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.  Pupil  of  Cin- 
cinnati Art  Academy  under  Noble; 
Agnes  D.  Abbatt.  George  Smillie  and 
Charles  C.  Curran  in  New  York. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS. 
Awards  :  First  hon.  mention,  Syra- 
cuse, 1897;  second  prize,  Syracuse,  1898. 
Work  in:  Boston  Art  Club;  Art  Club 
of  Philadelphia. 


HITCHCOCK, 

Hitchcock). 


Cecil    Jay     (Mrs. 
See  Jay,  Cecil. 


George 


HITCHCOCK,  D(avid)  Howard,  Lania- 
keal;  h.  25  Judd  St.,  Honolulu,  Ha- 
waiian Islands. 

P.,  S.,  I.— Born  Hawaii,  May  15,  1861. 
Pupil  of  Virgil  Williams;  Bouguereau 
and  Ferrier  in  Paris.  Member: 
Salma.C.    1904. 

HITCHCOCK,  Lucius  Wolcott,  Premium 
Point  Park,  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.— Born  West  Williamsfleld,  O.,  Dec. 
2,  1868.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Le- 
febvre,  Constant,  Laurens  and  Colarossi 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  SI  1904; 
Salma.C.1907.  Awards:  Silver  medal 
for  illustration,  Paris,  1900;  hon.  men- 
tion, Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver 
medal  for  illustration  and  bronze  for 
painting,  St.  Louis  Exp.,   1904. 

HITCHCOCK,   Mary  D.,  118  West  91st  St., 
New   York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

HITCHNER,  Mary  R.,  235  South  11th  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Fellowship  PAFA. 

HITTLE,  Margaret  A.,  550  Arlington  PL, 
Chicago,    111. 

P.,  I.,  E.,  L.,  T.— Born  Victor,  Iowa  Co., 
Iowa,  April  19,  1886.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
ASL  of  Chicago.  Member:  Chicago 
SA.  Work:  Three  panels,  "Miles 
Standish,"  James  R.  Doolittle  School, 
Chicago;  panel,  "The  Rolling  Mills," 
Lane  Technical  High  School,  Chicago.; 
ceiling  and  frieze  of  Bennett  Museum, 
Garrett  Biblical  Institute,  Evanston,  111. 

HOARD,  Margaret,  140  Wadsworth  Ave., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 

S.— Born  in  Iowa.  Pupil,  ASL.  of  N.  Y. 
Member  :  L'Union  Internationale  des 
Beaux- Arts  et  des  Lettres,  Paris,  1914; 
ASL  of  N.;  NA  Women  PS.  Award: 
Hon.  mention,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Represented  in  Metropolitan  Museum 
of  Art.   New  York,   N.  Y. 

HO  BAN,  Frank  J.,  608  South  Dearborn 
St.;  h.  5345  Winthrop  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  Des. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.  Mem- 
ber:    Palette  and   Chisel   C. 

HOBART,  Clark,  1371  Post  St.,  San 
Francisco,    Cal. 

E.,  P.— Born  in  Illinois.  Pupil  of  Mark 
Hopkins  Inst,  of  Art  in  San  Francisco; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Bridgman  and  Rob- 
ert Blum;  studied  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: San  Francisco  SA;  Cal.SE. 
Award  :  Silver  medal  for  monotype, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Crocker  prize 
($100),  San  F.  AA.,  1918.  Work  in 
Golden  Gate  Museum.  Editor,  Burr- 
Mclntosh   Monthly,    1903-10. 

HOBART,  Gladys  Marie,  907  Valencia  St., 
San   Francisco.    Calif. 

P.,  T.— Born  Santa  Cruz.  Calif.  Aug. 
28,  ^m2.  Pupil  of  J.  C.  Johansen.  Mem- 
ber:     'San   F.    AA. 

HOBART,    Helen    F.,    246    West    14th    St., 
New   York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

HOBBS.  George  L..  705  Chestnut  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa.    (P.) 

HOBBS,  Louise.     See  Allen. 


453 


HODGE 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


HOLLOWAY 


HODGE,  Mrs.  Helen  F(rancis),  714  Kan- 
sas Ave.;  h.  1515  Boswell  Ave.,  Topeka, 
Kan. 

P.,  L. — Born  Topeka,  Kan.  Pupil  of 
Corcoran  School  of  Art  in  Washington, 
George  M.  Stone.  Member:  Topeka 
AG.  Awards  :  Five  first  prizes, 
Kansas   State   Fair. 

HODGE,  Margaret  M(agill),  2312  19th  St., 
Washington,  D.  C. 

P. — Born  Washington.  Pupil  of  Cor- 
coran School  of  Art.  Member:  Wash. 
WCC. 

HODGSKIN,     Helen,     869     President     St., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

HOECKNER,  Carl,  63  W.  Ontario  St., 
Chicago,  III. 

P. — Born  Munich,  Germany,  Dec.  19, 
1883.  Studied  in  Hamburg  and  Cologne. 
Member:  Chicago  SA.,  "Cor  Ar- 
dens." 

HOELZEL,  Elise  Emilia,  2700  Gilliam  Rd., 
Kansas  City,   Mo. 

P. — Born  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  Jan.  8, 
1897.     Pupil  of  C.  A.  Wilimovsky. 

HOFFBAUER,  Charles,  The  Players  Club. 
16  Gramercy  Park,  New  York,  N.  Y. ; 
summer,  70  bis  Rue  Notre-Dame-des- 
Champs,  Paris,  France. 
P. — Born  Paris,  France,  June  28,  1875. 
Pupil  of  Gustave  Moreau,  F.  Flameng 
and  Cormon  in  Paris.  Member  : 
Soci6t4  des  Artistes  Frangais;  So- 
ciety Internationale:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1912. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1898;  second  class  medal,  Paris  Salon, 
1899;  bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900; 
Bourse  de  Voyage,  1902;  Prix  Rosa  Bon- 
heur,  1902;  Prix  National  du  Salon,  1906; 
Knight  of  the  Legion  of  Honor. 
Work:  "Les  Gueux,"  Museum  of 
Rouen;  "The  Roof  Garden,"  Carnegie 
Institute,  Pittsburgh;  "Revolte  de 
Flamands,"  Memorial  Hall,  Philadel- 
phia; "Coin  de  Bataille,"  Luxembourg, 
Paris;  "Sur  les  Toits,"  National  Gallery, 
Sydney,  N.  S.  Wales;  mural  decorations 
in  Confederate  Memorial  Hall,  Rich- 
mond,  Va. 

HOFFHINE,   Helen  G.,  182  Madison  Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

HOFFMAN,  Frank,  6809  Greenview    Ave., 
Chicago,   111. 
P. — M  ember:    Chicago  SA. 

HOFFMAN,  Gustave  Adolph,  5  Laurel  St., 
Rockville,    Conn. 

P.,  E.,  L. — Born  Brandenburg,  Germany, 
Jan.  28,  1869.  Pupil  of  NAD  and  Royal 
Acad.  FA.,  Munich.  Represented  by  a 
series  of  etchings  in  the  National  Gal- 
lery, Berlin;  Royal  Gallery,  Munich; 
National  Gallery,  Leipzig;  Art  Gallery, 
Frankfort;  British  Museum,  London; 
Lenox  Library,  New  York  City;  Capitol, 
Hartford,  Superior  Court,  Rockville, 
Conn. 

HOFFMAN,  Harry  Leslie,  50  West  67th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Old 
Lyme,    Conn. 

P. — Born  Cressona,  Pa.  Pupil  of  ASL 
under   Du   Mond   in    New    York;    Julian 


Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  Salma. 
C.  1908;  MacD.C;  Allied  AA;  S.Conn.P.; 
A.  Aid  S. ;  Lotos  C. ;  AWCS.  Award  : 
Gold  medal,   P.-P.Exp.,   San  F.,   1915. 

HOFFMAN,  Malvina,  157  East  35th  St.; 
h.  120  East  34th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.,    P. — Born   New   York   City,   June   15, 

1887.  Pupil  of  Rodin  in  Paris;  Gutzon 
Borglum  in  New  York.  Member: 
Nat. Inst. of  Social  Sciences;  Three  Arts 
Club.  N.  Y.  (hon.);  N.  A.  Women  PS.; 
Appui  aux  Artistes  (treas.).  Awards  : 
First  prize,  "Russian  Dancers"  exhibit, 
Paris;  hon.  mention  for  sculpture,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Shaw  memorial 
prize,  NAD,  1917;  Widener  gold  medal, 
PAFA,  1920;  Barnett  prize,  NAD,  1921. 
Work:  "Russian  Bacchanale,"  Lux- 
embourg Museum,  Paris;  "Head  of  Mod- 
ern Crusader,"  Metropolitan  Museum  of 
Art;  "Pavlowa  Gavotte,"  Detroit  In- 
stitute;   "Modern  Crusader,"  AIC. 

HOFFMANN,  Maximilian  A.,  4  East  Ohio 
St.,   Chicago,  111. 
S.,    P. — Born    Trier,    Germany,    Feb.    6, 

1888.  Pupil  of  Milwaukee  ASL;  Royal 
Academy,  Munich.  Member:  Chi- 
cago   SA;    SW.    Sc. 

HOFFSTETTER,  W.  A.,  Glenside,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:         Fellowship      PAFA; 
Phila.  WCC;  Phila.  AC. 

HOFTRUP,    J.    L.,    1947    Broadway,    New 
York.    N.    Y. 
P.— M  ember:    Buffalo    SA. 

HOLBERG,  Richard  A.,  232  West  22nd 
St.,   New   York,   N.  Y.      (P.) 


HOLBERG,  Mrs.  R, 

New  York,  N,  Y. 


A.,  232  West  22nd  St. 
(P.) 


454 


HOLLAND,  F(rancis)  Raymond,  627  Mad- 
ison Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer, 
Darien,    Conn. 

P.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Jan.  10,  1886. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
S.Indp.A.;  Silvermine  Group;  Conn.  SA. ; 
Pittsburgh  AA.  Award:  Second 
prize,  Pittsburgh  AA,  1916.  Work: 
"Marsh   House,"    Darien,    Conn. 

HOLLAND,  W.  J.,  5545  Forbes  St.,  Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

HOLLISTER,  Antoinette  B.,  Foster  Hall, 
University  of  Chicago,  Chicago,  111. 
S.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Aug.  19,  1873. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  Injalbert  and  Rodin  in 
Paris.  Member:  SW.  Sc. ;  Chicago 
SA.  Award:  Hon.  mention  for 
Sculpture,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915; 
Shaffer  prize  for  sculpture,  AIC,  Chi- 
cago, 1919. 

HOLLOWAY,  Edward  Stratton,  1327 
Spruce  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
I.,P.,C.,W. — Born  Ashland,  Green  Co., 
N.  Y.  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Award  :  Bronze 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Art  di- 
rector, J.  B.  Lippincott  Co.;  joint  author, 
"The  Practical  Book  of  Interior  Decora- 
tion." 

HOLLOWAY,      Ida      H(oiterhoff)       (Mrs. 
George     C.     Hollo  way),     Norway    Ave., 
Avondale,    Cincinnati,    O. 
P.,    I.,    C. — Born    Cincinnati.      Pupil    of 


HOLM 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


HONIG 


Cincinnati  Art  Academy  under  Frank 
Duveneck;  Henry  B.  Snell,  and  studied 
in  Europe.  Member:  Cincinnati 
Woman's  AC;  MacD.C;  The  Crafters 
C,  Cincinnati. 

HOLM,  Victor  S.,  School  of  Fine  Arts, 
Washington  University,  St.  Louis,  Mo.; 
h.   Clayton,   Mo. 

S.,  T. — Born  Copenhagen,  Denmark, 
Dec.  6,  1876.  Pupil  of  AIC  under  Dor- 
ado Taft;  Philip  Martiny  in  New  York. 
Member:  NSS,  1913;  St.  Douis  AG; 
St.  Douis  AD;  2  x  4  S.  of  St.  Douis; 
Municipal  Art  Com.  (pres.);  Alumni 
AIC.  Awards:  Silver  medal.  Mo. 
State  Fair,  1913;  Carleton  prize  ($100), 
St.  Douis  AG,  1914,  1916,  1917;  hon.  men- 
tion, P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work  : 
Parker  Memorial,  State  University  Di- 
brarv,  Rolla,  Mo.;  Ives  Memorial,  City 
Art  Museum,  St.  Douis;  Barnes  Memo- 
rial, Barnes  Hospital,  St.  Douis;  Mis- 
souri 'State  Monument  at  Vicksburg, 
Miss.;  Gov.  Carlin  Monument,  Carroll- 
ton,  111.;  Washington  Fischel  Monument, 
Bellefontaine,  St.  Douis,  Mo.;  "Boy  With 
Father's  Sword,"  St.  Douis  Public  Di- 
brary;  decorations  on  exterior  of  St. 
Pius'   Church,   St.  Douis. 

HOLMAN,  Abigail,  31  East  18th  Ave., 
Denver,   Colo. 

P.,  T. — M  em  b  e  r  :  Denver  AA.  Direc- 
tor, Fine  Arts  Academy  of  Denver. 

HOLMES,  Ethel  G(reenough)  (Mrs.  Mas- 
sey  Holmes),  1040  West  53rd  St.,  Kansas 
City,  Mo.;  summer,  care  of  M.  S.  Greeh- 
ough,    Nahant,   Mass. 

P.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  May  30,  1879. 
Me  m  b  e  r  :      S.   Indp.   A. 

HOLMES,    Frank    G.,   Denox,    Inc.,    Tren- 
ton,   N.    J. 
P.— M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

HOLMES,  Harriet  Morton  (Mrs.  J.  Gar- 
nett  Holmes),  826  North  Central  Ave., 
Phoenix,    Ariz. 

E. — Born  Portland,  Me.  Member  : 
Calif  Print  Makers;   Calif.   SE. 

HOLMES,    Mrs.    Kate    Osgood,    1454    Bel- 
mont St.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.— M  ember:    Wash.   WCC. 

HOLMES,  Ralph,  Atascadero,  Calif.;  P.O. 
Morro,  Calif. 

P.,  L,  T.— Born  Da  Grange,  111.,  Oct.  1, 
1876.  Pupil  of  AI  Chicago;  studied  in 
Europe. 

HOLMES,    Rhoda   Carleton    Marian.      See 

Mrs.   Nicholls. 

HOLMES,  William  H.,  National  Museum, 
h.  1454  Belmont  St.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P. — Born  Harrison  Co.,  O.,  Dec.  1, 
1846.  Member:  S.Wash.A.;  Wash. 
WCC;  NYWCC.  Awards:  First  Cor- 
coran prize.  Wash.  WCC  1900;  Parsons 
prize.  Wash. WCC  1902.  Work:  "Mid- 
summer," Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington, 
"The  Wanderlusters'  Rest,"  National 
Gallery  of  Art,  Washington,  D.  C; 
Director,  National  Gallery  of  Art,  Smith- 
sonian Institution,   Washington. 

HOLMWOOD,     Loren     C,     161    Columbus 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 


HOLSLAG,  Edward  J.,  1012  North  Dear- 
born St.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  Dec— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y„  1870. 
Pupil  of  NAD  and  John  Da  Farge. 
Member:  Mural  P.;  Chicago  SA; 
Palette  and  Chisel  C.  Award:  Scripps 
traveling  scholarship.  Work:  Mural 
paintings  in  Dibrary  of  Congress,  Wash- 
ington,  D.   C,   and  in   numerous   hotels. 

HOLSMAN,  Elizabeth  Tuttle,  1224  East 
57th  St.,  Chicago,  111.;  summer,  Dotua 
Island,  Lauderdale  Dakes,  Wis. 
P.,  S.— Born  Brownville,  Neb.,  Sept.  25, 
1873.  Pupil  or  AIC.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;  Chicago  AC.  Award:  Sil- 
ver medal,  St.  Paul  Inst.,  1916.  Work: 
"Still  Waters,"  Omaha  Society  of  Fine 
Arts;  "Portrait  of  David  Rankin," 
bronze  bas-relief,  and  "Portrait  of 
Joseph  Addison  Thompson,"  Tarklo 
College,  Tarkio,  Mo.;  bronze  bas-relief 
of  Dr.  C.  E.  Bessey,  University  of  Ne- 
braska, Dincoln,  Neb.;  bronze  bas-relief 
of  Dean  Reese,  Daw  School,  University 
of  Nebraska,  Dincoln,  Neb.;  war  me- 
morial bas-relief  "Dieut.  Alexander  Mc- 
Cornick"  in  U.  S.  Destroyer  "The  Mc- 
Cornick";  war  memorial  "Victory"  with 
honor  roll  in  Harrison  Technical  High 
School,   Chicago. 

HOLTERHOFF,     Ida.       See    Mrs.     George 
C.  Plolloway. 

HOLZER,    J.    A.,    182    East    72d    St.,    New 
York,  N.   Y. 

Mural  P.,  S. — Born  Berne,  Switzerland, 
Oct.  30,  1858.  Pupil  of  Fournier  and 
Bernard  in  Paris.  Member:  N.Y. 
Arch.Dg.  1894;  S. Indp.  A.  Award: 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893.  Work: 
"Homer,"  mural  decoration,  Prince- 
ton University,  Princeton,  N.  J.;  mosaic 
windows  at  Troy.  N.  Y. 

HOLZHAUER,    Emil,    78    Perry    St.,    New 
York,  N.   Y. 

P.,  S. — Born  Schwilbisch  Gmiind,  Ger- 
many, Jan.  21,  1887.  Pupil  of  Robert 
Henri,  Homer  Boss.  Member:  S. 
Indp.  A.;  Dg.  of  N.Y.A. 

HOMER,      Eleazer      B.,      270      Blackstone 

Blvd.,  Providence,  R.  I. 

P. — M  ember:    Providence    AC. 
HOMER,  Ruth  Wellington,  270  Blackstone 

Blvd.,  Providence,  R.  I. 

P. — M  ember:    Providence    AC, 

HONIG,  George  H.,  315  Mercantile  Bank 
Bldg.,  Evansville.  Ind. 
Port.  P.,  S.— Born  Rockport,  Ind.,  1881. 
Pupil  of  NAD  and  H.  A.  MacNeil  in 
New  York.  Work:  Spanish-American 
war  memorial  at  Salina,  Kan.;  "The 
Spirit  of  1861"  and  "The  Spirit  of  1916," 
on  Vanderburg  County  Soldiers'  and 
Sailors'  Coliseum,  Evansville,  Ind.  "The 
Hiker,"  Fairview  Park,  Denver,  Colo.; 
portrait  of  Cleo  Baxter  Davis  in  Court 
House,  Bowling  Green.  Ky. ;  portrait  in 
bronze  of  J.  B.  Gresham  for  War  Moth- 
ers of  America,  Evansville,  Ind. ;  war 
memorials  in:  Elks  House,  Princeton, 
N.  J.;  Evansville,  Ind.  and  Mt.  Vernon, 
Ind.,  in  Eagles  Home  at  Anderson  and 
Richmond,  Ind.;  in  Masonic  Temple, 
Evansville  Ind. ;  in  Court  House  at 
Bloomington,  111.  and  Evansville,  Ind. 


455 


HOOKER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


HORTER 


HOOKER,      Evelyn,     3639     Reading     Rd., 
Avondale.  Cincinnati,  O. 
P. — M  e  m  b  er  :       Cincinnati      Woman's 
AC. 

HONORE,  Paul,  4729  Fourth  Ave.,  De- 
troit, Mich.;  summer,  Birmingham, 
Mich. 

P.,  I.,  E.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Pennsyl- 
vania. May  30,  1885.  Pupil  of  Brangwyn 
and  Wicker.  Member:  Scarab  C. : 
Assoc,  for  Culture.  New  York;  Fine  and 
Industrial  Art  Guild. 

HOOPER,  Mrs.  Annie  Blakeslee,  200  Fifth 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Kew  Gardens, 
L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I..  C. — Born  in  California.  Pupil 
of  San  Francisco  Art  School;  ASL  of 
N.  Y.  and  Charles  Melville  Dewey. 
Member:    NYWCC. 

HOOPER,  Will  Phillip,  200  Fifth  Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Biddeford.  Me.  Pupil  of 
Benjamin  Fitz  and  A'SL  of  N.  Y. ; 
Mass.  Normal  Art  School,  Boston. 
Member:     NYWCC;   Salma.   C. 

HOOVER,    Bessie    M.      See    Mrs.    H.    H. 

Wessel. 
HOPKINS,  C(harles)   E(dwin),  3525  Trim- 
ble Ave.,  Evanston,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P..     E.— Born    Cincinnati,     O.,     Dec.     19. 
1886.     Pupil  of  Nowottny  and  Barnhorn. 
Member:      Cincinnati  AC. 

HOPKINS,  Edna  Boies  ^Mrs.  James  R. 
Hopkins),  55  rue  de  Dantzig,  Paris, 
France. 

Engr. — Born  in  Michigan.  Member  : 
Societe  Internationale  des  Graveurs  en 
Couleurs;  Societe  Internationale  des 
Graveurs  sur  Bois;  Societe  Nationale 
des  Beaux-Arts  in  Paris.  A  av  a  r  d  : 
Silver  medal,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work  in  Library  of  Congress,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C;  Walker  Art  Gallery, 
Liverpool;  National  Museum,  Stock- 
holm; Kunst  Gewerke  Museum,  Berlin; 
Bibliotheque  d'Art  et  Archaeologie, 
Paris;  Cincinnati  Art  Museum;  Detroit 
Institute  of  Arts. 

HOPKINS.    James    R.,    55    Rue    de    Dant- 

zig,  Paris,  France;  and  Art  Academy 
of    Cincinnati.    O. 

P.— Born  in  Ohio,  1878.  Pupil  of  Cin- 
cinnati Art  Academy.  M  e  m  b  "^  r  : 
ANA;  Paris  AAA.  Award:  Lippin- 
cott  prize.  PAFA  1908;  bronze  medal, 
Buenos  Aires.  1910;  gold  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp..  San  F.,  1915;  Harris  bronze 
medal  and  prize  ($300)  ATC  1916:  Clarke 
prize,  NAD,  1920.  Work:  "Frivol- 
ity,^' Cincinnati  Museum;  "A  Kentucky 
Mountaineer,"  Chicago  Art  Inst.;  "Re- 
flections," Atlanta  Art  Association. 

HOPKINS,  Mark,  Giverny-par-Vernon. 
Eure,  France;  and  Williamstown.  Mass. 
S.— Born  Williamstown,  Mass.  Feb.  9, 
1881.  Pupil  of  F'rederick  MacMonnies. 
Member:  Societe  des  Artistes  Fran- 
gais;  Union  Internationale  des  Beaux- 
Arts. 

Hr>DK!NSON.     Ch=irles     Sidney,     Fenway 
Studios,    30  Ipswich   St.,   Boston,  Mass.; 
h.   Manchester,   Mnss. 
P. — Born     Cambridge,     Mass.,     July    27. 


1869.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber: Boston  AG;  Boston  WCC;  SAA 
1898;  Copley  S.  1898;  Port  P.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  1901; 
bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
second  prize  ($200),  Worcester  Mu- 
seum, 1902  and  1905;  Beck  gold  medal, 
PAFA.  1915;  silver  medal,  P. -P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Represented  in  Rhode 
Island  School  of  Design;  Harvard  Uni- 
versity, National  Gallery  of  Art,  A\^ash- 
ington. 

HOPP,    George,    49    West    37th    St.,    New 
York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

HOPPE,    Leslie    F.,   415    South   Claremont 

Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 

Des.— Born   Jerseyville,   111.,   1889.    Pupil 

of  Chicago  AFA  and  AIC.    Member: 

Palette  and  Chisel  C. 
HOPPER,     Edward,     3     Washington     Sq.. 

North,    New    York,    N,    Y.;    summer,    53 

North  Broadway,  Nyack,   N.  Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Nyack,  N.  Y.,  July  22,  1882. 

Pupil    of    Henri:    Hayes    Miller;    Chase. 

Me  m  b  e  r  :     S.Indp.A.;  Whitney  Studio 

C.     Represented  in  Calif.   State  Library. 
HOPPIN,     Howard,    32    Westminster     St., 

Providence,    R.    I. 

P. — M  ember  :    Providence   AC. 

HOPPIN,  Tracy,  New  Hope,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember    :     Salma.  C. 

HOPSON,  William  Fowler,  730  Whitney 
Ave.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 
E.,  Engr.— Born  Watertown,  Conn.,  Aug. 
30,  1849.  Pupil  of  L.  Sanford  in  New 
Haven;  J.  D.  Felter  and  August  Will 
in  New  York.  Member:  Grolier  C, 
New  York;  Rowfant  C,  Cleveland;  AI 
Graphic  A.;  Acorn  C.  and  Paint  and 
Clay  C,  New  Haven;  Odd  Volume  C. 
Boston.  Award:  Hon.  mention  for 
copper  engraving,  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901.  Work  in  Chicago  Art  Insti- 
tute.    'Specialty,    bookplates. 

HORE,   Ethel.     See  Mrs.  John  Townsend. 

HORNBY,  Lester  G(eorge),  Dover,  Mass. 
I.,  Engr.,  P. — Born  Lowell,  Mass., 
March  27,  1882.  Pupil  of  R.  I.  School 
of  Design,  Providence;  Pape  School, 
Boston;  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Laurens  and 
others  in  Paris.  Member:  Provi- 
dence AC;  Providence  WCC;  Chicago 
SE;  N.  Y.  SE;  Salma.  C;  Paris  AAA 
(dir.  1907-1908).  Work  in:  Victoria 
and  Albert  Museum.  London;  Library  of 
Congress,  Washincton,  D.  C;  New  York 
Public  Library;  Art  Institute  of  Chi- 
cago; Detroit  Institute;  R.  I.  School  of 
Design,  Providence;  Carnegie  Institute. 
Pittsburgh.  Illustrated  "Sketch-book  of 
London,"  Edinburgh,  Paris,  Boston, 
Series  of  war  etchings. 

HORNE.  Laura  Trevitte,  Woodstock,  N. 
Y. ;  h.  854  W.  81st  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P..  W.,  L.— Born  Dalton,  Ga.,  June  30, 
1891.  Pupil  of  John  Carlsen,  Francis 
Jones,  Van  Dearing  Perrine.  Mem- 
ber:    Newport   AA. 

HORTER,  Earl,  4920  Parkside  Ave.,  Phil- 
adelphia, Pa. 

T.— M  ember:  ST  1910.  Award: 
Silver  medal,  P.-P.-Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 


456 


NORTON 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


HOWELL 


NORTON,  William  S(amuel),  64  Rue  de 
la  Rochefoucauld,  Paris,  France. 
P.,  W. — Born  Grand  Rapids,  Mich.,  Nov. 
16,  1865.  Pupil  of  ASL  and  NAD  in  New 
York;  Laurens  and  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris.  Member:  NYWCC;  Societe 
Moderne,  and  Salon  d'Automne,  Paris. 
Work:  "Good  Friday  In  Seville," 
Luxembourg  Museum,  and  in  the  Musee 
Carnavalet,  Paris,  France,  and  in  the 
Brooklyn  Museum. 

HOUGH,  Walter,  1423  Monroe  St.,  Wash- 
ington,  D.   C. 

P.,  W.,  L.— Born  Morgantown,  W.  Va., 
April  23,  1859.  Pupil  of  E.  P.  Andrews, 
W.  H.  Holmes.  Member:  Wash. 
AVCC. 

HOULAHAN,  Kathleen,  2159  Shelby  St., 
Seattle,   Wash. 

P. — Born  Winnipeg,  Canada,  Jan.  31, 
1887.  Pupil  of  Robert  Henri.  Mem- 
ber: NAC;  S.Indp.A.;  Seattle  Fine 
Arts    Soc. 

HOUSTON,   Grace,   211-B,   Iroquois  Apts., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Pitts.  AA. 

HOUSTON,  Nora,  519  East  Franklin  St., 
Richmond,    Va. 

P.,  L.,  T.— Pupil  of  Kenneth  Hayes 
Miller,  Connah,  Henri  and  Chase;  Si- 
mon, Blanche,  Menard  and  Cottet  in 
Paris.  Award  :  Hon.  mention,  Ap- 
palachian Exp.,  Knoxville,  1910. 

HOVENDEN,  Martha,  Plymouth  Meeting, 

Pa. 

S. — M  ember:         Fellowship       PAFA; 

Plastic  C. 
HOVER,      Lillian     Sooy     (Mrs.     John     I. 

Hover),    266   West    94th    St.,    New   York, 

N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Colorado  Springs,  Colo.,   Sept. 

19,    1889.      Pupil    of    Wilham    Sartain. 

HOW,  Kenneth  (Gayoso),  37  West  39th 
St.;  h.  469  Fourth  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

P.,  A.— Born  Wautaugh,  L.  L,  N.  Y., 
June  8,  1883.  Pupil  of  Jane  Peterson. 
Member:  NYWCC;  N.  Y.  Arch. 
Lg. ;  Salma.  C.  "W  o  rk  :  Buckwood 
Inn,  Shawnee-on-Delaware,  Pa.;  addi- 
tions to  Hotel  Gramatan,  Bronxville, 
N.    Y. 

HOWARD,  Clara  F(rances),  Stuyvesant 
Chambers,  20  Gramercy  Park,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Poughkeepsie, 
N.   Y. 

Min.P.,  T.— Born  Poughkeepsie,  N.  Y., 
Dec.  5,  1866.  Pupil  of  NAD  and  ASL  of 
N.  Y.  under  Brush  and  Chase.  Mem- 
ber:  N.   A.   Women   PS;   Am. S. Min.P. 

HOWARD,  Edith  Lucile,  10  East  9th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  10  Swarthmore 
Ave.,  Ridley  Park,  Pa. 
P.,  T.— Born  Bellows  Falls,  Vt.  Pupil 
Phila.  School  of  Design  for  Women 
under  Daingerfield,  Snell.  Member: 
NYWCC;  Phila.  Alliance;  Plastic  C. ; 
N.A.  Women  PS.  Awards  :  Hon. 
mention.  Plastic  C,  1915;  gold  medal. 
Plastic  C,   1917. 

HOWARD,  Eloise.  107  West  47th  St., 
New   York,   N.   Y.    (E.) 


457 


HOWARD,      H(ugh)      H  (untington),     8820 
Carnegie  Ave.,   Cleveland,   O. 
P.— Born     Cherry    Valley,     O.,     July    28, 
1860.      Member-:      Cleveland   SA. 

HOWARD,  Lizzie,  266  Exford  St.,  Roches- 
ter,   N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:  Rochester  AC. 

HOWARD,  Marion,  1517  H  St.,  N.W.;  h. 
The  Woodward,  Connecticut  Ave., 
Washington,  D.  C.;  summer.  Fir  Lodge, 
North  Conway,  N.  H. 
Ldscp.P.,Dec. — Born  Roxbury,  Mass., 
1883.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School 
under  Tarbell,  Benson  and  Hale;  also 
of  Chase  and  Edward  H.  Barnard. 
Me  m  b  e  r  :    N.    A.    Women    PS. 

HOWARD,   p.    F.,   Westport,   Conn.    (L) 

HOWE,  Wallis  E.,  1208  Turks  Head  Bldg., 
Providence,  R.  I. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence   AC. 

HOWE,  William  H(enry),  Lawrence  Park, 

Bronxville,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Ravenna,  O.,  1846.  Pupil  of 
Otto  de  Thoren  and  Vuillefroy  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1894,  NA  1897;  SAA 
1899;  Nat.Inst.A.L.;  Salma.C.  1891;  A. 
Fund  S.;  Lotos  C.  Awards:  Hon. 
mention.  New  Orleans  Exp.,  1885;  hon. 
mention,  Paris  Salon,  1886;  third  class 
medal,  Paris  Salon,  1888;  silver  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1889;  Temple  gold  medal, 
PAFA  1890;  grand  gold  medal.  Crystal 
Palace,  London,  1890;  gold  medal,  Bos- 
ton, 1890;  medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chi- 
cago, 1893;  gold  medal,  California  Mid- 
winter Exp.,  1894;  gold  medal,  Atlanta 
Exp,,  1895;  Officer  d'Academie,  Paris, 
1896;  Chevalier  of  the  Legion  of  Honor, 
1899;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901.  Specialty,  landscapes  with 
cattle.  Work  :  "My  Day  at  Home"; 
"Monarch  of  the  Farm,"  National  Gal- 
lery,  Washington,   D.   C. 

HOWELL,  Felicia  Waldo,  The  Sherwood, 
58  West  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Sept.  8,  1897.  Pupil  of  Cor- 
coran Art  School,  Washington,  D.  C; 
Phila.  School  of  Design  for  Women; 
and  Henry  B.  Snell.  Member:  NY 
WCC;  PBC;  N.A.WomenPS.;  SPNY; 
Wash.  WCC;  AWCS.  Awards: 
Prize,  N.  A.  Women  Painters  and 
Sculptors,  1916;  1st  Hon.  mention.  Con- 
cord Art  Asso.,  1919;  silver  medal,  Soc. 
Washington  Artists,  1921;  second  Hall- 
garten  prize,  NAD,  1921;  silver  medal, 
TVash.  WCC,  1921:  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Au- 
gustus S.  Peabody  prize,  AIC  1921. 
T\^  o  r  k  :  "A  New  England  Street." 
Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington;  "The 
Return  of  the  27th  Division,"  National 
Gallery,  Washington;  "The  Avenue  of 
the  Allies,"  American  Legion  Bldg., 
Gloucester,  Mass.  Instructor  in  paint- 
ing. New  York  School  of  Fine  and 
Applied  Art. 

HOWELL,  Helen,  2417  Salutaris  Ave., 
Walnut  Hills,  Cincinnati,  O. 
Ldscp.  P.,  T.— Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art 
Academy;  summer  schools  in  Indiana, 
Michigan,  and  New  York.  Member: 
Cincinnati  Woman's  AC;  MacD.  C  of 
Cincinnati.     Specialty,  silhouettes. 


HOWELL 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


HUGO 


HOWELL,  Josephine  C,  14  East  44th  St., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

HOWITT,    John    Newton,    147    West    23d 

St.,    New   York,    N.    Y. 
P.,   I.^Born  White  Plains,   N.   Y.,   May 
7,  1885.     Pupil  of  ASL.  of  N.  Y.     Me  m- 
b  e  r  :    SI  1912;  Salma.  C;  Guild  of  Free 
Lance  Artists;   Lg.   of  N.Y.A. 

HOWLAND,  Mrs.  Anna  Goodhart,  1429 
Belmont  'St.,  N.  W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.— Born  Atchison,  Kan.,  May  10,  1871. 
Pupil  of  J.  H.  Moser.  Member: 
Wash.     WCC, 

HOWLAND,  Edith,  6  West  28th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Catskill-on-Hudson, 
N.    Y. 

S. — Born  Auburn,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of  Gus- 
tave  Michel  in  Paris;  and  of  Augustus 
Saint  Gaudens.  Member:  ASL  of 
N.  Y. ;  N.  A.  Women  PS.  Award: 
Hon.   mention,   Paris   Salon,  1913. 

HOWLAND,  Elizabeth  H.,  1361  East  56th 
St.,  Chicago,  IlL;  Provincetown,  Mass. 
P.— M  ember:    N.  A.  Women  PS. 

HOWLAND,  George,  29  Quai  Voltaire, 
Paris,   France. 

P. — Born  New  York,  Feb.  12,  1865.  Pu- 
pil of  Benjamin-Constant,  Laurens  and 
Collin  in  Paris.  Awards  :  Hon.  men- 
tion, Paris  Salon,  1914;  silver  medal, 
Paris  Salon,  1921.  Member  :  Cheva- 
lier of  the  Legion  of  Honor  of  France. 

HOYT,  Edith,  1301  21st  St.,  N.  W.,  Wash- 
ington,   D.    C. 

P.— Born  West  Point,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
Charles  Woodbury. 

HUBBARD,  C(harles)  D(aniel),  37  Park 
St.,   Guilford,   Conn. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Newark.  N.  J..  July  14, 
1876.  Pupil  of  Kenyon  Cox  and  John  H. 
Niemeyer.  Member:  New  Haven 
PCC;  Guild  of  Free  Lance  Artists. 

HUBBARD,  Kin,  Indianapolis  News,  In- 
dianapolis,   Ind.    (I.) 

HUBBARD,  iVIary  W(ilson),  142  East  40th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Springfield,  Mass.  April,  1871. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Constant  in 
Paris.  Member:  N. A. Women  PS; 
NYWCC. 

HUBBARD,  Whitney  iVI(yron),  511  First 
St.,  Greenport,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Middletown,  Conn.,  June  18, 
1875.  Pupil  of  F.  V.  Du  Mond.  Mem- 
ber: Conn.  SA;  Brooklyn  WCC;  Conn. 
AFA. 

HUBBELL,  Henry  Salem,  Carnegie  Insti- 
tute of  Technology,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  and 
■Silvermine,  Norwalk,  Conn. 
P.— Born  Paola,  Kan.,  Dec.  25,  1870. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  Whistler,  Collin,  Laurens 
and  Constant  in  Paris.  Member: 
ANA  1906;  Paris  SAP;  Port  P.; 
NAC;  Alhed  AA;  Salma.C.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1901;  third 
class  medal,  Paris  Salon,  1904;  sil- 
ver medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  third 
prize,  Worcester  (Mass.)  Museum, 
1905;  third  Harris  prize  and  bronze 
medal,  AIC  1910.  Director,  School  of 
Painting  and  Decoration,  Carnegie  Inst. 


of  Technology,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.  Work: 
"Child  and  Cat,"  Luxembourg,  Paris; 
"The  Samovar,"  Museum  of  Lille, 
France;  "Larkspurs,"  Government  Col- 
lection, France;  "The  Brasses,"  Wil- 
stach  Collection,  Philadelphia;  "Paris 
Cabman,"  Union  League  Club,  Philadel- 
phia; "Woman  with  Fan,"  Art  Associa- 
tion, Grand  Rapids. 

HUBBELL,  Katherine,  70  Grove  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y.      (S.) 

HUBER,    Leo,    149    East    15th    St.,    New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

HUDNUT,  Alexander,  M.,  5  Nassau  St.; 
h.  19  West  54th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
summer,  Allenhurst,  N.  J. 
P. — Born  Princeton,  N.  J.  Member: 
Salma.C;  Century  Assoc;  and  Lotos 
Club;   NYWCC;  Grolier  C. 

HUDSON,  Charles  W(illiam),  13  Hilton 
St.,  Hyde  Park,  Boston,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Boston,  Aug.  21,  1871.  Pupil 
of  Boston  Museum  School  under  Grund- 
mann,  Tarbell  and  Benson.  Mem- 
ber:    Boston   WCC;    NYWCC. 

HUDSON,  Elmer  F(orrest),  Gramatan 
Court,  Bronxville,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Mon- 
hegan  Island,  Me. 

Marine  P. — Born  Boston,  Aug.  14,  1862. 
Member:  Boston  AC;  Copley  S,  1895; 
Salma.C. 

HUDSON,  Eric,  Bronxville,  N.  Y.     (P.) 

HUDSPETH,  R(obert)  N(orman),  49 
Thoreau  St.,  Concord,  Mass. 
P.,  C,  T.— Born  Caledonia,  Ontario, 
Canada,  July  2,  1862.  Pupil  of  Aca- 
demie  Julian  under  Bouguereau,  Fer- 
rier,  Bashet  and  Doucet.  Work: 
Portrait  miniature  owned  by  Lord  Mil- 
ner,  England;  vase  owned  by  H.  R.  H. 
Queen   Mary  of  England. 

HUESTIS,  Joseph  W.,  564  Jefferson  Ave., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

HUEY,  Florence  G(reene)  (Mrs.  J.  Wls- 
ter  Huey),  Ruxton,  Baltimore  Co.,  Md. 
P.— Pupil  of  Gabrielle  D.  Clements,  Jo- 
seph De  Camp  and  Cecilia  Beaux. 

HUP,  Karl  (Philip),  16th  and  Locust 
Sts.;  h.  2721  North  Fifth  St.,  Philadel- 
phia,  Pa. 

P.,  I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Sept.  28, 
1887.     Pupil  of  PAFA. 

HUFFINGTON,  John  C,  Darien,  Conn. 
P.,I.,T.— M  e  m  b  e  r  :  NYWCC;  Conn. 
AFA. 

HUGHES,  Daisy  M.,  1941  South  Union 
Ave.,  Los  Angeles,  Calif.;  summer, 
Carmel,  Monterey  Co.,  Calif. 
P.,  T.— Born  Los  Angeles,  Calif.,  Jan. 
24,  1883.  Pupil  of  L.  E.  Garden  Macleod, 
Ralph  Johonnot,  Rudolph  Schaeffer, 
and  C.  P.  Townsley.  Member  :  Calif. 
AC;  Liaguna  Beach  AA;  Art  Teachers' 
Assoc,   of  Southern  Calif, 

HUGHES,  R.  v.,  3137  Raleigh  Ave.,  Pitts- 
burgh,    Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Pitts.  AA. 

HUGO,     Joseph,     836     Hazelwood     Ave., 
Pittsburgh.   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 


458 


HULBERT 


WHO'S   WHO  IIS  ART 


HURRY 


HULBERT,  Charles  Allen,  South  Egre- 
mont,  Mass. 

P. — Born  Mackinac  Island,  Mich.  Pu- 
pil of  PAFA;  Metropolitan  Museum  Art 
School,  and  Artist-Artisan  Institute  in 
New  York.  Member:  Salma.C; 
Brooklyn  SA.  Work:  "The  Old 
Trunk,"  Public  Library,  Erie,  Pa.; 
"Portrait  of  Secretary  Edward  Lazan- 
sky,"  in  the  Capitol,  Albany,  N.  Y. 

HULBERT,  Katherine  Allmond  (Mrs. 
Charles  A.  Hulbert),  South  Egremont, 
Mass. 

P. — Born  in  Sacramento  Valley,  Cal. 
Pupil  of  San  Francisco  School  of  De- 
sign; NAD  and  John  Ward  Stimson 
in  New  York.  Me  m  b  e  r  :  N.  A.  Women 
PS;  Brooklyn  SA.  Work:  "The  Old 
Mill,"  Library  of  Girls'  High  School, 
Brooklyn. 

HULL,  Mrs.  Marie  Atkinson,  222  North 
St.,  Jackson,  Miss. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Summit,  Miss.,  Sept. 
28,  1890.  Pupil  of  PAFA,  and  of  Carl- 
son and  Reid  at  the  Broadmoor  Art 
Academy.  Member:  Mississippi 
AA.  Award  :  Miss.  AA  gold  medal, 
1920.  Work:  "Ancient  Oaks,  Biloxi," 
owned  by  Mississippi  Art  Association. 

HUMPHREY,  David  W.,  259  West  23rd 
St..  New  York,  N.  J. 

P.,  I.— Born  Elkhorn,  Wis.,  Feb.  28, 
1872.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Julian  Academy, 
Colarossi,  and  Whistler  in  Paris. 
Member:    S.Indp.A. 

HUMPHREYS,  Albert,  96  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  S. — Born  near  Cincinnati,  O.  Pupil 
of  Gerome,  Robert-Fleury  and  Alexan- 
der Harrison  in  Paris.  Member: 
Paris  AAA;  Phila.  Sketch  C; 
Inter.  Soc.  of  Pts.,  Paris  (hon.). 
Award  :  Landscape  prize,  Paris 
AAA.  Represented  by  a  painting  in  De- 
troit Institute  of  Arts;  paintings  in  Bos- 
ton Public  Library;  sculpture  in  Na- 
tional Gallery  of  Art.  Washington;  Chil- 
dren's fountain,  South  Manchester, 
Conn. 

HUMPHRISS,  Charles  H.,  162  East  35th 
St.;  h.  502  West  173d  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

S. — Born  in  England,  1867.  Mem- 
ber:  NSS,   1908;   S.Indp.A. 

HUNT,  E.  Aubrey,  Val  Verde,  Dudley 
Rd.,  Hastings,  Sussex,  England. 
P. — Born  Weymouth,  Mass.,  Feb.  7, 
1855.  Pupil  of  GerOme  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: English  Art  Club,  London.  Rep- 
resented in  Leeds  Gallery  of  Art,  and 
Leicester  Gallery  of  Art,   England. 

HUNT,  Esther,  1683  Oak  St.,  San  Fran- 
cisco, Cahf. 

P.,  S. — Born  Grand  Island,  Neb.,  Aug. 
30,  1885.  Pupil  of  Chase.  Award: 
Gold  medal  for  sculpture,  Pan-Cal.  Exp., 
San  Diego,  1915. 

HUNT,  Leigh,  Convent  Ave.  and  139th  'St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Housatonic, 
Mass. 

Etcher,  T.,  W.,  L.— Born  Galena,  111., 
May  19,  1858.  Pupil  of  Henry  Farrer. 
Member:  A.  Fund  S.;  Soc.  of  Amer- 
ican   Etchers;    Arti    et    Amicitae,    Hol- 


land (cor.).  Professor,  College  of  the 
City   of  New   York. 

HUNT,    Thomas,    198    Fingerboard    Rd., 
Ft.  Wadsworth,  S.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:    NYWCC. 

HUNT,  Una  Clarke  (Mrs.  Arthur  P. 
Hunt),  5  Chelsea  Sq.,  New  York,  N.  Y.? 
summer,  Pasaconaway,  N.  H. 
P.,  I.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Jan.  6,  1876. 
Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School  and 
Denman  W.  Ross.  Member:  Wash. 
WCC.  Work:  Reredos  in  St.  Michael's 
Church,   Geneseo,   N.  Y. 

HUNTER,  David  Charles,  646  North  Clark 
St.,    Chicago,    111. 

P.,  S.,  T.— Born  in  England.  Pupil  of 
John  Gelert  and  AIC.  Member- 
Palette  and  Chisel  C. 

HUNTER,     Edward,    9    Troy    St.,    N.     S., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Pitts.  AA. 

HUNTER,  Isabel,  2050  Santa  Clara  Av»„ 
Alameda,   Calif. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  San  Francisco,  Calif. 
Pupil  of  Arthur  Mathews,  Emil  Carl- 
sen,  Joullin.  Member:  San  F.  AA. 
Illustrates    for    "Sunset"    Magazine. 

HUNTER,     Lizbeth     C(Iifton),     58     West 

57th   St.,   New   York,   N.   Y. 
P. — Born      Gilroy,      Cal.       Member: 
NYWCC;    Boston   WCC;     N.A.     Women 
PS.  ^ 

HUNTINGTON,      Margaret      Wendell,      5S 

Washington  Sq.,  New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     N.A.  Women  PS. 

HURLBURT,    Irving    E.,    15   Wolcott    St., 
New  Haven,   Conn. 
P. — M  ember:  New  Haven  PCC. 

HURLEY,  E(dward)  T(imothy),  Rook- 
wood  Pottery;  h.  2112  St.  James  Place, 
W.  H.,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P.,  Etcher. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Oct. 
10,  1869.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art 
Academy  under  Frank  Duveneck. 
Member:  Cincinnati  AC;  Chicago 
SE;  Richmond  Art  Assoc;  Crafters 
Company  of  Cincinnati.  Awards  : 
Gold  medal  for  originality  in  art 
workmanship,  St.  Louis  World's 
Fair,  1904;  Logan  Medal,  AIC,  1921. 
Work:  "Midnight  Mass,"  Cincinnati 
Museum;  etchings  in  Richmond  (Ind.) 
Art  Association;  Art  Association  of 
Indianapolis;  Detroit  Institute;  Toledo 
Museum  of  Art;  New  York  Public 
Library;  Library  of  Congress,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C;  Chicago  Art  Institute; 
British   Museum,    London,    England. 

HURLEY,  Irene  Bishop  (Mrs.  E.  T.  Hur- 
ley), 2121  St.  James  Place,  Cincinnati, 
Ohio. 

Min.  P. — Born  Colorado  Springs,  Colo., 
Dec.  5,  1881.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art 
Academy.  Member:  Cincinnati  Wo- 
man's  AC. 

HURRY,      Mrs.      Lucy      Washington,      60 

Greenwich  St.,  Hempstead,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.,  C.  Dec. — Born  Hagerstown,  Md., 
Oct.  17,  1884.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
under  Kenyon  Cox;  Marshall  Fry;  Fay- 
ette Barnum.  Member:  NYWCC; 
N.A.  Women   PS. 


459 


HURST 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


IHRIG 


HURST,  L(ou)  E.,  Avon,  Lorain  Co., 
Ohio. 

P.,  I.,  C— Born  Avon,  O.,  Oct.  30,  1883. 
Pupil  of  Cleveland  School  of  Art,  F.  C. 
Gottwald  and  H.  G.  Keller.  Specialty, 
botanical  illustrating. 

HURTT,  Arthur  R.,  1518  Mohawk  St., 
Los    Angeles,    Cal. 

P.,  L— Born  in  Wisconsin,  Oct.  31,  1861. 
Pupil  of  Douglas  Volk.  Member: 
Cal.  AC.  Award  :  Bronze  medal, 
Pan. -Cal.  Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915. 
Painter  of  stage  scenery,  murals  and 
panoramas. 

HUTAF,  August  W(illiam),  1— 31st  St., 
TVoodcliff-on-Hudson,  N.  J. 
P..  I.— Born  Hoboken.  N.  J.,  Feb.  25, 
1879.  Pupil  of  W.  D.  'Streetor.  Mem- 
ber: Am.  Numismatic  Society;  SI. 
Specialty  posters,  book  covers  and  dec- 
orations. Author  of  poster  "The  Spirit 
of  the  Fighting  Tanks",  5th  Liberty 
Loan. 

HUTCHENS,  Frank  Townsend,  48  Bar- 
row St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Norwalk, 
Conn. 

P.,  L. — Born  Canandaigua,  N.  Y.,  June 
7,  1869.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.,  under 
Wiles,  Du  Mond  and  Mowbray;  Julian 
Academy  under  Constant  and  Laurens, 
and  Calarossi  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  Paris  AAA;  Salma.  C. ; 
AWCS.  W^  o  r  k  :  "Betrayal  of  Christ," 
Carnegie  Library,  Sioux  Falls,  S.  Dak.; 
portrait  of  Gen.  Edgar  S.  Dudley,  Mu- 
seum at  West  Point,  N.  Y.;  "Autumn 
Afternoon,"  Art  Club,  Erie,  Pa.;  "A 
Winter  Morning,"  Herron  Art  Institute, 
Indianapolis;  "Twilight  in  Picardie," 
Toledo  Museum;  "Hon.  James  W.  Wads- 
worth,"  Capitol.  Albany;  "Olive  Garden, 
Capri,"  Sioux  Falls  Art  Asso. 

HUTCHINS,    John     E(ddy),    709    Putnam 
Ave.,  Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer,   Kiamesha,    N.   Y. 
P.,  C— Born  Wyoming,  Pa.,  Mar.,  1891. 

HUTCHINS,    Will,     Deerfield,     Mass.;     h. 
1348  Euclid  St.,  Washington,   D.   C. 
P.,    W.,    L. — Born    Westchester,    Conn., 
June  11,   1878.     Pupil  of  Yale  School  of 
FA;    Laurens   in   Paris. 

HUTCHISON,  D.  C,  145  Hawthorne  Ave., 
Yonkers,    N.    Y.    (I.) 

HUTCHISON,      Mrs.      Ellen      Wales,      866 

Elm   St.,    New   Haven,    Conn. 
P.,  T. — Born  East  Hartford,  Conn.,  June 
12,    1868.      Pupil    of   C.    E.    Porter.    Geo. 
Thomson.      Member:     Conn.    AFA. 

HUTCHISON,  F(rederick)  W.,  45  E.  59th 
St.,   New   York,   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Montreal,  Canada.  Pupil  of 
Jean  Paul  Laurens,  Benjamin-Constant. 
Member:     Allied  AA. ;   Salma.   C. 

HUTSON,    Charles    Woodward,    7321    Pa- 
nola St.,   New  Orleans,   La. 
P.,     W. — Born     McPhersonville,     S.     C, 
Sept.   23,   1840. 

HUTTIO,     E.    W.,    Century    Bldg.,    Pitts- 
burgh.  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 


HUTTY,  Alfred  H.,  96  Fifth  Ave.,  Ne-w 
York.  N.  Y.;  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Grand  Haven,  Mich.,  Sept 
1877.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine 
Arts;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Chase  and 
Birge  Harrison.  Member:  Salma.  C, 
Woodstock  AA;  Carolina  Art  Asso. 
Represented  in  Gibbes  Memorial  Art 
Gallery,  Charleston,  S.  C.  Director. 
School  of  Art  of  Carolina  Art  Associa- 
tion. 

HYATH,  Winfred  8.,  Bryn  Athyn,  Pa 
(P.) 

HYATT,  Anna  Vaughn,  44  Gramercy  Park 

New    York,    N.    Y. 

S. — Born  Cambridge,  Mass.,  March  10, 
1876.  Pupil  of  Henry  H.  Kitson  in  Bos- 
ton; H.  A.  MacNeil  and  Gutzon  Borglum 
in  New  York.  Member:  NSS 
1905;  ANA  1916.  Awards:  Bronze 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  hon  men- 
tion, Paris  Salon,  1910;  silver  medal, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  purple  rosette 
from  French  Government,  1915;  gold 
medal.  Plastic  C,  1916;  Saltus  medal. 
NAD,  1920.  Work:  "Lion,"  erected 
at  Dayton,  O.;  bronze  "Fighting  Ele- 
phants," Carnegie  Institute,  Pitts- 
burgh; "Joan  of  Arc,"  New  York  City. 
Curator  of  Sculpture  at  French  Muse- 
um, New  York,  1918.  Specialty,  ani- 
mals. 

HYATT,     Harriet     Randolph.      See     Mrs. 

Mayer. 

HYDE,  Haliie  Champlin  (Mrs.  Edward  B. 
Hyde).      See    Mrs.    Fenton. 

HYDE,  Mary  Elizabeth,  3  The  Roanoke, 
Clifton,    O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati's  Woman's 
AC. 

HYDE,  Russell  Taber,  159  Summer  St.. 
Waltham,  Mass.;  summer,  Summer 
'School  of  Painting,  Ogunquit,  Me. 
P.,  E.,  L.,  T.— Born  Waltham,  Mass., 
July  14,  1886.  Pupil  of  Laurens,  Bachet, 
Richer.     Member:     Dissenters. 

HYDE,  William  H(enry),  829  Park  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Windsor, 
Vt. 

Port.  P.— Born  New  York,  Jan.  29,  1858. 
Pupil  of  Boulanger,  Lefebvre,  Doucet 
and  Alexander  Harrison  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1900;  SAA  1893;  Cen- 
tury Assoc.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  bronze  medal,  Pan- 
Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  hon.  mention, 
P.-P.Exp.,    San   F.,    1915. 

HYETT,  Will  J.,  care  of  Gillespie  Gal- 
leries, 422  Wood  St.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.; 
h.  Gibsonia,  Pa. 

P. — Born  Chiltenham.  England,  Jan.  IG, 
1876.  Pupil  of  Sir  Alfred  East.  Mem- 
ber: Pittsburgh  AA;  Pittsburgh  Arch. 
C.  Awards:  Bronze  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  third  honor,  Pitts- 
burgh AA,    1917. 

IDE,  Alice  Steele.  See  Mrs.  Foster  Han- 
naford. 

IHRIG,     Clara     Louise,     12     Buffalo     St., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 


460 


ILLAVA 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


IRVING 


ILLAVA,  Karl,  412  East  37th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y.    (S.) 

ILLIAN,  George  (John),  139  East  38th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  252  Garden 
Ave.,  Mt.  Vernon,  N.  Y. 
I. — Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  Nov.  29,  1894. 
Pupil  of  Milwaukee  Art  Inst.;  AIC; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  SI;Salma. 
C. ;   Guild  of  Free  Lance  Artists. 

INGELS,  Kathleen  Beverley.  See  Robin- 
son. 

INGERLE,  Rudolph  F.,  McClurg  Bldg., 
28  S.  Wabash  St.;  h.  6851  Ridgeland 
Ave.,   Chicago,   111. 

P. — Born  Vienna,  Austria,  April  14. 
1879.  Member:  Chicago  SA;  Cliff 
Dwellers;  Palette  and  Chisel  Club;  Bo- 
hemian AC.  Work  :  "After  the 
Storm,"  City  of  Chicago;  "Moonrise," 
Arche  Club,   Chicago. 

INGERSOLL,  Anna  Warren,  1815  Walnut 
St.,   Philadelphia,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:   Fellowship  PAFA. 

INGERSOLL,    Emma    K.    Hess    (Mrs.    D. 

W.  Ingersoll),  Chestertown,  Md. 

P.,  T.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Jan.  18,  1878. 

Pupil   of  AIC.     Member:    Designers' 

Alumni     of     AIC.       Award  :      Bronze 

medal   for   miniatures,    St.    Louis     Exp., 

1804. 

INGHAM,  Elizabeth  Howell,  (Mrs.  F.  S. 
Smith),  E.  Palisade  Ave.,  Englewood, 
N.   J. 

P.,  I.— Born  Easton,  Pa.  Pupil  of  PAFA 
and  Drexel  Inst,  in  Phila. ;  Whistler  in 
Paris,  and  studied  in  London.  M  e  m- 
ber:  Phila.  WCC;  N.  A.  Women  PS; 
NYWCC;   Wash.   WCC. 

INGLIS,  John  J.,  144  North  Union  St., 
Rochester,    N.    Y. 

P.,  I.,  C. — Born  DubJin,  Ireland,  Aug. 
26,  1867.  Pupil  of  Gerome,  Courtois, 
and  Collin  in  Paris,  and  studied  in 
London.  Member:  Royal  Hibernian 
Academy  of  Arts,  Dublin;  Rochester 
AC.  Award  :  Taylor  Scholarship 
for  painting,  Dublin  Academy. 

INGRAHAM,  George  Hunt,  1127  Guardian 
Bldg.;  h.  2052  Cornell  Rd.,  Cleveland,  O. 
E.,  Arch. — Born  New  Bedford,  Mass., 
Mar.  17,  1870.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Inst,  of 
Technology.  Member:  Cleveland 
Chamber   of   Commerce. 

INNESS,  George,  Jr.,  care  of  Century 
Co.,  353  Fourth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
summer,  Cragsmoor,  Ulster  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Paris,  France,  Jan.  4,  1853,  of 
American  parents.  Pupil  of  his  father, 
George  Inness.  Member:  ANA  1893, 
NA  1899;  SAA1880;  Boston  AC;  Salma. 
C.  1876  (Life  1899);  A. Fund  S;  Lotos  C. 
Awards  :  Gold  medal,  Paris  Salon, 
1899;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  silver  medal,  Charleston 
Exp.,  1902;  gold  medal.  AAS  1902. 
Work:  "Shepherd  and  Sheep,"  Metro- 
politan Museum,  New  York;  "Sheep 
Grazing,"  Art  Museum,   Montclair,  N.  J. 

INVERNIZZI,     Prosper,     500    West     178th 
St.,  New  York,   N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 


lORIO,  Adrian  J.,  Lang  Studios,  6  New- 
bury St.;  h.  28  Park  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P.,  I.,  W.,  L.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y., 
May  13,  1879.  Pupil  of  Will  H.  Brad- 
ley. Member:  The  Artists-Design- 
ers Lg.  of  New  England.  Illustrations 
for  H.  M.  Caldwell  Co.;  Oliver  Ditson 
Co.;    Ginn  and   Co. 

lOUKAl,  Kyahel,  106  West  55th  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

IPSEN,  Ernest  L.,  119  East  19th  St.,  New 
York,    N.   Y. 

Port. P. —Born  Maiden,  Mass.,  Sept.  5, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School; 
Royal  Academy  at  Copenhagen.  Mem- 
ber: NAC  (life);  ANA;  Allied  AA; 
Salma. C.  Represented  in  Chicago  Art 
Institute;  Massachusetts  Institute  of 
Technology;  Boston  State  House;  Tren- 
ton State  House. 

IRELAND,  Leroy,  53  East  59th  St.,  New 
York.    N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa..  Dec.  24, 
1889.  Pupil  of  Pennsylvania  Academy 
of  Fine  Arts,  under  Daniel  Garber. 
Work:  "God  of  the  Snake  Dance," 
Dallas  Art  Association. 

IRELAND,    William     Addison,    Columbus 
Evening     Dispatch;     h.     264     Woodland 
Ave.,   Columbus,   Ohio. 
I.— Born   Chillicothe,   Ohio,   Jan.   8,   1880. 

IRISH,  Margaret  Holmes  (Mrs.  H.  C. 
Irish),  Webster  Grove,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 
P.— Born  Chatham,  Ontario,  May  2, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Neb.  State  University; 
St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts  under 
Cornoyer.  M  e  m  b  e  r  :  St.  Louis  Wom- 
an's AL  (pres.);  S.Indp.A.;  St.  Louis 
Art  Students'  Assoc;  Twentieth  Cen- 
tury C.  Awards:  Hon.  mention, 
Woman's  Art  League,  St.  Louis;  bronze 
medal,  MFWC;  hon.  mention  and  prize, 
Missouri  State  Fair,  1912.  Member: 
Art  Students'  Assoc;  St.  Louis  An- 
cients. 

IRVIN,   Rea,   Spuvten  Duyvil,  N.  Y. 

I. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  Aug.  26, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Hopkins  Art  Institute, 
San  Francisco.     Member:    SI  1913. 

IRVINE,    M.    Bell,  Albemarle  Court,   Nor- 
folk, Va. 
P.— M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

IRVINE.  Wilson  H..  Hamburgh,  Conn. 
Ldscp.P.— Born  Byron,  111.,  Feb.  28, 
1869.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;  Chicago  WCC;  Cliff  Dwellers; 
Palette  and  Chisel  C.  Chicago;  Salma. 
C.  Awards:  Cahn  prize.  ($100), 
AIC  1912;  Carr  prize  ($100),  AIC  1915; 
silver  medal,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915; 
medal,  Chicago  SA  1916;  Palette  and 
Chisel  C.  prize,  AIC  1916;  Grower  prize, 
AIC  1917.  Work:  "The  Road"  and 
"Autumn,"  Art  Institute  of  Chicago, 
Mun.  AL  purchase,  1911. 

IRVING,  Anna  D.,  22  High  St.,  New 
Haven,    Conn. 

P. — M  ember:  New  Haven  Paint  and 
Clay  Club. 


461 


ISRAEL 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


JAEGERS 


ISRAEL,  Nathan,  15  Kossuth  Place, 
Brooklyn,  N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ;  Dec.  21, 
1895.  Pupil  of  Max  Weber,  K.  H. 
Miller,  B.  Robinson.  Member:  ASL. 
of  N.  Y.;   S.Indp.A. 

IVES,  Neil  McD(owe!l),  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  Nov.  27,  1890. 
Pupil  of  Du  Mond,  Carlson  and  Das- 
burg. 

IVES,  Percy,  22  West  Mountain  St.;  h. 
502  Cass  Ave.,  Detroit,  Mich. 
Port. P.,  T. — Born  Detroit,  Mich.,  June 
5,  1864.  Pupil  of  L.  T.  Ives;  Bougue- 
reau,  Gerome,  Lefebvre  and  Boulanger 
in  Paris.  Member:  Detroit  Art 
Assoc. ;  Fellowship  PAFA.  Award  : 
Hon.  mention,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901. 

IVINS,    Mrs.    Florence   W.,    75    West    55th 
St.,   New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,    Engr. — M  ember:    N.    A.    Women 
PS. 

IVORY,   P.   V.   E.,  51  West  10th  St.,  New 
York,   N.    Y. 
I.— M  ember:     Salma.    C, 

IZOR,  Esteile  Peele,  "The  Wellington," 
West  Michigan  St.,  Indianapolis,  Ind. 
P.,W. — Pupil  of  Forsyth  and  Steel  In 
Indianapolis;  Freer  and  Vanderpoel  in 
Chicago;  Chase  and  Herter  in  New 
York;  H.  D.  Murphy  in  Boston.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :   Ind.  AC. 

JACKSON,  Annie  Hurlburt,  329  Tappan 
St.,  Brookline,  Mass. 

P. — Born  Minneapolis,  Minn.,  Aug.  19, 
1877.  Pupil  of  Eric  Pape;  Murphy; 
Woodbury.  Member:  Copley  S. ; 
Boston    GA;    Pa.S.Min.P.;    Am.S.Min.P. 

JACKSON,   Chevalier,   Schwenkville,   Pa. 
I.,    W.,    L.,     T.— Born    Pittsburgh,    Pa., 
Nov.    4,    1865.     Pupil   of  A.   Bryan  Wall. 
Member:     Pittsburgh  AA. 

JACKSON,   Elbert   McGran,  116  East  66th 
St.,   New  York,   N.  Y. 
I. — M  ember:     Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 
Illustrates       for       "Saturday       Evening 
Post." 

JACKSON,  Hazel  Brill,  1386  Beacon  St., 
Brookline,    Mass.    (P.) 

JACKSON,  John  Edwin,  57  West  37th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I. — Born  Nashville,  Tenn.,  Nov.  7, 
1875.  Pupil  of  NAD,  ASL.  of  N.  Y. 
Member:  Salma.  C;  SI;  Guild  of 
Free  Lance  Artists.  Illustrations  for 
"Scribner's,"  Century  Co.,  "Harper's 
Magazine,"   "Cosmopolitan." 

JACKSON,  (Miss)  Lesley,  "The  Concord." 
Washington,    D.    C, 

P. — Born  Rochester,  Minn.  Member: 
S.Wash.A.;  Wash.WCC;  Wash.SFA; 
N.  A.  Women  PS;  NYWCC.  Award  : 
Second  Corcoran  prize,  Wash.WCC, 
1905. 

JACKSON,  Martin  J(acob),  Bradbury 
Bldg. ;  h.  222  South  Mariposa  Ave.,  Los 
Angeles,   Calif. 

P. — Born  Newburgh,  N.  Y.,  April  12, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Cooper  Union  and  NAD 
under  Edgar  M.  Ward  in  New  York; 
Comelli  in  London;  also  studied  in 
Paris,  Brussels  and  Antwerp.     Mem- 


ber: S.Indp.A.  Awards:  Silver 
medal  for  oil  painting  and  silver 
medal  for  water  colors,  Alaska- Yukon 
Exp.,    Seattle,   1909. 

JACKSON,  Mrs.  May  Howard,  1816  16th 
St.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
S.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  May  12,  1877. 
Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member:  S.  Indp.  A. 
Work:  "Wilham  P.  Price,"  St.  Thom- 
as' Church,  Phila. ;  "Paul  Lawrence 
Dunbar,"  Dunbar  High  School,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C. ;  William  H.  Lewis,  ex- 
Asst.  Attorney  General;  Kelly  Miller, 
Howard   University,   Washington,   D.   C. 

JACKSON,  Roy,  1015  Madison  St.,  Seattle, 
Wash.    (P.) 

JACOB,    F.   W.,   2546   Melrose   Ave.,    Nor- 
wood,   O. 
P. — M  ember:      Cincinnati  AC. 

JACOBS,  Harry  W.,  45  Brantford  PL, 
Buffalo,  N.  Y.   (P.,  T.) 

JACOBS,  Michel,  58  West  57th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

Port.  P.,  S.,  T.— Born  Montreal,  Canada, 
Sept.  10,  1877.  Pupil  of  Laurens  in 
Paris;  E.  M.  Ward  at  NAD.  Mem- 
ber: Salma.  C.  Work:  "Portrait 
of  Senator  Underwood"  and  "Portrait 
of  Champ  Clark",  in  the  Capitol,  Wash- 
ington; 26  portraits  in  Baron  de  Hi|sch 
Inst.,  Montreal,  Canada;  Medal  for 
"Military  Order  of  World  War." 
Author   of    "The   Art   of   Color." 

JACOBSEN,  Mrs.  E.  M.  P.  (See  Plum- 
mer.) 

JACOBSON,  Oscar  B(rousse),  University 
of  Oklahoma;  h.  609  Chautauqua  St., 
Norman,  Okla. 

P.,  L.,  T.— Born  Westervik,  Sweden, 
May  16,  1882.  Pupil  of  Birger  Sandzen, 
Weir,  Albert  Thompson  and  Neimeyer; 
Yale  Art  School.  Member:  College 
AA.,  Oklahoma  AA. ;  Work:  "Prayer 
for  Rain,"  McPherson  Art  Gallery,  Kans.; 
"Voices  of  the  Past,"  Bethany  Art 
Gallery,  Lindsborg,  Kans. ;  "Portrait  of 
Gov.  Williams,"  State  Capitol,  Okla- 
homa City,  Okla.;  "Rio  Grande,"  Hayes 
Normal  School.  Represented  in  collection 
of  the  University  of  Oklahoma,  Norman. 

JACOBY,  Helen  Eaton,  859  East  58th  St., 
Indianapolis,  Ind.;  summer,  277  North 
Shore  Drive,  South  Haven,  Mich. 
P.,  I. — Born  Indianapolis,  Ind.  Pupil 
of  Otto  Stark  in  Indianapolis;  Pratt 
Inst.  Brooklyn.  Member:  Indiana 
Artists  C. 

JAEDIKER,   Theodore,   19   East   28th   St., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

JAEGERS,  Albert,  Suffern,  N.  Y. 

S. — Born  Elberfeld,  Germany,  March  28, 
1868.  Member:  NSS  1899;  N.  Y. 
Arch.Lg.;  Nat.Inst.A.L.  Work:  Baron 
Steuben  statue,  Washington,  D.  C. 
Partorius  monument,  Germantown,  Pa. 

JAEGERS,   Augustine,   404   Twelfth  Ave., 
Long  Island  City,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S. — Born    Barmen,     Germany,    Mar.    31, 
1878.      Pupil    of    ASL    of    N.    Y.;    NAD; 
Ecole   des    Beaux-Arts    in    Paris    under 


462 


JAMAR 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


J ESS UP 


Merci6.  Member:        NSS,        1909. 

Awards  :  Collaborative  and  Avery 
prize,  Arch.  Lg.  of  N.  Y.,   1909. 

JAMAR,  S.  Corinne,  Elkton,  Cecil  Co., 
Md. 

Min.  P.— Born  Elkton,  Md.  Pupil  AIC; 
Drexel   Inst.,    Phila. 

JAMES,  Alexander  R.,  Dublin,  N.  H. 
P. — Born  Cambridge,  Mass.,  1890.  Pupil 
of  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Boston,  A.  H. 
Thayer.  Work:  "Portrait  of  Prof. 
William  James"  and  "Portrait  of  a 
Girl,"   Museum   of  Fine  Arts,   Boston. 

JAMES,  Arthur  E.,  2  East  23rd  St.,  New 
York,    N.   Y. 
I. — M  ember:     SI. 

JAMES,   Mrs.    Esther    M(orse),  16  Strath- 
more    Rd.,    Brookline,    Mass. 
Min.  P. — Born  Brookline,  Mass.,  Oct.  15, 
1885.     Pupil   of  Hale  and  Benson. 

JAMES,  Faustina.  See  Mrs.  John  H. 
Kelly. 

JAMES,  John  Wells,  1239  Dean  St.,  Brook- 
lyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Feb.  22,  1873. 
Pupil     of     James     Knox.     Member: 
Salma.  C. 

JAMES,  William,  Riverway  Studios,  Bos- 
ton, Mass.;  h,  89  Irving  St.,  Cambridge, 

P.,  T. — Born  Cambridge,  Mass.,  June  17, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Benson  and  Tarbell. 
Member:  Boston  GA.  Award: 
Silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 

JAMESON,  Arthur  E(dward),  141  Sixth 
Ave.;  h.  29  East  38th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

I.— Born  in  England,  March  26,  1872. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.     Member:    SI. 

JANSSON,  Alfred,  1851  Byron  St.,  Chi- 
cago, 111. 

P.— Born  in  Sweden,  1863.  Studied  In 
Stockholm  and  Paris.  Member: 
Palette  and  Chisel  C;  Chicago  SA; 
Chicago  AC;  Chicago  AG.  Awards: 
Swedish  American  Artists  3d  prize, 
1911;  Rosenwald  purchase  prize  ($200), 
AIC  1912;  Carr  landscape  prize,  AIC 
1914.  Work:  "Icy  Rocks,"  Municipal 
Commission  purchase. 

JAQUES,  Bertha  E.  (Mrs.  W.  K.  Jaques), 
4316  Greenwood  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
Etcher,  Printer,  W.,  T. — Born  Coving- 
ton, O.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Member: 
Chicago  SA;  Chicago  SE  (sect.); 
Cal.  SE;  Calif.  P.M.  Award  :  Bronze 
medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San.  F.,  1915.  Work 
in:  Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  New  York 
Public  Library;  Librarv  of  Congress, 
Washington,  D.  C;  St.  Paul  Institute  of 
Art. 

JAQUISH,   O.   W.,   Jr.,  217  West  33rd   St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

JAY,  Cecil  (Mrs.  George  Hitchcock),  39 
West  67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  Min.  P.— M  ember:  NYWCC. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention  for  oil 
painting  and  silver  medal  for  minia- 
tures, P.-P.Exp.,   San  F.,  1915. 


JEMNE,  Mrs.  Elsa  Laubach,  649  Endicott 
Bldg.,  St.  Paul,  Minn. 
P.,  I.— Born  St.  Paul,  Minn.,  July  7,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Violet  Oakley,  Cecilia  Beaux, 
Daniel  Garber,  Emil  Carlsen  and  Jo- 
seph Pearson.  Member:  St.  Paul 
AS;  Fellowship  PAFA.  Awards: 
Silver  medal,  St.  Paul  Inst.,  1911;  J.  J. 
Hill  gold  medal,  St.  Paul  Inst.,  1915; 
Cresson  European  Scholarship,  PAFA, 
1914  and  1915;  gold  medal  for  painting, 
•St.  Paul  Institute  of  Art,  1916. 

JENKINS,  Mrs.  Hannah  T(empest),  Rem- 
brandt Hall.  Pomona  College,  Clare- 
mont.  Los  Angeles  Co.,  Calif. 
P..  W.,  L.,  T. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Pupil  of  Spring  Garden  Inst..  'School  of 
Industrial  Art  and  PAFA  in  Philadel- 
phia; Robert  Fleury  and  Constant  in 
Paris.  Member:  Plastic  C;  Fellow- 
ship PAFA.  Award:  Diploma,  Alas- 
ka-Yukon-Pacific  Expo.,  Seattle.  1909. 
Head  of  Art  Dept.  of  Pomona  College. 
Claremont,    Calif. 

JENKINS,    Mrs.    Martha    E.,    5538   Cornell 
Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 

P. — Born  Charleston,  111.  Studied  in 
Boston  and  Chicago,  and  under  Duve- 
neck.  Member:  Chicago  AC. ; 
Washington  AC. 

JENKINS,  Mattie  M(aud),  704  Washing- 
ton St.,  Whitman,  Mass.;  summer,  By- 
thesea  Cottage,  Brnnt  Rock.  Mass. 
Min.  P.,  I. — Born  Whitman,  Mass.,  July 
29,  1867.  Pupil  of  Henry  Cook,  Ethel 
B.    Colver  and  Charles   W.   Reid. 

JENNEWEIN,  Carl  Paul,  560  West  26th 
St.;  84  Grove  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  S.— Member:  NSS;  N.  Y.  Arch. 
Lg. ;  American  Academy  in  Rome. 
Alumni.  Awards  :  Collaborative  prize 
for  sculpture  and  Avery  prize,  N.Y. 
Arch.  Lg.,  1912;  mention,  collaborative 
competition,  N.Y.  Arch.  Lg.,  1915;  Am. 
Acad,  in  Rome  Fellowship  in  Sculpture, 
1916-19. 

JENNEY,  Edgar  W(hitfield),  15  West 
38th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h,  17  Sum- 
mit St.,  Glen  Ridge,  N.  J. 
P.,  Arch. — Born  New  Bedford,  Mass., 
Dec.  11,  1869.  Pupil  of  Major  in  Bos- 
ton; Laurens  in  Paris.  Member: 
Mural  P. ;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  Work: 
Decorations  in  Wisconsin  State  Capi- 
tol; Union  Central  Life  Insurance  Co., 
Cincinnati,  O. ;  Senate  Chamber  and 
House  of  Commons,  Ottawa,  Canada; 
Hibernia  Bank,   New  Orleans,  La. 

JENNY,    Charles    O.,    114    North   17th    St., 
Philadelphia,   Pa.    (S.) 

JENSEN,    Dorothy   Daiph,  2700  W.   Hayes 
St.,   Seattle,  ^Vash.    (P.) 

JENSSEN,  Haakon  A.,  22  Castro  St..  S?an 

Francisco,    Calif. 

P. — Born    Kristiania.    Norway,    Dec.    10, 

18S3.      Member:    San   F.    AA. 
JENTTER,     Charles,     14     Boyd     Avenue, 

Jersey  City,   N.  J. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 
JEPSON,   Mrs.   W.    R.     See  Wiles,   Gladys, 
JESSUP,  Josephine,  Rowaton,   Conn. 

P.,  I. — Born  New  York.     Pupil  of  Wyatt 

Eaton.     Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS. 


463 


JEWETT 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


JOHNSON 


JEWETT,  Maude  S.  (Mrs.  Edward  H. 
Jewett),  245  East  61st  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

S. — Born  Englewood,  N.  J.,  June  6,  1873. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS.  Work:  Fountain 
in  Cleveland  Museum. 

JIROUCH,  Frank  L.,  4821  Superior  Ave., 
Cleveland,    O. 

P.,  S.— Born  Cleveland,  O.,  Mar.  3,  1876, 
Pupil  of  Matzon,  Ludikie,  Grafly,  Gar- 
ber,  Pearson.  Member:  Cleveland 
AC.  Work:  Bronze  relief  in  Church 
of  Lady  of  Lourdes;  "Christ  and  An- 
gels," stone.  St.  Colman's  Church; 
"Diana  of  Ephesus,"  Union  National 
Bank;  Chapman  Memorial,  Cleveland 
Ball  Park;  Altar  of  Sacrifice,  Cleveland; 
Fitzsimons   bronze   tablet,    Paris. 

JOCHIM,  Arthur,  48  Leinan  Place,  Jersey 
City.  N.  J. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

JOHANSEN,    Anders     D.,    442    First    St., 
'     Brooklyn,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

JOHANSEN,  John  C(hristen),  12  West  9th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Copenhagen,  Denmark,  Nov. 
25,  1876.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Duveneck; 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1911,  NA  1915;  Port.P.; 
Players;  NAC;  Salma.C.  1906;  MacD.C. 
Awards  :  Municipal  League  Pur- 
chase prize  and  Young  Fortnightly 
prize,  AIC  1903;  hon.  mention,  Arts 
C.  of  Chicago,  1903;  silver  medal, 
Chicago  SA,  1904;  bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  gold  medal.  Buenos 
Aires  Exp.,  1910;  Saltus  gold  medal, 
NAD  1911;  Harris  silver  medal  ($500), 
AIC  1911;  hon.  mention.  CI  Pittsburgh, 
1912;  H.  S.  Morris  prize,  Newport  AA. 
1915;  gold  medal.  P.-P.  Exp..  San  F.. 
1915.  Represented  in  National  Gallery. 
Santiago.  Chili;  Pennsylvania  Academy 
of  the  Fine  Arts;  "Piazza  San  Marco," 
Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  "Fiesole." 
Public  Gallery.  Richmond,  Ind. ;  Mu- 
seum. Dallas.  Tex.;  Conservative  Club. 
Glasgow;  Art  Museum,  Syracuse,  N.  Y.; 
Union  League  Club.  Chicago;  Proteus 
Club.  Des  Moines.  la.;  Arche  Club.  Chi- 
cago; University  Club,  Chicago;  Gallery 
of  Vincennes,  Ind.;  State  Normal 
School,    Terre    Haute,    Ind. 

JOHANSEN,  M.  Jean  McLane  (Mrs.  John 

C.  Johansen).     See  McLane. 

JOHNSON,  Mrs.  Adelaide,  care  of  the 
National    Women's    Party,    Washington, 

D.  C;  20  Vicolo  di  San  Nicollo  da 
Tolentino,  Rome,  Italy;  care  of  the 
Lyceum  Club,  128  Piccadilly,  London, 
Eng. 

S.— Born  Plymouth,  111.  Pupil  of  Monte- 
verde  and  Fabi  Altinl  In  Rome. 
Work:  Portrait  bust  of  Susan  B.  An- 
thony, Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York. 

JOHNSON,  B.  D.,  Studio  22001/2,  Colum- 
bia  Avenue,   Philadelphia,   Pa.    (P.) 

JOHNSON,   Burt  W.,  86  Grove  St.,  Flush- 
ing. N.  Y. ;  summer.   Claremont.   Calif. 
S.,    T.— Born    Flint,    O.,    Apr.    25,     1890. 
Pupil    of    Louis    Saint    Gaudens,    J.     E. 
Fraser,    Robert    Aitken,  'George    Bridg- 


man.  Instructor  at  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
Member:  Laguna  Beach  AA. 
Work:  "Spanish  Music  Fountain"  and 
"Greek  Tablet,"  Pomona  College,  Clare- 
mont, Calif.;  panel  "Christ,"  St.  Fran- 
cis Hospital.  La  Crosse,  Wis.;  memo- 
rial fountain,  Huntington  Park,  Calif. ; 
Pomona  Valley  memorial  monument, 
Pomona,  Calif.;  E.  N.  Dimick  statue. 
West  Palm  Beach,  Calif. 

JOHNSON,   Charles  M.,  810  Classon  Ave., 
Brooklyn,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

JOHNSON,  Clarence  R.,  15  Windermere 
Ave.,   Lansdowne,   Pa.      (P.) 

JOHNSON,  (Miss)  Content,  200  West  57th 
St.,   New   York,   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Bloomington,  111.  Pupil  of 
Julian  Academy  under  Constant  and 
Laurens  in  Paris;  N.Y. School  of  Art 
under  Chase.     Member:     SPNY. 

JOHNSON,  Cordelia,  2346  South  34th  St., 
Omaha,  Neb. 

P.— Born  Omaha,  July  11,  1871.  Pupil 
of  J.  Laurie  Wallace.  Member: 
Omaha   Art    Guild. 

JOHNSON,  Frank  Edward,  3038  N  St., 
Washington,  D.  C;  Havana,  Cuba; 
summer,  Norwich,  Conn. 
P.,  W.,  L. — Born  Norwich,  Conn.,  July 
6,  1873.  Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Con- 
stant in  Paris.  Member:  Wash. 
WCC. 

JOHNSON,  Frank  Tenney,  48  Charles  St., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 

P..  I.— Born  Big  Grove,  la.,  June  26, 
1874.  Pupil  of  Lorenz,  Heinle  and  Henri. 
Member:  NYW(:C;  Allied  AA;  SI 
1914;  Salma.  C;  Soc.  Animal  P  and  S. 
Award  :  Hon.  mention.  Wis.  PS, 
1919.  Represented  in  National  Gallery, 
Washington,  D.  C,  and  Dallas  Art 
Asso. 

JOHNSON,  G(race)  M(ott),  145  Tren- 
chard  St.,  Yonkers,  N.  Y.;  Taos,  N.  M.; 
summer,  Woodstock,  Ulster  Co.,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  New  York  City,  July  L'8.  1882. 
Pupil  of  Hermon  McNeil  and  Gutzon 
Borglum.  Member:  NSS  (Assoc); 
N  A.  Women  PS.;  S.Indp.A.;  Soc.  Ani- 
mal P.  and  S.  Award:  McMillin 
sculpture  prize.  N.  A.  Women  PS  1917. 
Specialty,  animals. 


■Swnrthmn^p,     Pa. 
Pa.   S.   Min.   P.; 


JOHNSON,  Harry  L., 
Min.  P. — M  ember 
Am.   S.  Min.  P. 

JOHNSON,  Herbert,  518  Walnut  St.;  h. 
6333  Drexel  Rd.,  Overbrook.  Philadel- 
phia, Pa.;  summer,  Huntingdon  Valley, 
•  Pa. 
I.— Born  Sutton,  Neb.,  1878.  Mem- 
ber: SI  1913.  Cartoonist  for  various 
magazines. 

JOHNSON,  Jeanne  Payne  (Mrs.  Louis  C. 
Johnson),  39  Remsen  St.,  Brooklyn, 
New   York,    N.   Y. 

P. — Born  near  Danville,  O.,  April  14, 
1887.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Mme.  La 
Farge,  Richard  Miller  and  Lucien  Simon 
in  Paris.  Member:  Brooklyn  Mini- 
ature Soc, 


464 


JOHNSON 


WHO'S    WHO  IN  ART 


JONES 


JOHNSON,  Margaret,  11  Willow  PI., 
Mt.  Vernon,  N.   Y. 

1.— Born  Boston,  Mass..  Apr.  5,  1860. 
Pupil  of  Cooper  Union  and  ASL  in  New 
York.  Author  and  illustrator:  "The 
Procession  of  the  Zodiac,"  "A  Bunch  of 
Keys,"  "Polly  and  the  Wishing  Ring," 
etc. 

JOHNSON,  Marie  Runkle,  255  South  Fair 
Oaks  Ave.,  Pasadena,  Cal. 
P. — Born  Flemington,  N.  J.,  Dec.  21, 
1861.  Pupil  of  Collin,  Girardot,  Cour- 
tois  and  Prinet,  in  Paris;  Chase,  in  New 
York.  Member:  Cal.  AC.  Award: 
Medal,  Pan. -Cal.  Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915. 

JOHNSON,  Merle  DeVore,  1440  Broad- 
way, New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Douglas- 
ton,    L.   I.,    N.    Y. 

I.— Born  Oregon  City,  Ore..  Nov.  24, 
1874.  Member:  Guild  of  Free  Lance 
Artists.  Manager,  Art  Dept.,  "Evening 
Journal,"    1910-1913. 

JOHNSON,  P.  D.,  147  West  23rd  St., 
New   York,   N.   Y.    (I.) 

JOHNSON,   Robert,  Leonia,  N.  J. 
I.— M  ember:    SI. 

JOHNSON,  W.  J.,  Uniontown,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Pitts.  AA. 

JOHNSON,     W.     Parke,     1133     Broadway, 
New   York,    N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

JOHNSON,  Wynne,  1223  K  St.,  N.  W., 
Washington,    D.    C.    (P.) 

JOHNSTON,  Bertha  Gill,  201  South  Craig 
St.,    Pittsburgh,    Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA. 

JOHNSTON,    Frederick    G.,    Leader    Pub- 
lishing Co..  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh    AA. 

JOHNSTON,  M(ary)  Virginia  Del  C(as. 
tillo),  Riverdale,  Md. 

P. — Born  Puerto  Principe,  Cuba,  Aug. 
16,  1865.  Pupil  of  E.  H.  Andrews,  E.  C. 
Messer,  and  Robert  Henri,  Member: 
S. Wash. A.;  League  of  Am.  Pen  Women. 

JOHNSTON,  Robert  E.,  490  Broad  Ave., 
Leonia,    N.    J 

1.— Born  Toronto,  Canada.  Sept.  14,  1885. 
Pupil  of  Harvey  Dunn;  Walter  Sichert 
in  London.  Member:  SI;  Arts  and 
Letters   Club   of   Toronto. 

JOHNSTON,  Winant  P.,  3337  Walnut  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa, 
S.— M  ember:     Ind.   SS. 

JOHST,    Paul    Spener,   167   West   13th   St., 
New  Y^ork,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

JOINER,  Harvey,  405  Equitable  Bldg., 
Louisville,  Ky. ;  h.  Prather,  Ind. 
P. — Born  Charlestown,  Ind.,  Apr.  8, 
1852.  Self-taught.  Member:  Louis- 
ville Artists  Lg.  Specialty,  Kentucky 
beechwoods. 

JONES,  Albertus  E.,  93  Niles  St.,  Hart- 
ford, Conn.;  h.  South  Windsor,  Conn. 
P.,  T.— Born  South  Windsor,  Conn..  Oct. 
31,  1882.  Pupil  of  Charles  Noel  Flagg. 
Member:  Conn.  AFA;  S.  Indp.  A.; 
Soc.  of  Conn.  Artists.  Award  :  Dun- 
ham prize.  Conn.  AFA,  1912.  Instruc- 
tor of  drawing  and  painting,  Hartford 
Art  Society  School. 


JONES,    Aristine    M.    P.,    4306    Tenth    St., 
N.   E.,    Seattle,   Wash.    (Min.  P.) 

JONES,    Bayard,   40   West   28th    St.,    New 
York,   N.  Y.;   h.   Merrick,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
I.— Born  Rome,  Ga.,  Oct.  9,  1869.     Pupil 
of     Laurens     and     Constant     in     Paris. 
Member:   SI  1903. 

JONES,    Elizabeth    Sparhawk.     See   Spar- 
hawk-Jones. 

JONES,   Ernest  E.,  29  Ericsson  S.,  Roch- 
ester, N.  Y. 

P..  T.— Born  Penn  Yan,  N.  Y.,  July  27, 
1885.  Pupil  of  F.  von  der  Lancken  and 
Otto  Beck. 

JONES.   Frances   Devereux.     See  Hall. 

JONES,  Francis  C(oates),  33  West  67th 
St..  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  July  25, 
1857.  Pupil  of  Boulanger  and  Lefebvre 
at  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1885,  NA  1894 
(treas.);  SAA  1882;  AWCS;  N.Y.Arch. 
Lg.  1888;  Mural  P;  Nat.Inst.A.L.;  NAC; 
A. Aid  S;  Century  Assoc.  Awards: 
Clarke  prize,  NAD  1885;  silver  medal, 
Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  Shaw  pur- 
chase, SAA  1904;  silver  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Isidor  medal,  NAD 
1913;  silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp..  San  F., 
1915. 

JONES,  Grace  Church,  118  Sherman  St., 
Denver,  Colo.;  summer,  Taos.  N.  M. 
P..  T.— Born  West  Falls,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
Delance,  Gaspard,  Calot,  Colarossi  Acad- 
emy in  Paris.  Member:  Province- 
town   AA;    Denver  AA. 

JONES,     H(ugh)     Bolton,     33    West     67th 
St.,   New  York,  N.   Y. 

Ldscp.P.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Oct.  20, 
1848.  Studied  in  France.  Member: 
ANA  1881,  NA  1883;  SAA  1881;  AWCS; 
Nat.Inst.A.L.;  NAC;  A.Fund  S;  Century 
Assoc.  Awards  :  Bronze  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1889;  medal,  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  bronze  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  Webb  prize,  SAA  1902; 
Shaw  Fund  prize,  SAA  1902;  gold 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  silver 
medal,  P.-P.Exp..  San  F.,  1915.  Work: 
"Spring"  and  "Autumn,"  Metropolitan 
Museum.  New  York;  "Springtime,"  Cor- 
coran Gallery,  Washington;  "Sheep 
Pasture,"  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the 
Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia;  "Landscape," 
Brooklyn  Institute  Museum. 

JONES,     Leon     Foster,     Port     Jefferson, 
L.   I.,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Manchester,  N.  H.,  Oct.  18, 
1871.  Pupil  of  Cowles  Art  School  in 
Boston  under  Major  and  De  Camp. 
Member:  Salma.C;  A.  Fund  S. 
Award:  Silver  medal,  P.-P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915. 

JONES,  Nancy  C(hristine),  Handicraft 
Club,  Benefit  St.,  Providence,  R.  I.; 
h.  Diamond  Hill,  Manville,  R.  I. 
P.,  T. — Born  Providence,  R.  I.,  May  7, 
1888.  Pupil  of  R.  L  School  of  Design, 
Charles         Hawthorne.  Member: 

Handicraft  Club;  Sail-Loft  Club,  Provi- 
dence. 


465 


JONES 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


JUSTICE 


JONES,  Paul,  3031  Stanton  Ave.,  Cincin- 
nati,  O.    (P.) 

JONES,  Seth  C,  Municipal  Bldg.;  h.  435 
East  Main  St.,  Rochester,  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer,   Linden,    N.   Y. 

P.,  I..  T.— Born  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  July 
15.  1853.  Pupil  of  Wm.  H.  Holmes  and 
Thomas  Moran.  Member:  Rochester 
AC;  Picture  Painters  C.  (pres.);  Muni- 
cipal Art  Com.    (sec);   Chicago  A.  G. 

JONES,    Thomas    B.,    5113    Chester   Ave., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

JONGERS,  Alphonse,  40  West  59th  St.. 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Port. P.— Born  in  France,  Nov.  17,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  under 
Delaunay  and  Gustave  Moreau;  studied 
two  years  in  Spain.  Came  to  U.  S.  in 
1897.  M  em  b  er  :  SAA  1905;  ANA  1906; 
Lotos  C.  Awards:  Silver  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  third  class  medal, 
Paris  Salon,  1909.  Work:  "William  T. 
Evans,"  National  Gallery,  Washington, 
D.  C;  "Louise"  and  "Arthur  H.  Hearn," 
Metropolitan  Museum,   New  York,  N.  Y. 

JONSON,  C.  Raymond,  19  East  Pearson 
St.,  Chicago,  111. 

P.— Born  Chariton,  la.,  July  18,  1891. 
Pupil  of  W.  J.  Reynolds.  Member: 
"Cor  Ardens."  Work:  "The  Bur 
Reed,"  a  decoration,  City  of  Chicago; 
"Irony,"  University  of  Oklahoma,  Nor- 
man; "Mountain  Vista,"  Mississippi  Art 
Asso.,  Jackson,  Miss. 

JORDAN,  David  W(ilson),  19  West  Ash- 
mead  PI.,  Germantown,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Harrisburg,  Pa.,  June  2, 
1859.  Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Schiissele 
and  Eakins.  Member:  ACPhila.; 
Phila.  Sketch  C;   Fellowship  PAFA. 

JORDAN,  Mildred  C,  129  Whalley  Ave., 
New  Haven,   Conn. 

Min.P. — Born  Portland,  Me.  Pupil  of 
Yale  School  of  Fine  Arts.  Member: 
New  Haven  Paint  and  Clay  C. 

JOSEPH,  Adelyn  L.,  4334  Drexel  Blvd., 
Chicago,  111. 

S.,  I.,  C,  W. — Born  Chicago,  June  16, 
1895.  Pupil  of  Mulligan  and  Polasek. 
Member:  Chicago  SA;  SW  Sc;  Chi- 
cago AG. 

JOSEPH!,  I(saac)  A.,  106  West  57th  St.; 
h.  321  Riverside  Drive,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Min.P.,  Ldscp.P.— Born  New  York.  Pu- 
pil of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Bonnat  in  Paris. 
Member:  AS  Min.P.  (ex-pres.); 
AWCS;  Royal  Soc.  of  Min. Painters,  Lon- 
don; Salma.C.  1890;  Lotos  C. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp., 
1900;  silver  medal,  Charleston  Exp., 
1902. 

JOSLYN,  Adele,  185  Lancaster  Ave., 
Buffalo,   N.  Y.    (P.,  T.) 

JOULLIN,  Mme.  Luclle,  Caffney  Bldg., 
376  Sutter  St.;  h.  745  47th  Ave.,  San 
Francisco,    Calif. 

P.— Born  Illinois,  Aug.  7,  1876.  Pupil 
of  John  Vanderpoel,  Fred  Freer,  Ralph 
Clarkson,  AIC,  Arthur  Mathews,  San 
Francisco  Art  Asso.  Work:  "Alger- 
ian Slave,"  Bohemian  Club,  San  Fran- 
cisco,  Calif, 


JUDD,      Neale      M.,      National     Museum, 
Washington,  D.  C. 
S.— M  ember:     Wash.  WCC. 

JUDSON,  Alice,  58  West  57th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  9  Leonard  St.,  Beacon, 
N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Beacon,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of  ASL  of 
N.  Y.  and  J.  H.  Twachtman.  Mem- 
ber: N.A.  Women  PS.  Work:  Over 
mantle  decoration,  Administration  Bldg., 
Matteawan  State  Hospital,  Beacon, 
N.    Y. 

JUDSON,  Almira,  123  Edgewood  Ave., 
San  Francisco,  Calif;  summer,  Los 
Gatos,   Calif. 

P. — Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.  Pupil  of 
Woman's  Academy,  Munich;  Colorossi  in 
Paris;  Henri  in  New  York.  Member: 
San  F.A.A. 

JUDSON,  Jane  Berry    Castile,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Rochester  AC. 

JUDSON,  iVIrs.  IVIinnie  Lee,  Main  St., 
Stratford,    Conn. 

P.— Born  Milford.  Conn.,  Oct.  20.  1866. 
Pupil  of  Yale  School  of  Fine  Arts. 
Member:  Conn.  AFA.;  New  Haven 
PCC. 

JUDSON,  William  L(ees),  College  of  Fine 
Arts,  212  Thorne  St.;  h.  201  Avenue  66, 
Los   Angeles,   Cal. 

P.,  T. — Born  Manchester,  England,  Apr. 
1,  1842.  Came  to  U.  S.  1852.  Pupil  of 
J.  B.  Irving  in  New  York;  Boulanger 
and  Lefebyre  in  Paris.  Member: 
Calif  AC;  Laguna  Beach  AA.  Dean, 
College  of  Fine  Arts,  Univ.  of  Southern 
California  since  1901.  Author  of  "Kuhle- 
born,"    "Building   of  a  Picture,"   etc. 

JUERGENS,  Alfred,  213  South  Grove 
Ave.,   Oak  Park,  111. 

P. — Born  Chicago,  Aug.  5,  1866.  Pupil 
of  Chicago  AD;  Munich  Royal  Academy, 
under  Gysis  and  Diez.  Member: 
Chicago  SA;  Munich  Artists  Assoc;  Art- 
ists Assoc,  of  Germany;  Soc.Inter.des 
Beaux-Arts.  Awards  :  Silver  medal, 
Madrid  and  Munich;  Cahn  prize  ($100), 
AIC  1914;  bronze  medal,  P. -P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915;  William  Randolph  Hearst  $300 
prize,  AIC.  Work:  "John  the  Baptist 
at  the  River  Jordan"  and  "Suffer  Little 
Children  to  Come  Unto  Me,"  St.  Paul's 
Church,  Chicago;  "November  After- 
noon," Cliff  Dwellers  Club,  Chicago; 
"Afternoon  in  May,"  Municipal  Gallery, 
Art  Institute,  Chicago,  1913;  "Lilac 
Time,"  Union  League  Club,  Chicago; 
"A  Lilac  Bush,"  Clark  Gallery,  Grand 
Rapids,   Mich. 

JULIUS,     Oscar     H.,    67    West    87th    St., 

New  York,  N.   Y. 

P. — Me  m  b  e  r  :     Salma.  C. 

JUNGE,  Carl  S(tephen),  143  South  Harvey 
Ave.,  Oak  Park,  111. 

P.,  L— Born  Stockton,  Cal.,  June  5, 
1880.  Pupil  of  School  of  Art  in  Lon- 
don; Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Awards  :  Prizes  1916,  1917  and  1921 
from  American  Bookplate  Society. 

JUSTICE,   IVIartin,  33  West  67th   St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 
I.,  P.— M  ember:  SI  1911. 


466 


JUSZKO 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


KAVANAUGH 


JUSZKO,  J(eno),  59  East  59th  St.,  New 
York,   N.  Y. 

■S.— Born  in  Hungary.  Nov.  26,'  1880. 
Member:  NSS;  Salma.  C;  Anr..  Nu- 
mismatic Soc.  Work:  Monument  of 
Archbishop   Samy.   Santa  Fe,   N.   M. 

KAELIN,  Charles  S(alis),  Atlantic  Ave., 
Rockport,  Mass. 

P.— Born  Cincinnati,  Dec.  19,  1858.  Pupil 
of  Cincinnati  Art  School;  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
Member:  Cincinnati  AC;  AWCS. 
Award  :  Silver  medal,  P. -P.Exp.,  San 
P.,  1915.  Work:  "Pastel,"  Cincin- 
nati Museum;  Queen  City  Club;  Univer- 
sity Club. 

KAGANN,  Theo.  1497  South  Blvd.,  New 
York,   N.  Y.    (S.) 

KAHILL,  Joseph  B.,  562  Congress  St.;  h. 
2  Crescent  St.,  Portland,  Me. 
Port.P. — Born  Alexandria,  Egypt,  May 
15.  1882.  Pupil  of  Charles  L.  Fox,  Rich- 
ard Miller,  Collin  and  Prinet  in  Paris. 
Member:  Paris  AAA :  PSA  of  Port- 
land. Represented  in  Walker  Art  Gal- 
lery of  Bowdoin  College. 

KAHILL,  Victor,  1429  Arch  St.,  Philadel- 
phia,   Pa.    (P.) 

KAHLE,  Julie,  325  West  End  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     N.A.  Women  PS. 

KAHLER,    Carl    49    West    8th    St.,    New 
York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

KAHLES,  C.  W.,  Queens,  L.  I.,  N.  Y.   (I.) 

KAHN.   Isaac,   2426   Reading  Rd.;   h.    2943 
Fairfield   Ave.,    W.    H.,    Cincinnati,    O. 
P.,  C,  W.,   L.,  T.— Born  Cincinnati,   O., 
Aug.   16,   1883.     Pupil   of  Duveneck   and 
Lindsay.     Member:    Cincinnati   AC.^ 

KAISER.  August,  111  East  35th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I.,  E. — Born  Krumbach,  Bavaria, 
Germany,  Oct.  2,  1889.  Pupil  of  Sloan 
in  New  York;  Randall  in  St.  Paul. 
Member:  Guild  of  N.  Y.  A. ;  Attic 
C.  of  Minneapolis. 

KALDENBERG,  FCrederIck)  R(obert),  95 
Fifth  Ave.;  h.  307  East  20th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

S.,  C. — Born  New  York,  June  7,  1855. 
Self-taught.  Member:  NSS  1893; 
N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  1898;  N.  Y.  Soc.  C. 
A  wa  r  d  s  :  Bronze  medal,  American 
Inst.,  New  York,  1869;  gold  medal,  Cin- 
cinnati,  1884.     Specialty,   ivory  carving. 

KAMPF,  Mrs.  Melissa  Q.,  200  Rodney  St., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember  :     S.Indp.A. 

KANTOR,  Morris,  1947  Broadway,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  230  Smith  St.,  Brooklyn, 
N.   Y. 

P. — Born  in  Russia,  April  15,  1896.  Pupil 
of  Homer  Boss.    Member:    S.Indp.  A. 


27   West    8th    St..    New 


KARASZ,    lionka 
York,  N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

KARFIOL,  Bernard,  Ridgefleld,  N.  J. 
P.— Born    Brooklyn    in    1886.      Pupil    of 
Laurens    in    Paris.      Member:    Paris 
AAA. 


KARFUNKLE,  David,  13  East  14th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  S.,  Etcher. — Born  Vienna,  Austria. 
Pupil  of  NAD;  Royal  Academy  In  Mu- 
nich under  Herterich.  Member: 
Salma.C.   1907. 

KASE,  Pauf  G(eorge),  30  North  8th  St., 
Reading  Pa.;  h.  Mount  Penn,  Pa. 
P.,  C. — Born  Reading,  Pa.,  Nov.  4,  1896. 
Pupil  of  Breckenridge  and  PAFA. 
Member:  Fellowship  PAFA.  Work: 
"Rocks,  Bluff  Point,"  Reading  Museum 
of  Art. 

KASSEL,  Morris,  220  West  42nd  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

KATO,    Kentaro,   131  West  23d   St.,   New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Fukuoka,  Japan. 
P. — Born     in     Japan,     Nov.     15,     1889. 
Pupil  of  Henry  Read.     Award  :     Sec- 
ond Hallgarten  prize,  NAD,  1920. 

KATOAKA,  Genjiro,  57  Hayashicho,  Kois- 
hikawa,  Tokio,  Japan. 
P.,  I. — Born  Arita,  Japan,  1867.  Pupil 
of  J.  H.  Twachtman  in  New  York. 
Member:  NYWCC;  Salma.C.  1889. 
Award:  Morgan  prize,  Salma.C.  1905. 

KATZENSTEIN,        Elizabeth        Gutman, 

See  Mrs.   E.   G.   Kaye. 

KATZIEFF,  Julius  D.,  126  Dartmouth  St., 
h.  46  Cortes  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  sum- 
mer, Rockport,   Mass. 

P.,  E.— Born  Lithuania,  Oct.  16,  1892. 
Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School  and 
PAFA. 

KAUFFMAN,  G.  Francis,  5005  West 
Superior   St.,    Chicago,    111.    (I.) 

KAUFMAN.  Jean  Francois,  1208  Carnegie 
Hall;  h.  883  Seventh  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.,  S.,  E.,  A.,  W.— Born  Uznach,  Switz- 
erland, Oct.  31,  1870.  Pupil  of  Gerome, 
Ecole  Nationale  des  Beaux-Arts,  Paris. 
Works:  "Portrait  Hon.  Asa  Bird 
Gardner,"  War  Department,  Washing- 
ton, D.  C. ;  decorations  in  Monumental 
Church,  Richmond,  Va. ;  monumental 
bronze  bust,  Poughkeepsie,   N.  Y. 

KAUFMANN,  Ferdinand,  9  Wood  St.;  h. 
908  Cherokee  St.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — Born  Oberhausen,  Germany,  Oct. 
17,  1864.  Pupil  of  Laurens,  Constant 
and  Bouguereau  in  Paris.  Member: 
Paris  AAA;   Pittsburgh   A  A. 

KAULA,  Lee  Lufkin  (Mrs.  W.  J.  Kaula), 
311  Fenway  Studios,  30  Ipswich  St.. 
Boston,   Mass. 

P.— Born  Erie,  Pa.  Pupil  of  C.  M. 
Dewey  in  New  York;  Aman-Jean  in 
Paris.  i 

KAULA,  William  J(urlan),  311  Fenway 
Studios,  30  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Boston,  1871.  Pupil  of 
Normal  Art  School  and  Cowles  Art 
School  in  Boston;  Collin  in  Paris. 
Member:  Boston  AC;  NYWCC;  Paris 
AAA;  Boston  WCC;  Boston  GA. 
Award:  Bronze  medal,  P. -P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915. 

KAVANAUGH,  Marlon.  See  Mrs.  Elmer 
Wachtel. 


467 


KAVANAUGH 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


KELLER 


KAVANAUGH,  Katharine  (Mrs.  William 
V.  Cahill),  2625  Polk  St.,  San  Francisco, 
Calif. 

P.— Born  Falmouth,  Ky.,  May  5,  1890. 
Pupil  of  Wm.  V.  Cahill.  Member: 
Southern  Calif.  AC;  Laguna  Beach  AA. 

KAWACHI,  J(oseph)  B(unzo),  170  Fifth 
Ave.;  h.  291  East  155th  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P.,  C. — Born  Toyoaka  Tajima,  Japan, 
June  26,  1885.  Studied  in  Japan.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r:   S.   Indp.  A. 

KAY,  Gertrude  A.,  133  South  Union  Ave., 
Alliance,   O. 
P.— M  ember:     N.   A.  Women  PS. 

KAYE,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Gutman,  856  Park 
Ave.,    Baltimore,   Md. 

P.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Sept.  5,  1887. 
Pupil  of  S.  Edwin  Whiteman,  Hugh 
Breckenridge  and  H.  B.  Snell. 

KAYE,    Joseph,    429    Fourth    Ave.,    Pitts- 
burgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA. 

KEANE,  Theodore  J.,  5027  Dorchester 
Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 

P. — Born  in  San  Francisco  in  1880. 
Pupil  of  Calif.  School  of  Design  and 
AIC.  Member:  Palette  and  Chisel 
C;  Chicago  SA;  Cliff  Dwellers;  NAC; 
Attic  C.  of  Minneapolis.  Specialty  ani- 
mal paintings.  Formerly  director  of 
Minneapolis  Society  of  Fine  Arts  and 
dean  of  School  of  the  Chicago  Art 
Institute. 

KEARFOTT,  Robert,  care  of  McCann 
Agency,  415  Montgomery  St.,  San  Fran- 
cisco, Calif.     (P.,  I.) 

KEAST,  Susette  S.,  655  Cypress  St., 
Presser  Park,   Veadon,  Pa.   (P.) 

KECK,  Charles,  40  West  10th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

S.— Member:  NSS  1906;  N.Y.Arch. 
Lg.   1909;  Allied  AA. 

KEELER,  Charles  B.,  Fin  del  Viaje, 
Glendora,  Los  Angeles  Co.,  Calif. 
P.,  E.— Born  Cedar  Rapids,  la..  1882. 
Pupil  of  AI  Chicago;  Johansen,  Stevens 
and  Nordfeldt.  Member:  Chicago 
SE.  Awards  :  Silver  medal  for 
etchings,  St.  Paul  Inst..  1915;  hon.  men- 
tion, P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 

KEELER  (Louis  Bertrand)  Roiston,  Sam- 
mis  Ave.,  Huntington,  Suffolk  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  New  York,  Nov.  9,  1882.  Pupil 
of  NAD.     Member:     Lg.  of  N.Y.A. 

KEELER,  (R.)  Burton,  224  West  11th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  April  5,  1886. 
Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member:  N.  Y. 
Arch.  Lg. ;  Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 
Awards  :  Cresson  Traveling  Schol- 
arship, PAFA,  1911  and  1912. 

KEELEY,     Mrs.     Lester,     217    Dean     St., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 


KEEP,     Helen,    753    Jefferson    Ave 
troit,  Mich.     (P.) 


KEEP,     Virginia. 
Clark. 


See     Mrs. 


De- 
Marshall 


KEFFER,   Frances,  Hillsdale,   N.   J. 

P.,  T.— Born  Des  Moines,  la.,  Jan.  6, 
1881.  ■  Pupil  of  Pratt  Inst.,  Alex.  Robin- 
son, Frank  Brangwyn,  Ossip  Linde. 
Member:  N.A.  Women  PS;  Nanuet 
Painters;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A.  Award  :  $100 
prize  Women's  Club,  Des  Moines,  Iowa, 
1912. 

KEHRER,    F.    A.,    24    W.    Maynard   Ave.. 
Columbus,  O. 
I. — M  ember:    Pen    and    Pencil    Club, 

Columbus. 

KEISTER,    Roy    C,    1909    Republic   Bldg.; 
h.  805  Crescent  PI.,  Chicago,  111. 
I.— Born  in  Ohio  in  1886.     Pupil  of  AIC. 
Me  m  b  e  r  :     Palette    and    Chisel    C. 

KEITH,  Dora  Wheeler  (Mrs.  B.  Keith). 
33  West  67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  and 
Onteora,  Catskills,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  C— Born  Jamaica,  L.  I.,  N.  Y., 
March  8,  1857.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
and  of  Chase;  studied  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: SAA  1886;  ANA  1906.  Awards: 
Prang  prize  ($500),  1885;  Prang  prize 
($2,000),  1886;  hon.  mention,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901. 

KEITH,   Warren,   132  East  29th   St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

KELLER,  Arthur  l(gnatius),  250th  St. 
and  Goodrich  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ; 
summer,  Cragsmoor,  Ulster  Co.*  N.  Y. 
I.,  P.— Born  New  York,  July  4,  1866. 
Pupil  of  NAD  under  Wilmarth  and 
Ward;  Loefftz  In  Munich.  Member: 
AWCS;  NYWCC;  AI  Graphic  A.; 
NAC;  SI  1901  (ex-pres.);  Salma.  C. 
1900;  Guild  of  Free  Lance  Artists. 
Awards  :  Gold  medal  for  water 
color,  ACPhila.  1899;  silver  medal,  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  bronze  medal  for  drawings, 
Pan -Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  Evans 
prize,  AWCS  1902;  second  prize  ($300), 
"Herald"  Christmas  competition,  1904; 
gold  medal  for  illustrations  and  silver 
medal  for  paintings.  St.  Louis  Exp,. 
1904;  Isidor  prize,  Salma.C.  1914;  gold 
medal  for  illustrations,  P.-P.Exp.,  San 
F..  1915.  Work:  "At  Mass,"  Munich 
Academy.  Illustrated:  "The  Virginian," 
"The  Right  of  Way."  Trving's  "Legend 
of  Sleepy  Hollow,"  "Her  Letter,"  "The 
Red  City,"  "The  World  for  Sale,"  "The 
Valley  of  Fear,"  "Graustark,"  "The 
Fortunate   Youth." 

KELLER,   Clyde   Leon,  450  Wabash  Ave., 
Portland,    Ore.    (P.) 

KELLER,   Edgar,  77  "West  50th   St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  6523  Hollywood  Blvd.,  Los 
Angeles,  Cal. 
P.— M  ember:    Phila.  AC. 

KELLER,  George,  24  Park  Terrace,  Hart- 
ford,  Conn. 
P. — M  ember:  Conn,  AFA. 

KELLER,     Henry    George,    1381    Addison 
Road.   Cleveland.   O. 

P.— Born  Cleveland.  Apr.  3.  1870.  Pupil 
of  Bergman  at  Diisseldorf;  Balsche  at 
Karlsruhe;  Zijgel  at  Munich.  Award: 
Silver  medal,  Munich.  1902.  Specialty, 
animals.  Work:  "In  the  Sand  Pit," 
Cleveland  Museum.  Instructor  of  com- 
position and  design,  Cleveland  School 
of  Art. 


468 


KELLER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


KENNEDY 


KELLER,  Marie  De  Ford,  St.  James 
Apartment,  Charles  and  Center  St., 
Baltimore,   Md.     (P.,  I.,   T.) 

KELLOGG,  Edmund  P(hilo),  30  North 
Michigan  Ave.;  h.  3546  Ellis  Ave.,  Chi- 
cago,  111. 

P.,  1.,  T. — Born  Chicago,  1879.  Pupil  of 
Freer,  Duveneck,  Chase  and  Albert 
Herter.  Member:  JO^sierners  Alumni 
of  AIC;  Chicago  AC.  Represented  in 
St.  Paul  Institute;  "Ready  for  Flight," 
Chicago  Athletic  Asso.  Instructor  at 
The  Academy  of  Fine  Arts,  Chicago, 
111. 

KELLY,  Annie  D.,  1919  N  St..  N.  W.. 
Washington,    D.    C. 

P.— M  ember:  Wash.  WCC. ;  S. 
Wash.  A. 

KELLY,  James  E(dward),  318  West  57th 
St.,    New   York.    N.   Y. 

S.,  I.— Born  New  York,  July  30,  1855. 
Pupil  of  NAD  and  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Theo- 
dore Robinson  and  Carl  Hlrschberg.^  Il- 
lustrated for  "Harper's,"  etc.,  until 
1881;  since  exclusively  sculptor. 
Work:  "Monmouth  Battle  Monu- 
ment"; equestrian  Gen.  Sherman;  "Col. 
Roosevelt  at  San  Juan  Hill,"  etc. 

KELLY,  Juiia,  15  North  Hempstead  Turn- 
pike, Great  Neck,  Long  Island,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

KELLY,  J.  Redding,  55  West  95th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Yorktown,  N.  Y. 
Port. P.,  T.— Born  New  York,  Aug.  5, 
1873.  Pupil  of  NAD.  Member: 
Salma.C.  1898.  Professor  in  Art  Dept., 
College  of  the  City  of  New  York. 

KELIVIAN,  Ben(jamin),  1692  Park  Ave., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Roumania,  April  5, 
1890.  Pupil  of  Pennsylvania  Academy 
of  Fine  Arts,  NAD.  Member:  Lg. 
of  N.Y.A.;  Graphic  Sketch  Club.  Rep- 
resented in  Graphic  Sketch  Club  of 
Philadelphia. 

KEMBLE  E(dward)  W(indsor),  care  Les- 
lie's Weekly,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I. — Born  Sacramento.  Cal.,  Jan.  18.  1861. 
Self-taught.  Specialty,  negro  subjects. 
Illustrated:  "Uncle  Tom's  Cabin," 
"Huckleberry  Finn";  author  "Kemble's 
Coons." 

KEMP,  Oliver,  Knickerbocker  Bldg.,  116 
West  39th  St.;  h.  1046  Am.sterdam  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  suriimer,  Bowerbank, 
Piscataquis  Co.,  Maine. 
P.,  I.,  W.— Born  Trenton.  N.  J.,  May 
13,  1882.  Pupil  of  Howard  Pyle.  Chase, 
Gerome.  Illustrations  for  "Scribner's," 
"Harper's,"  "Century,"  "Saturday  Eve- 
ning Post." 

KEMPER,  Ruby  Webb,  Milford,  Ohio. 
P.,  C. — Born  Cincinnati,  Ohio,  Dec.  8, 
1883.  Pupil  of  T.  E.  Noble,  L.  H.  Mea- 
kin,  W.  H.  Fry,  Frank  Duveneck,  Anna 
Riis.  Member:  Cincinnati  Ceramic 
Club;  Cincinnati  Woman's  AC;  The 
Crafters   Soc. 

KEMPTON,  Elmira.  916  Main  St.;  h.  75 
South  17th  St..  Richmond,  Ind. 
P.,  C. — Born  Richmond,  Ind.,  Aug.  9. 
1892.  Pupil  of  James  R.  Hopkins,  H.  H. 
Wessel;  C.  J.  Barnhorn.  Member: 
Indiana  Artists'   Club. 


KENDAL,  Minerva,  1738  N  St.,  Washing- 
ton,  D.   C. 
P.— M  ember:    S.  Wash.  A. 

KENDALL,  Beatrice,  58  Trumbull  St., 
New  Haven,  Conn. 

P.— Born  New  York  City,  Jan.  14,  1902. 
Pupil  of  Yale  School  of  the  Fine  Arts. 

KENDALL,  Elisabetli,  58  Trumbull  St., 
New  Haven,  Conn. 

P.,  S.,  I. — Born  Gerrish  Island,  Maine, 
Sept.  22,  1896.  Pupil  of  Yale  School  of 
the  Fine  Arts. 

KENDALL,  Margaret  (Stickney)  (Mrs. 
Sergeant  Kendall),  58  Trumbull  St.,  New 
Haven,  Conn. 

Min.P.— Born  Staten  Island,  N.  Y.,  Nov. 
29,  1871.  Pupil  of  J.  Alden  Weir, 
Rolshoven  and  Sergeant  Kendall. 
Member:  Am. S. Min.P.;  New  Haven 
PCC.  Award  :  Bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis    Exp.,    1904. 

KENDALL,  Mrs.  Marie  B(oening),  2122 
Perkins  Ave.,  Long  Beach,  Calif.;  sum- 
mer, Laguna  Beach,  Cal. 
P.,  T.— Born  Mt.  Morris,  N.  Y.,  Aug. 
16,  1885.  Pupil  of  William  M.  Chase 
and  Jean  Mannheim.  Los  Angeles  College 
of  Fine  Arts.  Member:  Calif.  AC; 
West  Coast  Arts;  S.  Indp.  A.  W^  o  r  k  : 
Three  paintings  in  the  Virginia  Hotel, 
Long  Beach,  Calif. 

KENDALL  (William)  Sergeant,  School 
of  Fine  Arts,  Yale  University;  h.  58 
Trumbull  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 
P.,  S. — Born  Spuyten  Duyvil,  N.  Y.,  Jan. 
20,  1869.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Eakins 
in  Philadelphia;  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts 
and  Merson  in  Paris.  Member:  SAA 
1898:  ANA  1901,  NA  1905;  Nat.Inst.AL; 
NYWCC;  Conn.AFA;  Century  Assoc; 
New  Haven  PCC.  Dean  School  of 
Fine  Arts  of  Yale  Univ.  since  1913. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1891;  medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chi- 
cago, 1893;  Lippincott  prize,  PAFA 
1894;  hon.  mention,  Tennessee  Cen- 
tennial Exp.,  Nashville,  1897;  second 
prize,  Worcester  Museum,  1900;  bronze 
medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  bronze 
medal,  C.I.  Pittsburgh,  1900;  second 
prize.  Worcester  Museum,  1901;  silver 
medal  for  painting,  bronze  medal  for 
drawing  and  hon.  mention  for  sculpture, 
Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  Shaw  prize, 
SAA  1901;  Shaw  Fund  Purchase,  §AA 
1903;  gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
Isidor  medal,  NAD  1908;  Harris  prize, 
AIC  1908;  Palmer  gold  medal.  AIC  1910; 
gold  medal  for  painting  and  silver  medal 
for  sculpture,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915; 
Butler  prize,  AIC,  1918.  Work:  "Be- 
atrice." Pennsvlvania  Academy,  Phila- 
delphia; "The  'Seer"  and  "Psyche,"  Met- 
ropolitan Museum,  New  York;  "An  In- 
terlude," National  Gallery,  Washington; 
"Narcissa."  Corcoran  Gallery,  Wash- 
ington; "Crosslights,"  Detroit  Institute 
of  Arts;  "Intermezzo,"  R.  I.  School  o' 
Design,   Providence, 

KENNEDY,  Lawrence,  30  North  Michi- 
gan Blvd..  Chicago,  111.;  h.  29  N.  Oak 
St.,    Hinsdale.    111. 

P.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Oct.  31,  1880. 
Pupil  AIC.  Member:  Chicago  SA. ; 
Cliff   Dwellers. 


469 


KENNEDY 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


KIER 


KENNEDY,  Sam(uel)  J(ames),  4  East 
Ohio  St.,  Chicago,  111.;  summer,  Lag-una 
Beach,    Calif. 

P. — Born   Mt.    Pleasant,    Mich.,    June   7, 
1877.      Pupil   of   Henri   Martin.      Mem-         ,, 
b  e  r  :     Chicago    SA.      Work:    "Young        "^ 
Genius,"    Mt.    Pleasant    Public    Gallery; 
"The    Marshes,"    Library    of    Michigan 
Agricultural  College.  K 

KENNEL,    Louis,    741    Monroe    St.,    New 
Durham.    N.    J.;    h.    212    Palisade    Ave., 
Union  Hill,  N.  J.;  summer,  Middlebury,        k 
Conn. 

P. — Born  North  Bergen,    N.   J.,   May  7, 
1886.      Pupil  of  George   Bridgman,   Wm. 
H.    Lippincot,    Charles    Graham,    Ernest 
Gros.     Member:     S.Indp.A.     Designs        ^ 
stage  scenery.  ^ 

KENT,  Ada  Howe,  29  Atkinson  St., 
Rochester,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Rochester.  Pupil  of  Brush, 
Abbott  Thayer  and  Whistler.  Mem- 
ber: NYWCC. 

KENT,   Dorothy,  Tarrytown,  N.  Y.   (P.) 

KENT,   Rockwell,  care  of  M.  Knoedler  & 
Co.,  556  Fifth  Ave.,  101  Park  Ave.,  New        k- 
York,  2T.  Y.  *^ 

P. — Born    Tarrytown    Heights,    N.    Y., 
June  21,   1882.     Pupil   of  Chase,   Henri, 
Hayes  Miller,   Thayer.     Work:      "Ma- 
rine,"   in    Metropolitan    Museum,    New        K 
York. 

KENYON,    Henry    R.,    Ipswich,    Mass. 
P. — Member:  Providence  AC.     Work: 
"Landscape.  Holland,"  "November  Twi- 
light"    and      "Venice,"     Rhode     Island 
School  of  Design,  Providence. 

KEPLINGER,  Lena  Miller,  Bethesda.  Md. 
P.— M  ember:  Wash.WCC. 

KER,  Marie  SIgsbee.  See  Mrs.  A.  O. 
Fischer. 

KERIGAN,  Mrs.  Ambrose,  Jr.  See  Mil- 
dred  Post. 

KERN,  Josephine  M.,  5718  Kenwood  Ave., 
Chicago,    111.    (S.)  j. 

KERNS,  Fannie  M.,  916  Grattan  St.,  Los 
Angeles,   Calif. 

P.,  I.,  C,  T. — Born  Los  Angeles,  Calif. 
Pupil  of  Arthur  Dow,  Frank  Ingerson, 
Ralph  Johonnot.  Member:  Chicago 
Fine  Arts  Soc. ;   Boston  SAC. 

KERR,    Mrs.    Chester,    55    East    76th    St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

KERR,  George,  Art  Department,  "N.  Y. 
Journal,"  New  York.  N.  Y.  K 

I.— M  ember:  SI  1913. 

KERR,    Irene    Waite,    144   East    14th    St.,        K 
Oklahoma  Citv,   Okla. 

P.,    L..    T. — Born    Pauls    Valley,    Okla.,        ^ 
Jan.  11,  1873.     Pupil  of  Walcott,  Clark-        "^ 
son,    William    M.    Chase,    James    Eraser 
DuMond  and  P.  L.  Mora.     Member: 
Okla.  AA.     Award  :  First  and  second 
prizes,  Okla.   State  Fair. 

KETCHAM.  Susan  M.,  1010  Carnegie  Hall,        ^ 
New   York,    N.    Y. ;    summer,    Ogunquit, 
Me. 

P. — Born    Indianapolis,    Ind.      Pupil    of 
ASL    of   N.    Y.,    under    Chase    and    Bell.        K 
Member:       ASL     of    N.     Y.;     N.     A. 
Women    PS.      Award  :      Filing    prize, 

470 


N.Y.  Woman's  AC  1908.  Work:  "A 
Young  Student";  "Beatrix,"  "The  Rest, 
less  Sea,  Ogunquit,  Me.,"  Herron  Art 
Inst.,    Indianapolis. 

ETTEN,     Maurice,     50     West     67th     St., 

New  York.   N.   Y. 

I.— M  ember:    SI    1913. 

ETTERER,     Gustav,    1502    Walnut    St., 

Philadelphia,   Pa. 

P.— M  ember:  Phila.AC. 

EUHNE,  Max,  18  Bank  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

P.— Born  in  New  York,  Nov.  7,  1880. 
Pupil  of  Kenneth  Hayes  Miller,  Chase 
and  Henri. 

EY,  Mabel,  610  Fullerton  Parkway, 
Chicago,  111. 

P.,  T. — Born  Paris,  France,  1874,  of 
American  parents.  Member:  Wis. 
PS.  Awards:  Hon.  mention  for 
water  color,  St.  Paul  Inst.,  1915;  silver 
medal,  St.  Paul  Inst.,  1916;  hon.  men- 
tion, Milwaukee  Art  Inst.,  1917;  silver 
medal.  Wis.  PS,  1919.  Instructor,  Mil- 
waukee Art  Institute. 
EYS,  Harry  J.,  "Columbus  Citizen,"  Co- 
lumbus, O. 

I. — M  ember:  Pen  and  Pencil  C,  Co- 
lumbus. 

EYSER,  Ephraim,  2408  Linden  Ave., 
Baltimore,    Md. 

S.,  T.— Born  Baltimore,  Oct.  6,  1850. 
Pupil  of  Royal  Academies  in  Munich 
and  Berlin.  Member:  NSS  1907; 
Charcoal  C.  of  Baltimore.  Awards  : 
Silver  medal,  Munich  Academy;  first 
class  medal.  New  Orleans  Exp.,  1885. 
Work  :  Maj.  Gen.  Baron  de  Kalb,  An- 
napolis. Md.;  memorial  to  Pres.  Chester 
A.  Arthur,  Rural  Cemetery,  Albany, 
N.  Y. ;  "Psyche,"  life  size  marble.  Cin- 
cinnati Art  Museum:  "Bust  of  Sidney 
Lanier,"  Johns  Hopkins  University.  In- 
structor Rinehart  School  ibr  Sculpture, 
Maryland  Inst. 

EYSER,  Ernest  Wise,  249  West  74th  St., 
New  York,    N.   Y. 

S.,  P.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  1874.  Pu- 
pil of  Maryland  Inst.  Art  School  in  Bal- 
timore: ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  .Tnllan  Academy 
In  Paris;  Augustus  S'aint  Gaudens, 
Member:  NSS  1902;  Paris  AAA;  N.Y. 
Arch.Lg.  1908.  Work:  "Enoch  Pratt 
Memorial."  Baltimore:  A  dm.  Schley 
statue,  Annapolis:  "Sir  Galahad"  for 
Harper  memorial,  Ottawa,  Canada. 
IBBEY,  liah  Marion.  4001  Genesee  St., 
Kansas  City,   Mo.    (P.) 

IDDER,  Ben  L.,  57  West  57th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y.    (L) 

IDDER,  Frank  Howard,  210  South  Main 
St.,   New  Canaan.   Conn. 
P.— Born    Litchfield,     Conn.,     Sept.     16, 
1886.      Pupil    of    Kenneth    Hayes    Miller 
and  Denys  Wortman. 

lEFER,  Sam  P.,  147  West  Maynard  Ave., 
Columbus,   O. 

P. — M  ember:  Pen  and  Pencil  C,  Co- 
lumbus. 

lER,     Sadie,     Geneva     College,     Beaver 

Falls.    Pa. 

P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 


KILENYI 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


KING 


KILENYI,  Julio,  20  East  90th  St.,  New 
York.   N.  Y. 

S.,  Medalist — Born  in  Hungary,  1885. 
Member:  N.Y.  Arch.  Lg. ;  Lg.  of 
N.Y.A.;  NSS;  Am.  Numismatic  Soc; 
Allied  AA.  Designer  of  distinguished 
service  medal  of  the  U.  S.  Navy  Dept. 
Represented  in  the  Metropolitan  Mu- 
seum of  Art  and  Numismatic  Museum, 
New  York;  Cleveland  Museum  of  Art; 
Boston  Museum  of  Fine  Arts;  Massa- 
chusetts Historical  Museum. 

KILROY,    J.    C,    3rd    and    Liberty    Sts., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pitts.  AA. 

KIMBALL,  Alonzo  M(yron),  2248  Euclid 
Ave.,  Cleveland,  Ohio. 
P.,  I. — Born  Green  Bay,  Wis.,  Aug.  14, 
1874.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris,  under  Lefebvre, 
also  Whistler  and  Courtois.  Member: 
SI  1911. 

KIMBALL,  H.  M.,  285  Ridgewood  Ave., 
Glen  Ridge,   N.   J.    (P.) 

KIMBALL,  Isabel  Moore,  290  Adelphi  St., 
h.  65  Quincy  St.,  Brooklyn,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  Riceville,  la. 
S. — Born  Wentworth,  Mitchell  Co.,  la. 
Pupil  of  Herbert  Adams.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS.;  Brooklyn  SA. 
Work:  "Wenonah"  Fountain  in  Cen- 
tral Park,  Winona,  Minn. ;  gold  medal, 
Y.  M.  C.  A.  swimming  and  life  saving; 
Richards  memorial  tablet,  Vassar  Col- 
lege; Barrett  memorial.  Historical  Soc, 
Des  Moines,  Iowa;  War  Memorial  Tab- 
let for  Essex  County. 

KIMBALL,  Katharine,  care  of  Brown, 
Shipley  &  Co.,  123  Pall  Mall.  London, 
S.   W.,   England. 

E.,  I. — Born  in  New  Hampshire.  Pupil 
of  NAD  in  New  York;  Royal  College  of 
Art,  London.  Member  :  Asso.  Royal 
Soc.  of  Painter-Etchers  and  Engravers, 
London;  Section  de  Gravure,  Salon 
d'Automne,  Paris;  Chicago  SE. 
Award:  Bronze  medal,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Illustrated:  Okey's 
"Story  of  Paris;"  Gialliat- Smith's 
"Brussels;"  Stirling  Taylor's  "Canter- 
bury" and  "Rochester,"  etc.  Work: 
Complete  set  in  Bibliotheque  d'Art  et 
d'Archeologie,  Paris.  Work  in  Vic- 
toria and  Albert  Museum,  London; 
New  York  Public  Library;  Boston  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts;  Library  of  Congress, 
Washington,  D.  C. ;  Oakland  (Calif.) 
Public  Museum. 

KIMBEL,    Richard,    care    of    Salmagundi 
Club,   47  Fifth  Ave.,   New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.  C. 

KIMBEL,    Richard    M.,   13  West   30th   St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Allied  AA. 

KIMBERLY,  Cara  Draper  (Mrs.  Samuel 
A.  Kimberly),  2112  O  St.,  N.  W.,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C. 

P.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.  Pupil  of  Haw- 
thorne, Vanderpoel,  Messer.  Member: 
S.  Wash.  A.;   Wash.  WCC. 

KINDLER,  Alice  Riddle  (Mrs.  Hans  Kin- 
dler),  1701  Locust  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


P.— Born  Germantown.  Pa.,  Oct.  3,  1892, 
Studied  PAFA.  Works:  "The  Yellow 
Still  Life,"  Pennsylvania  Academy  of 
the  Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia;  Mural, 
"The  Canterbury  Pilgrimage,"  West 
Philadelphia  High  School. 
KINDLUND,  Anna  Belle  Wing  (Mrs.  Alois 
Trnka),  27  Westchester  Ave.,  White 
Plains,  N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Feb.  18,  1876. 
Pupil  of  Lucius  W.  Hitchcock  in  Buf- 
falo; George  Bridgman  in  New  York. 
Member:  Buffalo  Soc.  of  Artists; 
N.Y.Soc.C.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention, 
Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  bronze 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  silver  medal 
for  miniatures,   P. -P.Exp.,   San  F.,   1915. 

KING,  Albert  F.,  605  McCance  Bldg.;  h. 
815  South  Braddock  Ave.,  Pittsburgh, 
Pa. 

P.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Dec.  6,  1854. 
Self-taught.  Member:  Pittsburgh 
AA;  S.Indp.A.  Work:  Portrait  in 
Homeopathic  Hospital  and  in  Duquesne 
Club,    Pittsburgh,    Pa. 

KING,  Charles  B.,  814  Jefferson  Ave.,  De- 
troit. Mich. 

P.,  E.— Born  Angel  Island,  Cal.,  Feb.  2, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Laurens  in  Paris;  Bran- 
gwyn  in  London.  Member:  Soc.de  la 
Gravure  Originale  en  Couleur,  Paris; 
Chicago  SE.  Work  in:  New  York 
Public  Library;  Library  of  Congress, 
Washington,    D.    C. 

KING,    Clement,    Walkerville,    Ont.,    Can- 
ada. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

KING,    Edward,    Prospect    Ave.,    Pelham 
Manor,    N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

KING,  Emma  B.,  2118  North  Talbott  St., 
Indianapolis,  Ind. 

P. — Born  Indianapolis.  Pupil  of  Cox, 
Beckwith,  Chase  and  ASL  in  New  York; 
Boulanger,  Lefebvre,  Carolus-Duran 
and  Frank  E.  Scott  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: ASL  of  N.  Y. 

KING,    Gertrude,    32    Miller    St.,    Newark, 
N.  J. 
P. — M  ember:     N.A.  Women  PS. 

KING,  Hamilton,  200  West  57th  St.,  New 
York,   N.  Y. 

P.,  I. — Born  Lewiston,  Me.,  Dec.  21, 
1871.  Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:   SI  1915. 

KING,  James  S.,  798  Valley  Road,  Upper 
Montclair,  N.   J. 

Etcher,  P.— Born  New  York,  Dec.  26, 
1852.  Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts 
under  Gerome.  Member:  Salma.C. 
1884;  Allied  AA. 

KING,   Louise   H.     See  Mrs.  Kenyon  Cox. 

KING,  Paul,  10  South  18th  St.,  Philadel- 
phia; h.  279  West  Tulpehocken  St.,  Ger- 
mantown, Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Feb.  9,  1867. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  Buffalo;  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
under  Mowbray.  Member:  ANA; 
Salma.C;  AC  Phila.;  A. Fund  S.;  A.Aid 
S.;  Allied  AA.  Awards:  Shaw  prize, 
Salma  C.  1906;  Inness  prize,  Salma.C. 
1906;  hon,.  mention.  AC  Phila.  1911;  gold 


471 


KING 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


KITSON 


medal,  Phila.AC  1913;  silver  medal, 
P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Philadelphia 
prize,  PAFA,  1918.  Work:  "A  Cool 
Retreat,"  Engineers'  Club,  New  York; 
"Boulder  Pass,"  Art  Club  of  Philadel- 
phia; "Sailing-  Boats,"  Reading  Museum. 
KING,  W.  B.,  118  East  28th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

L— M  ember:    SI    1910. 
KINGSBURY,   Edward   R(eynolds),  24  St. 
Botolph     St.,    Boston,    Mass.;     summer, 
Ogunquit,    Me. 

P.,    T. — Born    Boston.      Pupil    of    Mass. 
Normal  Art  School  and  Boston  Museum 
School;    studied   in   Paris.     Member: 
Boston  AC;    Salma.C.     Work:    "Time 
and     the    World,"     mural     painting     in 
Charlestown  (Mass.)  High  School. 
KINKEAD,  Charles  Edwin,  253  Lawrence 
St.,   New  Haven,   Conn. 
P. — M  ember:      Salma.   C. 
KINNEY,     Margaret     West     (Mrs.     Troy 
Kinney),   154   East   38th  'St.,   New  York, 
N.    Y. 

I.— Born  Peoria,  111.,  June  11,  1872. 
PuDil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Julian  Academy 
in  'Paris  under  Robert-Fleury,  Collin, 
Merson  and  Lefebvre.  Member:  As- 
soc. SI  1912. 
KINNEY.  Troy,  154  East  38th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

I.,E. — Born  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  Dec.  1, 
1871.  Pupil  of  AIC;  N.  Y.  School  of 
Art.  Member:  Chicago  SE;  Brook- 
lyn SE;  New  York  SE.;  N.  Y.  Arch. 
Lg.  Work  in  Chicago  Art  Institute. 
Specialty,  decorations  and  etchings. 
KINSELLA,  James,  438  West  20th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Marblehead, 
Mass. 

P._Born  New  York,  Dec.  14,  1857.  Pu- 
pil of  NAD;  Ecole  des  Beaux- Arts  In 
Paris.      Member:    A.    Aid    S.;    NAG 

(life).  Award:  Silver  medal,  AAS 
1903.      Work:     "Seven    O'Clock    from 

Manasquan,"       Museum       of       Newark 

(N.  J.)    Technical  School. 
KINSEY,  Alberta,  ^Vilmington,   O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's  AC. 
KINSMAN-WATERS,     R.,     1143     Lincoln 

Road,  Columbus,  O. 
P.— M  ember:     NYWCC. 
KIRALFY,   Verona     A(rnold),   Corner  3rd 

and  Wood   Sts.,   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 

Port.  P.— Born  New  York  City  in  1893. 

Pupil    of    Chase    and    ASL    of    N.     Y. 

Member:    Pittsburgh   AA. 
KIRBY,  C.  Valentine,  219  State  St.,  Har- 

risburg,   Pa. 

C,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Canajoharie,  N.  Y., 

July     19,     1875.       Pupil     ASL.     of     N.Y. 

Member:      Pittsburgh     AA. ;     Phila. 

Sketch  C.  State  director  of  Art  Educa- 
tion,   Harrisburg,    Pa. 
KIRKHUM,  Mrs.  R.   N.,  3615  Macomb  St., 

Washington,    D.    C. 

P. — M  ember:    S.  Wash.  A. 

KIRKPATRICK,  Marion  Powers  (Mrs.  W. 
A.  Kirkpatrick).     See  Powers. 

KIRKPATRICK,       W(i  I  I  i  a  m)       A(rber- 
Brown),  30  Ipswich  St.,   Boston,  Mass.; 


h.  Waldoboro,  Me.;  summer,  Friendship, 
Me. 

I.,  P. — Born  in  England.  Studied  in 
Paris  and  London.  Member:  Bos- 
ton AC;   St.  Botolph  C. 

KIRPAL,  Elsa.     See  Mrs.  Tower  Peterson. 

KIRSCH,  Agatiia,  care  of  Bon  Marche, 
Seattle,    Wash.    (P.) 

KIRTLAND,    Elizabeth   Scribner,  40  Bene- 
dict  Ave.,    Tarrytown,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

KISSACK,  R.  A.,  411  Algonquin  PI.,  Web- 
ster Grove,   Mo. 

P.— Born  St.  Louis.  March  4,  1876.  Pu- 
pil of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts  and 
studied  in  Paris.  Member:  St. 
Louis  AG.  Award  :  Gold  medal,  St. 
Louis   School  of  Fine  Arts. 

KITSON,  H(enry)  H(udson),  St.  Botolph 
Studios,  4  Harcourt  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
S. — Born  Huddersfield,  England,  Apr.  9, 
1865.  Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  in 
Paris  under  Bonnaissieux.  Member: 
Copley  S.  1899;  Boston  SAC;  Bos- 
ton AC;  Eclectics.  Awards:  Three 
gold  medals,  Mass.  Charitable  Me- 
chanics' Association;  gold  medal, 
American  Art  Association,  New  York, 
1886;  bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp., 
1889;  medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago, 
1893;  decoration  from  King  of  Rouma- 
nia;  medal  Paris  Exp.,  1900.  Work: 
"The  Minute  Man,"  Lexington,  Mass.; 
Cedar  Rapids,  Iowa;  Dyer  Memorial 
Fountain,  Providence;  W.  M.  Hunt 
Memorial,  Boston;  "Music  of  the  Sea," 
Boston  Museum;  "Viscount  James 
Bryce,"  bronze  bust.  National  Gallery, 
Washington,  D.  C. ;  National  Gallery, 
London,  England;  Newark  Museum; 
"Admiral  Self  ridge,"  Vicksburg,  Miss.; 
"Roger  Conant  statute,"  Salem,  Mass.; 
Patrick  A.  Collins  Monument,"  "Robert 
Burns  Monument,"  Henry  B.  Endicott 
Memorial,"  "Gov.  Banks'  Monument," 
Boston,  Mass.;  "Farragut  Statute"; 
"Lt.  Gen.  Stephen  D.  Lee,'  '  "Gen, 
Martin  L.  Smith,"  "Iowa  State  Memo- 
rial," Vicksburg,  Miss.;  "Thomas  A. 
Doyle  statute,"  Providence,  R.  I.;  "Walt 
Whitman,"  bust,  London,  England; 
"Elizabeth,  Queen  of  Roumania  (Car- 
men Sylva)',,  "Carol,  King  of  Rou- 
mania," Bucharest,  Roumania;  "Christ," 
Drexel  Memorial  Chapel,  Philadelphia, 
Pa.;    "Haynes  Memorial,"  Newark,  N.  J. 

KITSON,  Theo  Alice  Ruggies  (Mrs.  H.  H. 
Kitson),  Framingham,  Mass. 
S. — Born  Brookline,  Mass.,  1876.  Pupil  of 
H.  H.  Kitson  in  Boston;  Dagnan-Bou- 
veret  in  Paris.  Me  m  b  e  r  :  Copley  S. ; 
NSS.  Award  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris 
Salon,  1890;  two  medals,  Mass.  Chari- 
table Mechanics'  Assoc;  bronze  medal, 
■St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work: 
"Minute  Man  of  '76,"  Framing- 
ham.  Mass.;  "Mother  Bickerdvke"  group 
for  Illinois,  "Volunteer  of  '61,"  New- 
buryport,  Mass.;  soldier  monuments  at 
Goshen,  N.  Y. ;  Walden.  N.  Y.;  Vicks- 
burg, Miss.;  Minneapolis,  Minn.;  Pasa- 
dena, Calif.;  Providence,  R.  I.;  Little 
Falls,  R.  I.;  Ashburnham,  Mass.;  North 
Andover,  Mass.;  North  Attleboro,  Mass.; 
Sharon,  Mass.;  Topfield,  Mass. 

472 


KITT 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


KNIGHT 


KITT,  Mrs.  Katherine,  319  South  Fourth 
Ave.,   Tucson,   Ariz. 

P._Born  in  California,  Oct.  9,  1876. 
Pupil  of  Richard  Miller.  Member: 
Cincinnati  Woman's  AC. 

KLAGES,  Frank  H(enry),  2027  North 
31st  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  July 
24,  1892.  Pupil  of  Emil  Carlsen,  Cecilia 
Beaux,  Philip  Hale.  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA.  Award  :  Cresson 
traveling    scholarship,    PAFA,    1914. 

KLAGSTAD,  August,  305  West  Broadway; 
h.  1715  Girard  Ave.,  N.,  Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

P. — Born  Bingen,  Norway,  Aug.  14,  1866. 
Pupil  of  Feudell,  W.  J.  Reynolds,  AIC, 
and  Chicago  Academy  of  Fine  Arts. 
Member:  Scandinavian  Art  Soc.  of 
America.  Aw  a  r  d  :  Hon.  mention, 
Minneapolis  Inst.,   1915. 

KLAR,    Walter    H.,    University    of    Pitts- 
burgh,   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — Pupil    of   NAD;    Mass.    Normal   Art 
S.  Member:  Pittsburgh      AA. 

Award  :  First  honorable  mention, 
Pittsburgh  AA,  1919.  Professor  of  Fine 
and  Industrial  Arts,  University  of 
Pittsburgh. 

KLAUDER,    Mary,   Bala,    Pa. 
S. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

KLAW,  Alonzo,  Carmel,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Louisville,   Ky.,  Apr.   15,   1885. 
Pupil  of  New  York  School  of  Art,  ASL 
of  N.  Y.   Member:   Salma.  C;  AWCS; 
NYWCC. 

KLEIMINGER,  A.  F.,  4164  Lake  Park 
Ave.,  Chicago,  111.;  summer,  Nonquitt, 
Mass. 

P.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Dec.  4,  1865.  Pu- 
pil of  Henri  Martin.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;  S.  Indp.  A.;  New  Bedford  SA. 

KLEIN,  Isidore,  123  East  22nd  St.,  New 
York,   N.  Y. 

P.,  E.— Born  in  Russia,  Oct.  12,  1897. 
Pupil  of  NAD;  Fawcett  Art  School, 
Newark.  Member:  S. Indp.  A. ;  Lg. 
of  N.Y.A. 

KLEPPER,  Frank  X.  E,  L.,  405  West 
Davis  St.,  McKinney,  Texas. 
P.,  E.,  T. — Born  Piano,  Texas,  May  3, 
1890.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Harry  Lachman  in 
Paris.  Award  :  Hon.  mention,  Texas 
State  Artists,  1916;  Everts  gold  medal, 
Texas  State  Artists,  1920. 

KLINE,  George  T.,  407  Mathews  St., 
Columbia,    Mo. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Aug. 
22,  1874.  Pupil  of  S.  E.  Whiteman. 
Member:  Art  Lovers'  Guild  of  Co- 
lumbia.    Illustrates  scientific  articles. 

KLINE,  Hibbard  Van  Buren,  Leonia, 
N.  J.;  summer.  Fort  Hunter,  N.  Y. 
P..  I. — Born  Auriesville,  N.  Y.,  Nov.  8, 
1895.  Pupil  of  College  of  Fine  Arts, 
Syracuse  University;  and  ASL.  of  N.Y. 
under  Chase  and  Mora.  Member: 
SL 

KLINE,  William  F(alr),  244  West  14th 
St.,   New  York,  N.  Y. 

Mural  P.,  I.,  C— Born  Columbia,  S.  C, 
May  3,  1870.  Pupil  of  NAD  under  Low 
and  Ward,  and  of  John  La  Farge  in  New 


York;  Julian  Academy,  tmder  Bougue- 
reau  and  Constant,  and  Colarossi  Acad- 
emy in  Paris.  Member:  ANA  1901; 
Mural  P.;  NYWCC,  1918;  AWCS,  1919. 
Awards  :  Lazarus  traveling  scholar- 
ship 1894;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  Clarke  prize,  NAD 
1901;  second  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD 
1903;  bronze  medal  for  painting  and  gold 
for  window,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 
Work:  Crerar  Memorial  Window,  Sec- 
ond Presbyterian  Church,  Chicago,  111. 

KLINK,  Ethel   H.    See  Mrs.  Jerome  Myers. 

KLOPPER,  Zan(will)  D(avld),  1642  West 
Division  St.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  I.— Born  in  Russia,  Oct.  20,  1870. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under 
Repin  and  Laurens.  Is  physician  and 
makes  specialty  of  anatomical  drawings. 
Work:  "Immaculate  Conception," 
mural  decoration  in  St.  Mary's  of  the 
Woods. 

KLOTZ,     L.     Edmund,     East    Gloucester, 
Mass. 
P.— M  ember:    Salma.  C. 

KLUMPKE,  Anna  Elisabeth,  Chateau-de- 
By,  12  Rue  Rosa  Bonheur,  Thomery, 
Seine-et-Marne,  France. 
P. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.  Pupil  of. 
Rosa  Bonheur,  Robert-Fleury,  Lefebvre 
and  Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Copley  S.  1893.  Awards:  Hon. 
mention,  Paris  Salon,  1885;  silver  medal, 
Versailfes,  1886;  Temple  gold  medal, 
PAFA  1889;  bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904.  Author  of  "Rosa  Bonheur, 
sa  vie  son  oeuvre."  Work:  "In  the 
Wash  House,"  Pennsylvania  Academy, 
Philadelphia. 

KNATHS,  Otto  Carl,  Provincetown,  Mass. 
P.— Born     Eau     Claire,     Wis.,     Oct.     21, 

1892.  Pupil  of  Chicago  Art  Institute. 
Member:     S.   Indp.   A. 

KNAUBER,  Alma,  Hayes  Hall,  Ohio  State 
University,     Columbus,     Ohio;     h.     3331 
Arrow    Ave.,    Pleasant    Ridge,    Cincin- 
nati, Ohio. 
P.,   T.^Born  Cincinnati,   Ohio,   Aug.   24, 

1893.  Pupil  of  F.  Duveneck,  L.  H.  Mea- 
kin,  C.  J.  Bornhorn.  Member:  Cin- 
cinnati AL;   College  AA. 

KNECHT,     Fern     Edie,    4142A    Lafayette 
St.,   St.   Louis,   Mo.    (P.) 

KNECHT,    K(arl)    K(ae),    Courier    Bldg.; 

Ill  Adams  Ave.,  "The  Jae-Kae,"  Evans- 

ville,    Ind. 

Cartoonist,    I. — Born    Iroquois,    S.    Dak., 

Dec.  4,  1883.    Pupil  of  AIC.    Member: 

American  Press  Humorists.     On  staff  of 

"Evansville  Courier." 
KNIFFIN,      Herbert     R.,     University     of 

Pittsburgh,   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 

P.,  T. — Studied  at  Cooper  Union;  NAD; 

and  in  Paris  and  Munich.     Member: 

Pittsburgh  AA.     Professor  of  Fine  and 

Applied   Art,    University   of   Pittsburgh. 
KNIGHT,     Augustus,     4216     Harney     St., 

Omaha,    Neb. 

P. — A  ward:  Hon.  mention  for  water 

colors,   St.  Paul  Institute,   1916. 
KNIGHT,     Bert,    52    East    34th    St.,    New 

York,   N.  Y. 

P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 


473 


KNIGHT 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


KOHLMANN 


KNIGHT,  Charles  R(obert),  27  West  67th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Lawrence 
Park,  Bronxville,  N.  Y. 
P.,  S.,  I.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  21, 
1874.  Pupil  of  Brush  and  Du  Mend. 
Member:  N.Y.Arch.T^g.  1912.  Spe- 
cialty, animals  and  birds,  modern  and 
fossil. 

KNIGHT,  Clayton,  36  East  29th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Sparkhill,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.— Born  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  Mar.  30, 
1891.  Pupil  of  Von  der  Lancken,  Henri, 
and  Bellows.  Member:  Guild  of 
Free  Lance  A.  Illustrates  for  maga- 
zines. 

KNIGHT,  D(anlel)  Ridgway,  Place  de 
TEglise,  Poissy,  Selne-et-Oise;  and  Rol- 
leboise-par-Bonnieres,  France. 
P.— Born  Philadelphia,  1839.  Pupil  of 
PAFA;  Ecole  des  Beaux  Arts,  Gleyre 
and  Meissonier  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Paris  SAP.  Officer  of  the  Legion 
of  Honor,  France;  Knight  of  St.  Mi- 
chael of  Bavaria.  Awards  :  Hon. 
mention,  Paris  Salon,  1884;  third  class 
medal,  Paris  Salon,  1888;  gold  medal, 
Munich,  1888;  silver  medal,  Paris  Exp., 
1889;  Legion  of  Honor  1889;  medal,  Co- 
lumbian Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  medal  of 
honor,  PAFA  1893;  medal,  Antwerp 
Exp.,  1894.  Work:  "Hailing  the 
Ferry,"  Pennsylvania  Academy,  Phila- 
delphia; "The  Shepherdess,"  Brooklyn 
Institute   Museum. 

KNIGHT,   Frederick  C,  30  East  34th  St., 
New   York,    N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

KNIGHT,  L(ouis)  Aston,  147  Rue  de  la 
Pompe,  Paris,  France;  Beaumont  le 
Roger,  Eure,   France. 

Ldscp.P. — Born  Paris,  France,  1873,  son 
of  D.  Ridgway  Knight.  Pupil  of  Lefebvre 
Robert-Fleury  and  of  his  father,  Ridg- 
way Knight,  in  Paris.  Member: 
Rochester  AC.  Awards  :  Bronze 
medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  hon.  mention, 
Paris  Salon,  1901;  gold  medal,  Rheima 
Exp.,  1903;  gold  medal,  Lyons  EXp., 
1904;  gold  medal,  Nantes  Exhb.,  1904: 
gold  medal,  Geneva  Exh.,  1904;  third 
class  medal,  Paris  Salon,  1905;  sec- 
ond class  medal,  Paris  Salon,  1906;  gold 
medal,  AAS  1907;  Knight  of  the  Legion 
of  Honor,  1920.  Work:  "The  Tor- 
rent," Toledo  Museum  of  Art;  "The 
River  Wharf,"  "Sous  le  Moulin," 
Luxembourg  Museum,  Paris.  Repre- 
sented in  Rochester  Memorial  Art 
Gallery. 

KNOPF,  Nellie  Augusta,  Illinois  Woman's 
College,  Jacksonville,  111. 
P.,  T.— Born  Chicago,  Sept.  19,  1875. 
Pupil  of  AIC  under  Vanderpoel  and 
Freer;  Charles  H.  Woodbury;  John  F. 
Carlson.  Member:  Jacksonville  Art 
Assoc;  Chicago  AG;  AIC  Alumni;  Col- 
lege Art  Asso.  Director  School  of  Fine 
Arts,  Illinois  Woman's  College.  Repre- 
sented in  John  H.  Vanperpoel'  memorial 
collection. 

KNOWLES,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  A.  McG(lll- 
vray),  care  of  Babcock  Art  Gallery,  19 
East  49th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


P.,  T.— Born  Ottawa,  Can.,  Jan.  8,  1866. 
Pupil  of  F.  M.  G.  Knowles.  Member: 
Royal  Canadian  Academy;  N.  A.  Women 
PS.  Work:  In  Canadian  National  Gal- 
lery;   Ontario   Government  collection. 

KNOWLES,  F.  IVlcGillvray,  care  of  Bab- 
cock Art  Gallery,  19  East  49th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Syracuse,  N.  T., 
May  22,  1860.  Studied  in  England, 
France,  Canada  and  the  United  States. 
M  e  m  b  e  r:  R.  C.  A.  Awards:  Hon. 
mention,  Pan-Amer.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
medal,  La.  Purchase  Exp.,  St,  Louis, 
1904;  medal,  Panama-Pacific  Exp.,  San 
Francisco,  1915.  Represented  in  Na- 
tional Galleries  of  Ottawa  and  Toronto. 

KNOWLTON,    Annie    D.,    6   Granger   PL, 
Rochester,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:  Rochester  AC. 

KNOWLTON,  Mrs.  Daniel,  178  Summer 
St.,  Buffalo,  N.  Y.   (P.) 

KNOX,   Edward,  Tom's  River,  N.  J. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

KNOX,  James,  54  Seventh  Ave.,  Brook- 
lyn, New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Glasgow,  Scotland,  April,  1866. 
Pupil  of  Joseph  H.  Boston.  Work: 
"First  Attack  of  the  Tanks,"  U.  S.  Na- 
tional Museum,  Washington,  D.  C. 

KNOX,  Jean,  310  West  Upsal  St.,  Ger- 
mantown,  Philadelphia,  Pa.    (P.) 

KNOX,  Susan  Bicker,  119  East  19th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  York  Har- 
bor, Me. 

P.— Born  Portsmouth,  N.  H.  Studied 
In  Philadelphia,  New  York  and  Europe. 
Member:  NAC;  Pen  and  Brush; 
SPNY;  N.A.  Women  PS.  Specialty, 
portraits. 

KNUEBEL,  John,  Technical  High  School, 
Buffalo,   N.   Y.    (P.,  T.) 

KOBBE,   Marie   O(lga),  77  East  89th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  203   Clinton  Ave., 
New  Brighton,   S.  I.,  N,  Y. 
P.— M  ember:  NYWCC. 

KOBMAN,  Clara  H.,  3  Eden  Park  Ter- 
race, Cincinnati,  O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

KOCH,    Edna,   100   Garfield  Place,   Brook- 
lyn,  N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

KOCH,  Helen  C,  253  Hearne  Ave.,  Cin- 
cinnati,  O. 

P. — M  ember  :  Cincinnati  Woman's 
A.  C. 

KOCH,    William,    "Baltimore   American," 
Baltimore,   Md. 
I. — M  ember-   Char.  C. 

KOECHL,    Paul,    1947    Broadway;    h.    15 
East   40th   St.,   New   York,   N.   Y. 
P.,     T.— Born    Brooklyn,    July    27,    1880. 
Pupil  of  Homer  Boss. 

KOHLER,  Rose,  3016  Stanton  Ave.,  Cin- 
cinnati, O. 

P.,  S.— Born  Chicago,  111.  Pupil  of  Cin- 
cinnati Academy  under  Duveneck  and 
Barnhorn.  Member:  Cincinnati 
Woman's   AC. 

KOHLMANN,  Rena  Tucker  (Mrs.  A.  R. 
Kohlmann),  108  West  57th  St.,  New 
York.   N.   Y. 


474 


KOHLMEIER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


KRAMER 


p.,  S.,  W. — Born  Indianapolis,  Nov.  29, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Joseph  De  Camp, 
Charles  H.  Woodbury  and  Geo.  Grey 
Barnard. 

KOHLMEIER,    Helen    M.,    1054   Ingraham 
St.,    Los   Angeles,    Cal. 
P.— M  ember:    Cal.    AC. 

KOHN,  Irma,  East  Gloucester,  Mass.;  h. 
Arts  Club,  6105  Michigan  Ave.,  Chicago, 
111. 

Ldscp.  P.— Born  Rock  Island,  111.  Pupil 
of  AIC;  Charles  Francis  Brown,  H.  B. 
Snell,  H.  L.  Lathrop.  Member: 
NYWCC;  Chicago  SA;  Chicago  AG; 
N.A.Women  PS.  Represented  in  Toledo 
Museum;  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the 
Fine  Arts,    Philadelphia. 

KOHUS,  Frank,  710  Clark  St.,  Cincinnati, 
O. 
S.— M  ember:      NSS. 

KOLDE,    Frederick    W(Illlam),    103    Juer- 
gens  Ave.,  Clifton,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P. — M  ember:   Cincinnati  AC. 

KOLLER,  E.  Leonard,  540  Jefferson  Ave., 
Scranton,   Pa. 

I.,  L.,  W.,  T.— Studied  under  Pyle, 
Morse  and  Willett.  Member:  N.Y. 
Soc.C.  Work:  "Soldiers  Memorial 
Monument,"  near  Gettysburg  battlefield. 

KOMROFF,  Mrs.     See  Elinor  M.  Barnard. 

KONTI,      Isidore,     314     Rlverdale     Ave., 

Yonkers,   N.   Y. 

S.— Born  Vienna,  Austria,  July  9,  1862. 
Pupil  of  Imperial  Academy  in  Vienna 
under  Helmer  and  Kundmann.  Came  to 
United  States  in  1890.  Member: 
NSS  1897;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1901;  Salma.C. 
1904;  ANA  1901;  NA  1905;  Allied  AA. 
Award  :  Gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904.  Work:  "Genius  of  Immor- 
tality," Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  groups  for  Bureau  of  Am,.  Re- 
publics Bldg.,  Washington,  D.  C; 
medal  "Landing  of  Jews  in  America," 
Minneapolis  Institute;  "Orpheus,"  Pea- 
body  Institute,  Baltimore,  Md. ;  group 
on  Dewey  Arch,  New  York;  monument 
to  Kit  Carson  and  Lt.  Beal,  National 
Museum  of  Art,  Washington;  statues  of 
Justinian  and  Alfred  the  Great,  Court 
House,   Cleveland. 

KOOPMAN,  John  R.,  1367  Plimpton  Ave., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Falmouth,  Mich.,  June  5,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Chase,  Henri,  K.  H.  Miller, 
Wiles.     Member  :     Salma.    C. 

KOPMAN,  Benjamin  D.,  8  East  15th  St., 
New    York.    N.    Y. 

P.— M  ember:  Allied  AA.  Work: 
"Portrait  of  a  Young  Man,"  Pennsyl- 
vania Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts,  Phila- 
delphia;  "Interior,"  Brooklyn  Museum. 

KORACH,  Dean,  61  Poplar  Street,  Brook- 
lyn,  N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

KORBEL,  Mario  J.,  care  Gorham,  Fifth 
Avenue  and  36th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S. — Born  Osik,  Czechoslavakia,  Mar.  22, 
1882.  Studied  in  Munich  and  Paris. 
Member:  Chicago  SA.  Award: 
Shaffer  prize,  AIC,  1910.  Work: 
Dancing  group,  Cleveland  Museum; 
"Andante,"     Metropolitan     Museum     of 


Art;  "Minerva,"  University  of  Havana, 
Cuba;  marble  bust  in  Chicago  Art  In- 
stitute; McPhee  Memorial  monument, 
Denver. 

KORDA,  Augustyn,  1214  Broadway,  Den- 
ver, Colo.;  h.  55  Warren  Ave.,  Buffalo, 
N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Buffalo,  June  17,  1894.  Pupil 
of  J.  E.  Thompson.  Member:  Den- 
ver  AA. 

KORNHAUSER,  David  E.,  3038  Chestnut 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA;  Fel- 
lowship PAFA;  Graphic  Sketch  C. 
Work:  "Along  the  Schuylkill  River," 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine 
Arts,    Philadelphia. 

KORNHAUSER,    Mary   Parker,  1425  Wal- 
nut St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:   Fellowship  PAFA. 

KOST,  Frederick  W.,  146  West  55th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Brookhaven,  Long 
Island,   N.  Y. 

Ldscp. P.— Born  New  York,  May  15, 
1861.  Pupil  of  NAD  under  Wm.  Macy. 
Member:  SAA  1889;  ANA  1900,  NA 
1906;  A.  Fund  S. ;  Lotos  C;  Century  C. 
Awards:  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp., 
1900;  bronze  medal,  Pan. -Am.  Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904.  Work:  "On  the  St.  John  River, 
N.  B.,"  Pennsylvania  Academy,  Phila- 
delphia; "Smithfield  Marshes,  Staten 
Island,"  Brooklyn  Institute  Museum; 
"Moonrise,  Fox  Hills,"  Art  Museum. 
Montclair,  N.  J. 

KOTZ,   Daniel,  Park  Ridge,   N,   J. 
Ldscp. P. — Born   near   South   Bend,   Ind., 
March     21,     1848.      Pupil    of    Henry    F. 
Spread.     Member:   Salma.C. 

KOULISH,     Meyer,     1446    Webster    Ave., 
Bronx,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

KOWNATZKI,  Hans,  Van  Dyck  Studios, 
939  Eighth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  sum- 
mer, Peconic,  L.  I..  N.  Y. 
P.,S. — Born  Konigsberg,  Germany,  Nov. 
26,  1866.  Pupil  of  Neide  and  Koner; 
Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Member:  S. 
Indp.A. 

KRAFFT,  Carl  R.,  220  South  Michigan 
Ave.;  h.  3552  South  Seeley  Ave.,  Chi- 
cago,   III. 

P.— Born  Reading,  O.,  Aug.  23,  1884. 
Member:  Chicago  SA;  Palette  and 
Chisel  C;  Chicago  AG;  Cliff  Dwellers; 
Society  of  Ozark  Painters;  Chicago  AC. 
Austin,  Oak  Park  and  River  Forest  Art 
Lg.  Awards  :  Englewood  Woman's 
Club  prize  ($50)),  AIC,  1915;  Municipal 
Art  Lg.  purchase  prize,  1916;  hon.  men- 
tion, Chicago  AG,  1916;  Fine  Arts  Bldg. 
prize.  Artists  Guild,  1917;  Logan  Medal, 
AIC,  1920;  bronze  medal,  Illinois  Artists 
Exhibition,  1920;  silver  Medal,  Chicago 
SA,  1921.  Represented  in  Municipal  Art 
League  Collection  Chicago;  collection  of 
Peoria  (111.)  Soc.  of  Allied  Arts;  Engle- 
wood Woman's  Club;  Los  Angeles  Mu- 
seum; Art  League,  Aurora,  111.;  "Quiet 
of  Evening,"  Arche  Club,  Chicago; 
"Morning  Fog,"  City  of  Chicago, 

KRAMER,  E.  A.,  1865  Monroe  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Bloomingdale, 
N.  Y.  6         . 


475 


KRAMER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


KURTZ 


Ldscp.  P. — Born  in  New  York  City  in 
1866.  Pupil  of  von  Diez  in  Munich; 
Laurens  and  Constant  at  Julian  Acad- 
emy in  Paris, 

KRAMER,  Erwin,  500  West  24th  St.,  Mil- 
waukee,  Wis. 
P.— M  ember:   Wis.   PS. 

KRATZ,  H(arriett)  Frances,  57  West  Lo- 
gan St.,  Germantown,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.,  T. — Born  Germantown,  Philadelphia, 
Pa.,  Apr.  25,  1893.  Pupil  of  Dainger- 
field,  Snell,  Everett  and  'Seyffert, 

KREHBIEL,  Albert  H.,  Park  Ridge,  Chi- 
cago,   111. 

P.,  T.— Born  Chicago,  111.  Pupil  of  AIC 
and  Frederick  Richardson;  Laurens  in 
Paris.  Member:  Paris  AAA;  Chi- 
cago SA;  Chicago  WCC;  Cliff  Dwellers. 
Instructor  AIC.  Work:  Mural  deco- 
rations for  Supreme  Court,  Springfield, 
111. 

KREHBIEL,  Dulah  Evans  (Mrs.  Albert 
Krehbiel),  Park  Ridge.  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  I.— Pupil  of  AIC;  W.  Appleton 
Clark  and  ASL  in  N.  Y,  Member: 
Chicago  AC;  Cordon  C.  Designer  and 
publisher  of  Ridge  Craft  cards, 

KREMELBERG,  Mary,  1007  No.  Charles 
St.,  Baltimore.  Md. 

P.— M  ember:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Fel- 
lowship   PAFA. 

KRETZINGER,  Clara  Josephine,  Lyme, 
Conn.:  h.  917  Monadnock  Bldg.,  Chicago, 
111. 

P.— Born  Chicago.  Pupil  of  AIC 
and  Chicago  AFA;  Lefebvre,  Robert- 
Pleury.  Laurens,  Congdon  and  Richard 
Miller  in  Paris.  Member:  Chicago 
SA;  Chicago  AC.  Award  :  Hon. 
mention,  Paris  Salon.  Represented  in 
Beloit  Art  Museum.    • 

KRIEGHOFF,  W.  G.,  care  of  The  Art 
Alliance,.  1823  Walnut  St.;  h.  1915  Rit- 
tenhouse  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Aug.  31,  1875. 
Pupil  of  Chase.  Member:  Phila. 
Alliance;   Phila.   Sketch  C. 

KROLL,  Leon,  253  West  42d  St.,  New 
York.   N.    Y. 

P.,  T.— Born  New  York.  Dec.  6,  1884. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  and  NAD; 
Laurens  in  Paris.  Instructor  at  NAD, 
1911-18.  Member:  ANA.:  NAC 
(Hfe);  S.Indp.A. ;  New  Soc.  Etchers. 
Salma.  C;  Phila.  AC;  New  York  Soc. 
of  Etchers,  Boston  AC.  Awards  : 
Porter  prize.  Salma.  C.  1914:  bronze 
medal,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Logan 
prize  AIC,  1919;  Purchase  Prize  AIC, 
1919;  First  prize,  Wilmington  SPA., 
1921;  Clarke  prize,  NAD,  1921.  Work: 
"A  Basque  Landscape,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy  of  Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia; 
"North  River  Front,"  Art  Institute  of 
Chicago;  "In  the  Country,"  Detroit  In- 
stitute; "Broadway  and  42nd  St.,"  Los 
Angeles  Museum. 

KROMER,  E.  A.,  Laclede  Hotel,  New 
York,   N.   Y.    (I.) 

KRONBERG,  Louis,  care  of  Boston  Art 
Club,  Newbury  and  Dartmouth  Sts., 
Boston,    Mass. 

P..  T.— Born  Boston.  Mass..  Dec.  20, 
1872.      Pupil    of   Museum    of    Fine   Arts. 


Boston:  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Julian  Acad- 
emy under  Benjamin-Constant,  Laurens 
and  Collin  in  Paris.  Member:  Bos- 
ton AC;  Boston  GA;  Copley  S.;  Salma. 
C.  Awards:  Longfellow  traveling 
scholarship,  Boston  Museum,  1894  to 
1897;  silver  medal.  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F., 
1915;  Shaw  prize.  Salmagundi  Club, 
1919.  Work:  "Pink  Sash,"  Metropoli- 
tan Museum.  New  York;  "Behind  the 
Footlights."  Pennsylvania  Academy  of 
the  Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia;  "Ballet  Girl 
Preparing  for  the  Dance."  Boston  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts;  "Oriental  Dancer." 
Herron  Art  Institute,  Indianapolis;  "Bal- 
let Girl  in  White,"  Gardner  collection, 
Boston,  Mass. 

KRULLAARS,  William  J.,  673  East  37th 
St.,    Chicago.    111. 

P.— Born  Rotterdam,  Holland,  1878. 
Pupil  of  Rotterdam  Academy  of  Fine 
Arts,  and  AIC.  Member:  Palette 
and    Chisel    C. 

KRUSE,  Alexander  Z.,  125  East  115th  St., 
New  York.  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

KUEMMEL,  Cornelia  A.,  Pritchett  Col- 
lege. Glasgow,  Mo. 

P.,  S.,  T.— Born  Glasgow,  Howard  Co., 
Mo.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine 
Arts,  under  John  Fry  and  E.  Wuerpel. 
Member:      St.   Louis  AG. 

KUHN,  Harry  P(hilip),  Colt  Bldg.,  Pater- 
son,  N.  J.;  summer,  Wheelerville,  Pa. 
P.,   C. — Born   Zurich,    Switzerland,   Nov. 
27,   1862.     Award:     Gold  medal,  Lou- 
isiana Purchase  Exp.,   St.   Louis,   1904. 

KUHN,  Walt,  Fort  Lee,  N.  J. 
P.— Born     New    York,     1877.      Pupil    of 
Ziigel  In  Munich.     Member:  Am.PS. 
Award  :    Silver   medal,    Munich,    1905. 

KUNIYOSHI,   Katherine  Schmidt,  Ardsley 

Studios,    110    Columbia   Heights,    Brook- 
lyn,  N.    Y. ;   summer,   Ogunquit,   Me. 
P.— Born    Xenia,     Ohio,    Aug.     15,     1898. 
Pupil       of       Kenneth       Hayes       Miller. 
Member:      S.   Indp.   A. 

KUNIYOSHI,  Yasuo,  110  Columbia 
Heights,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Ogunquit,  Me. 

P.— Born  Okayama,  Japan,  Sept.  1,  1893. 
Pupil   of  Kenneth   Hayes   Miller. 

KUNZ,  J.  E.,  148  East  4th  St.,  Cincin- 
nati, O.     (P.) 

KUNZE,  E(dward),  222  Bowers  St.,  Jer- 
sey City,  N.  J. 

P.,  C,  T. — Born  Waldenburg,  Germany, 
Oct.  8,  1848.  Pupil  of  Kugl,  Danisch 
Academi  of  Art,  Copenhagen.  Mem- 
ber:     S.Indp.A.;    Lg.   of  N.Y.A. 

KUPFERMAN,  Murray,  239  Penn  St., 
Brooklyn,   New  York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

KURTZ,  Julia  Wilder,  Markeen  Hotel, 
Buffalo,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

KURTZ,  Wilbur  G.,  141  East  North  Ave., 
Atlanta,   Ga. 

P..  I.— Born  Oakland.  111.,  Feb.  28.  1882. 
Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  PBC;  At- 
lanta AA.  Represented  in  Atlanta 
Woman's  Club. 


476 


KVRTZWORTH 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


LAMB 


KURTZWORTH,  H(arry)  M(uir),  Kansas 
City  Art  Inst.,  Kansas  City,  Mo.;  h. 
2136  Stanley  Ave.,  Detroit,  Mich. 
P.,  D.,  L.,  W.,  T. — Born  Detroit,  Mich., 
Aug-.  12,  1887.  Pupil  of  Detroit  Museum 
School  of  Art  under  Paulus  and  Gies; 
Detroit  Academy  of  Fine  Arts  under 
Wicker;  Columbia  University.  New 
York,  under  Dow;  Pa.  School  of  Indus- 
trial Art;  and  with  Julius  Melchers. 
Member:  Fourth  International  Art 
Congress,  Dresden,  1912;  Detroit  Soc. 
A.  and  C.  Organizer  and  director 
Grand  Rapids  School  of  Art  and  In- 
dustry, 1916.  Director,  Michigan  Art 
Institute,  1918;  Associate  Director, 
Chicago  Academy  of  Fine  Arts,  1920. 
Director  Kansas  City  Art  Institute. 
Author  of  "Industrial  Art  a  National 
Asset." 

KUSCHE,  Carlton  J(ules),  524  Tenth  St., 
Oshkosh,    Wis, 

P.,  I. — Born  Oshkosh,  Wis.,  Aug.  15, 
1873.  Pupil  of  AIC;  William  Wendt; 
French;  Dressier.  Member:  S.Indp. 
A. 

LACEY,  Bertha  J.,  40  Irving  PL,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  and  Perrysville,  Ind. 
P. — Born  Perrysville,  Ind.,  March  6, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Vanderpoel,  Meakln  and 
Duveneck.  Member:  ASL  of  Chi- 
cago; Indiana  Artists;  Cincinnati 
Woman's  AC. 

LACEY,  Jessie  P.,  305  Davis  St.,  Evans- 
ton,  111. 


P.— ^M  ember:  Chicago  SA. 


LA  CHAISE,   Eugene  A.,  39  Rue  Joubert, 
Paris,   France*. 
P.— M  ember:   Paris  SAP   (sect.). 

LACHAISE,  Gaston,  77  Washington  Place, 
New  York,  N.  Y.     (P.) 

LACHMAN,  Harry  B.,  6  rue  du  Val  de 
Grace,  Paris,  France. 
P.— Born  La  Salle,  111.,  June  29,  1886. 
Member:  Societe  Inter,  des  Art- 
istes et  Sculpteurs;  Societe  Paris 
Moderne;  Chevalier  of  the  Legion  of 
Honor,  France.  Work:  "Toledo," 
Delgado  Museum  of  Art,  New  Orleans, 
La.;  "St.  Nicolas  du  Chardonnet." 
"Uzerche,"  "Antibes"  in  Musee  du 
Luxembourg;  "Printemps  Parisien," 
Musee  du  Petit  Palais,  Paris;  "Old 
Tower"  and  "Old  Church,"  Chicago  Art 
Institute;  "Notre  Dame  Sunset,"  Del- 
gado Museum,  New  Orleans. 

LADD,  Anna  Coleman  (Mrs.  Maynard 
Ladd),  270  Clarendon  St.,  Boston,  Mass.; 
summer,  Beverly  Farms,  Mass. 
S.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  1878. 
Studied  In  Paris  and  Rome.  Mem- 
ber: NSS  1915  (assoc);  Boston  GA. 
Award:  Hon.  mention.  P,-P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Work:  Bronze  medal, 
"The  Spirit  of  Serbia,"  R.  I.  School  of 
Design;  "Bronze  Lady,"  Gardner  collec- 
tion, Boston.  Head  of  A.R.C.  Studio  for 
Portrait  Masks,  France,  1917-1918; 
"Wind  and  Spray,"  Borghese  Collection, 
Rome;  "Fountain  of  Youth,"  Torresdale, 
Pa.;  Soldiers'  Monument,  Hamilton, 
Mass. 


LADD,  Laura  D.  Stroud  (Mrs.  Westray 
Ladd),  508  South  41st  St.,  Philadelphia, 
Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  July  1,  1863. 
Pupil  of  Phila,  School  of  Design  for 
Women  and  PAFA.  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA;*  Plastic  C;  Phila.  WCC; 
Alliance. 

LAESSLE,  Albert,  38  W.  Washington 
Lane,    Germantown,    Philadelphia,    Pa. 

S.— Born  Philadelplua,  March  28,  1877. 
Pupil  of  Spring  Garden  Inst.,  Drexel 
Inst.,  PAFA,  Charles  Grafly,  and  studied 
in  Paris.  Member:  NSS,  1913;  Fel- 
lowship PAFA;  Phila.  Alliance;  N.Y. 
Soc.C;  New  SA  of  N.Y.;  Societe  les 
Amis  de  la  Medaille  d'Art,  Brussels; 
Soc.  of  Animal  P.S.;  Phila.  Alliance; 
Fellowship  PAFA.  Awards  :  Stew- 
ardson  prize  1902.  and  Cresson  traveling 
scholarship  PAFA,  1904;  bronze  medal, 
Buenos  Aires,  1910;  PAFA  Fellowship 
prize  ($100),  1915;  gold  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  Francisco,  1915;  first  sculp- 
ture prize,  Americanization  through 
Art.  Philadelphia,  1916;  Widner  gold 
medal,  PAFA,  1918;  hon.  mention  AIC, 
1920.  Work:  "Turtle  and  Lizards." 
"Blue  Eyed  Lizard,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy,  Philadelphia;  "Heron  and 
Fish,"  Carnegie  Institute,  Pittsburgh;  3 
small  bronzes,  Peabody  Institute,  Balti- 
more; Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York; 
Philadelphia   AC. 

LA  FARGE,  Bancel,  Edgehill,  Mt.  Car- 
mel.    Conn. 

P..  C— M  ember:  Mural  P.;  NYWCC; 
Century  Assoc;  Paris  AAA;  Nat. Inst. 
AL;  New  Haven  PCC.  Mosaic,  stained 
glass  and  figure  designer. 

LA     FARGE,   'Mabel     (Mrs.     Bancel     La 
Farge),   Mt.   Carmel,  Conn. 
P. — Born    Cambridge,    Mass.,    June    26, 
1875.     Pupil  of  John  La  Farge.     Mem- 
ber: New  Haven  PCC. 

LA     GATTA,     John,     59     West     37th     St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

LAHEY,  Richard  F(rancis),  80  Tonnele 
Ave.,  Jersey  City,  N.  J. 
P.,  E.,  T.— Born  Jersey  City,  N.  J., 
June  23,  1893.  Pupil  of  Bridgman, 
Henri,  K.  H.  Miller.  Member: 
Whitney  Studio  Club;  ASL.  of  N.Y.; 
Guild  of  Free  Lance  Artists. 

LALONDE,  J(oseph)  W(ilfrid),  303  Pitts- 
burgh  Bldg.;  h.  1790  Grand  Ave.,  St. 
Paul,   Minn. 

P.,  S. — Born  Minneapolis,  Minn.,  March 
19,  1897.  Pupil  of  Gustave  Goetsch, 
Louis  F.  Mora,  F.  V.  Du  Mond.  Work: 
Mural  of  Joan  d'Arc  and  St.  Louis,  St. 
Louis  Church,  St.  Paul,  Minn. 

LAMB,  Charles  R(ollinson),  23  Sixth 
Ave.;  h.  360  West  22d  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P.,  C,  Arch.— Born  New  York.  Pupil  of 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  Mural  P.; 
NSS  (lay);  N.  Y.  Municipal  AS;  ASL 
of  N.  Y.;  NAC;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.;  AFAS. 
Specialty,  religious,  historical  and  mu- 
nicipal art 


477 


LAMB 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


LANGTON 


LAMB,  Ella  Condie  (Mrs.  Charles  P.. 
Lamb),  360  West  22d  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  Cresskill,  N.  J. 
P.,  I.,  C— Born  New  York.  Pupil  of 
Chase  and  C.  Y.  Turner  In  New  York; 
Collin  and  Courtois  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Mural  P. ;  S.  Indp.  A. ;  N.  Y. 
Municipal  AS;  NAC.  Awards: 
Dodge  prize,  NAD  1889;  hon.  mention, 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  medal, 
Atlanta  Exp.,  1895;  hon.  mention,  Pan- 
Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901.  Represented  in 
collection  of  the  National  Arts  Club. 
Specialty;  Designs  for  stained  glass  and 
mosaics. 

LAMB,  F(rederick)  S(tymetz),  23  Sixth 
Ave.;  h.  356  West  2M  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  summer,  Cresskill,  N.  J. 
Mural  P.,  C,  W.,  L,.— Born  New  York, 
June  24,  1863.  Pupil  of  ASL,  under  Wm. 
Sartain  and  Beckwith  in  New  York; 
Lefebvre  and  Boulanger  in  Paris. 
Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1887  (ex- 
v.pres.);  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Mural  P; 
N.  Y.  Municipal  AS  (ex-sect.);  NAC; 
American  Scenic  and  Historic  Preser- 
vation Soc;  N.Y.Soc.C.  (ex-sect.);  AI 
Graphic  A.;  Architectural  League  of 
America  (ex-pres.).  Awards:  Hon. 
mention,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago, 
1893;  gold  medal,  Atlanta  Exp.,  1895; 
medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900.  Work; 
Series  of  historic  windows,  Plymouth 
Church,  Brooklyn,  and  Church  of  the 
Messiah,  New  York;  "Conference  of 
Gen.  Washington  before  the  Battle  of 
Long  Island,"  mural  painting,  Public 
School  No.  5,  Brooklyn. 

LAMB,  F.  Mortimer,  Stoughton,  Mass. 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Middleboro,  Mass.,  1861. 
Pupil  of  Massachusetts  Normal  Art 
School;  School  of  Boston  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: NYWCC;  AWCS;  Wash.  WCC; 
New  Haven  PCC.  Awards  :  Gold 
medal,  20th  Century  Exp.,  Boston, 
1900;  silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F., 
1915.  Work:  Memorial  corridor.  City 
Hall,  Brockton,  Mass.;  "The  Good 
Samaritan,"  Universalist  Church, 
Stoughton,  Mass.;  "Spring,"  Chicatau- 
but  Club,  Stoughton,  Mass.;  2  land- 
scapes in  Christian  Science  Students' 
Library,  Brookline,  Mass. 

LAMBDEN,    Herman,    250    Main    St.;    h. 
115  Paine  Ave.,  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  New  Rochelle,   N.   Y.,   Jan.   4, 
1859.      Member:    Salma.C. 

LAMBERT,  Gertrude  A.  12  East  15th  St.; 
h.  215  So.  Center  St.,  Bethlehem,  Pa. 
P.— Born  So.  Bethlehem,  Pa.,  Aug,  10, 
1885.  Pupil  of  Phila.  School  of  Design 
for  Women  and  PAFA.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Plastic  C;  N.  A.  Wo- 
men PS.  Awards  :  Cresson  traveling 
scholarship,  PAFA,  1912-13;  Mary  Smith 
prize,  PAFA,  1915;  silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San  F..  1915.  Work  :  "The  Lit- 
tle Market,  Baveno,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts.  Instructor 
in  water  color,  Philadelphia  School  for 
Women,  1910-11. 

LAMBERT,    Nora    Sarony,    139   Lexington 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:  N.  A.  Women  PS. 


LAMEY,   Richard,  1728  Ridge  Ave.,  Phil- 
adelphia, Pa. 
P.— M  ember:   Phila.   AA. 

LANCE,      Elizabeth,      44      Reynolds      St.. 
Kingston,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

LANDEAU,  Sandor  L.,  care  of  Paul 
Foinet,  21  Rue  Brea,  Paris,  France. 
P.— Born  in  Hungary,  1864.  Pupil  of 
Laurens  and  Constant  in  Paris. 
Member:  Paris  AAA.  Awards: 
Second  Wanamaker  prize,  Paris  AAA; 
hon.  mention,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1905; 
third  class  medal,  Paris  Salon  1907. 

LANDIS,  Marguerite  A.,  2143  Fifth,  West, 
Seattle,   Wash.    (P.) 

LANDT,  Theodora  Lins,  Arleigh  Road, 
Douglas  Manor,  L.I.,  N.  Y. 
P.,  C,  Dec— Born  New  York,  Feb.  10, 
1885.  Pupil  of  Pratt  Institute  and  ASL 
of  N.  Y.  Member  :  S.  Indp.  A.;  Lg. 
of  NYA. 

LANE,  Marian,  806  17th  St.,  Washington 
D.   C. 

P.,  C. — Born  Great  Gransden,  Hunting- 
donshire, England.  Member:  Wash. 
WCC;  Wash.  Handicraft  G.;  N.  Y. 
Guild  of  Bookworkers. 

LANG,  Charles  M.,  Miller  Bldg.  Studio, 
1931  Broadway,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  S.,  L,  C,  T.— Born  Albany,  N.  Y., 
Aug.  26,  1860.  Pupil  of  John  Renzer, 
Prof.  Lofftz.  Member:  Salma.  C. 
Work:  "Gov.  David  B.  Hill,"  "Gov. 
Roswell  P.  Flower,"  City  of  Albany; 
"Hugo  Flagg  Cook,"  Capitol,  Albany', 
N.  Y. ;  Judges  Parker  and  Henton, 
Court  House,  Albany. 

LANG,  Henrietta  Dean,  175  Lincoln  Ave., 
Detroit,   Mich.    (P.,  T.) 

LANGDON,  Katharine.  See  Mrs.  W.  H. 
Corson. 

LANGENBACH,  Clara  Emma,  449  Au- 
burn Ave.,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 
P.  T.— Born  Ontario,  Canada,  Jan.  28, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Ernest  Fosberg  and 
F.  Carlson.  Member:  Rochester 
AC;  Buffalo  SA;  Buffalo  GAA. 

LANGHORNE,  Katharine.  See  Mrs. 
Benjamin  P.  Adams. 

LANGLEY,  Mrs.  Sarah,  Arts  and  Crafts 
Guild,  11th  and  Locust  Sts.;  h.  1104 
Spruce  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer. 
Forest  Inn,  Eagles  Mere  Park,  Pa. 
P.,  S.,  I.,  W.,  T.— Born  Texas,  July  12, 
1885.  Pupil  PAFA.  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA.  Works  :  "Jewels," 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine 
Arts. 

LANGSDORF,  Clara  M.,  3964  Eastern 
Ave.,  Cincinnati,  O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

LANGTON,  Berenice  Frances  (Mrs.  Dan- 
iel W.  Langton),  165  West  82d  St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 

S. — Pupil  of  Augustus  Saint  Gaudens 
In  New  York;  Rodin  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: N.  A.  Women  PS.  Award: 
Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 


478 


LANGTRY 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


LAUTER 


LANGTRY,      Mary,      241      Ryerson      St., 

Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Member:      NYWCC;   N.   A.   Wo- 
men PS. 

LANGZETTEL,  George  H(enry).  Yale 
School  of  Fine  Arts;  h.  725  Whitney 
Ave..  New  Haven,  Conn. 
P.,  T. — Born  Springfield,  Mass.,  Apr.  3, 
1864.  Pupil  of  Yale  School  of  the  Fine 
Arts.  Member:  New  Haven  PCC. 
Assistant  curator  of  Yale  Art  Museum. 

LANSIL,  Walter  F(ranklin),  175  Tremont 
St.,  Boston,  Mass. 

P. — Born  Bangor,  Me.,  March  30,  1846. 
Pupil  of  J.  P.  Hardy  at  Bangor;  Julian 
Academv  in  Paris.  Member:  Bos- 
ton AC.  Work:  "Dutch  Fishing 
Craft,"  Boston  Art  Club. 

LANSING,     Richard     H.,    Elwanger    and 
Barry  Bldg.,  Rochester,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:  Rochester  AC. 

LAPPE,  Alexander  H.,  743  South  Linden 
Ave.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA. 

LARSEN,  Charles  P(eter),  17  Ea.st  14th 
St.;  1  Stuyvesant  Alley,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  h.  662  Madison  Ave.,  York.  Pa. 
P.,  E. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Mar.  7, 
1892.  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member: 
Chicago  SE.  Represented  in  Chicago  Art 
Institute. 

LARSEN,    May    Sybil,    4437    North   Fran- 
cisco  Ave.,    Chicago,    111. 
P. — Born      Chicago,      111.        Member: 
S.Indp.A. 

LARSH,  Theodora,  Netherland  Hotel, 
Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer. 
Beach  Hotel,  Chicago,  111. 
Min.  P.,  T.— Born  Crawfordsville,  Ind. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  AIC;  Mme.  La 
Forge  in  Paris.  Member:  N.  A. 
Women  PS;  ASL  of  Chicago;  Chicago 
Soc.   Min.   P.;   Chicago  AG. 

LARSON,  Fred  T.,  2935  North  Whipple 
St.,   Chicago.  111. 

P. — Born  Chicago,  Apr.  19,  1868.  Pupil 
of  AIC.  Member:  Palette  and  Chisel 
C. 

LATHROP,  Elinor  (Louise),  96  Niles  St.; 
h.  83  Gillette  St..  Hartford,  Conn.;  sum- 
mer,   Madison.    Conn. 

P..  S.— Born  Hartford.  Conn.,  Sept.  26, 
1899.  Pupil  of  Philip  Hale,  R.  F.  Logan 
and  Albertus  Jones.  Member:  Hart- 
ford Art   Society. 

LATHROP,  Ida  Pulls  (Mrs.  Cyrus  Clark 
Lathrop),  151  South  Allen  St.,  Albany, 
N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Troy,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  27,  1859. 
Self-taught.  Member:  N.A.  Women 
PS;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A.  Work:  "Still 
Life,"  Prendergast  Art  Gallery,  James- 
town, N.  Y.  Specialty,  portraits  and 
landscapes. 

LATHROP,  W(illlam)  L(angson),  New 
Hope,  Bucks  Co.,  Pa. 

P.— Born  Warren,  111.,  March  29,  1859. 
Member:  ANA  1902,  NA  1907; 
NYWCC;  Rochester  AC.  Awards: 
Evans  prize,  AWCS.  1896;  gold  medal, 
AC.  Phila.,  1897;  Webb  prize,  SAA, 
1899;  bronze  medal.  Pan. -Am.  Exp., 
Buffalo,    1901;    third   prize    ($500),    C.    I. 


Pittsburgh,  1903;  second  prize,  Wor- 
cester, 1904;  bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
:^xp.,  1904;  gold  medal  for  oil  painting 
and  silver  medal  for  water  colors,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work:  "The 
Meadows,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  "Clouds  and  Hills,"  Minneapolla 
Museum;  "Three  Trees,"  National  Mu- 
seum of  Art,  Washington;  "Abandoned 
Quarry,"  Carnegie  Institute,  Pittsburgh; 
"Old  Covered  Bridge,"  Hackley  Art  Gal- 
lery,  Muskegon,   Mich. 

LAUBER,  Joseph,  280  East  162nd  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Mural  P.,  Etcher,  C. — Born  Meschede, 
Westphalia,  Germany,  Aug.  31,  1855; 
came  to  U.  S.  at  age  of  nine.  Pupil  of 
Karl  Miiller,  Shirlaw  and  Chase; 
worked  with  La  Farge.  Member: 
Mural  P.;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.,  1889; 
A.  Aid  S.:  Salma,  C,  1902.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention  for  mosaics  and  glass, 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  gold  and 
bronze  medals  for  mosaic  and  mural 
designs  Atlanta,  1895;  medals,  for  etch- 
ings and  mural  work.  Midwinter  Fair, 
California.  Specialty,  stained  glass  and 
mosaics.  Work:  Paintings:  Sixteen 
symbolic  figures.  Appellate  Court,  New 
York;  portrait  of  ex-Speaker  Penning- 
ton. House  of  Representatives,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C;  windows  in  Church  of  the 
Ascension,  New  York.  Instructor  of  art 
at  Columbia  University,   New  York. 

LAUDERDALE,  Ursula  (Mrs.  Edward 
Seay  Lauderdale),    4005   Miramar  Ave., 

p.,  T.'— Born  Moberly,  Mo.,  July  29, 
1879.  Pupil  of  DeVoe  and  Maurice 
Braun.     Member:   Dallas  AA. 

LAUGHLIN,  Alice  D(enniston),  400  Dev- 
onshire St.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.;  summer, 
Hyannisport,    Mass. 

P.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Oct.  19,  1895. 
Member:  NAC;  Pittsburgh  AA;  ASL 
of  N.   Y. 

LAUGH  NER,    L.    M.,    Shady   Park,    Ligo- 
nier.  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pittsburgh  AA. 

LAURENT,  Robert,  106  Columbia  Hghts., 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Ker  Fravaal,  Cape  Neddick,  Me. 
S. — Born  Concarneau.  France,  June  29. 
1890.  Pupil  of  Hamilton  Easter  Field; 
Maurice  Sterne;  British  Academy  in 
Rome.  Instructor  at  Ogunquit  (Me.) 
School  of  Art.  Member:  Brooklyn 
SA;  S.  Indp.  A;  Modern  Artists  of 
America. 

LAURIE-WALLACE,  J(ohn),  4032  Izard 
St.,  Omaha,  Neb. 

P.,  S.,  I.,  L.,  T. — Born  Garvagh,  Ire- 
land, July  29,  1864.  Pupil  of  Thomas 
Eakins;  PAFA.  Member:  Omaha 
AG;  Chicago  SA. 

LAUTER,  F(lora),  12  East  9th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  612  East  13th  St.,  In- 
dianapolis,  Ind, 

P.— Born  New  York,  July  21,  1874.  Pu- 
pil of  Henri,  Chase  and  Mora  in  New 
York.  Member:  Women's  Inter.Art 
Club,  London;  Chicago  AC;  Alliance;  S. 
Indp.  A.;  Lg.   of  N.Y.A. 


479 


LA  VALLEY 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


LEARNED 


LA  VALLEY,  J(onas),  J(oSeph),  317  Main 

St.;  101  Allen  St.,  Springfield,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Rouse  Point,  N.  Y.,  Aug.,  1858. 
Member:  Springfield  AL.  Wo^k: 
"Birth  of  Springfield,"  owned  by  City 
of  Springfield.  Represented  in  Spring- 
field Art  Museum. 

LAW,  Margaret  Moffet,  13  East  Read  St., 
Baltimore,  Md. ;  h.  364  Spring  St., 
Spartanburg,    S.    C. 

P.,  T. — Born  Spax  tansburg,  S.  C.  Pu- 
pil of  Chase,  Henri,  Mora  and  Haw- 
thorne. Member:  Balto,  WCC; 
Balto.  HS;  S.Indp.A.;  N. A. Women  PS. 
Awards  :  3rd  prize  All  Southern  Ex- 
hibition, Charleston,  S.C,  1921.  Work: 
"Feeding  Chickens,"  Kennedy  Library, 
Spartanburg,  S.  C;  "Wayside  Chat," 
Converse  College,  S.  C. 

LAWFORD,  Charles,  Los  Angeles,  Calif. 
P. — M  ember:  Attic  C.  Minneapolis; 
Minneapolis  AL.  Awards  :  First 
prize  ($100),  Minneapolis  Inst.,  1915: 
bronze  medal,  St.  Paul  Inst..  1917;  gold 
medal,  Minnesota  State  Art  Commission, 
1917. 

LAWLESS,  Carl,  3228  North  Broad  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa.    (P.) 

LAWLOR,  George  W(arren),  Studio 
Bldg.,  110  Tremont  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Chelsea,  Mass.,  Oct.  21,  1848. 
Pupil  of  Julian  and  Colarossi  Acade- 
mies and  at  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  In 
Paris.     Member:    Boston   AC. 

LAWRENCE,  Sidney,  Anchorage,  Alaska. 
(P.) 

LAWRIE,  Lee  O.,  256  West  55th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

S.— Born  Oct.  16,  1877.  Pupil  of  Saint 
Gaudens  and  Martiny.  Instructor  in 
sculpture  Harvard  University.  1910-12; 
Yale  University,  1908-18.  Member: 
NSS.  Work:  Decorations  in  United 
States  Military  Academy;  West  Point; 
Church  of  St.  Vincent  Ferrer,  and 
reredos  of  St.  Thomas'  Church,  New 
York;  Harkness  Memorial  Tower  and 
Archway,   Yale  University. 

LAWSON,  Adelaide  J.,  209  West  97th  St., 
New  York.   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  New  York.  N.  Y..  June  9.  1890. 
Pupil  of  Kenneth  Hayes  Miller.  Mem- 
ber: S.  Indp.  A.;  Alliance;  People's  AG. 

LAWSON,  Ernest,  care  Daniel  Gallery, 
2  West  47th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  in  California,  1873;  Studied  in 
Kansas  City;  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  and  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1908,  NA 
1917;  Inst  A.  and  L..  Awards: 
Silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
Sesnan  medal  PAPA  1907;  gold  medal 
AAS  1907;  first  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD 
1908;  gold  medal.  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F., 
1915;  Altman  prize  ($500)  NAD  1916; 
second  W.  A.  Clark  prize  ($1,500),  and 
Corcoran  silver  medal,  1916;  Innes  gold 
medal,  NAD  1917;  Temple  gold  medal, 
PAFA,  1920;  Altman  prize  ($1,000), 
NAD,  1921;  first  prize,  Pittsburgh  Intn. 
Exp.,  1921.  Work:  "An  Abandoned 
Farm,"  National  Gallery,  Washington; 
"The    Swimming    Hole,"    Art    Museum, 


Montclair,  N.  J.;  "Winter,"  Metropoli- 
tan Museum,  New  York;  "Landscape" 
and  "Winter,"  Brooklyn  Museum;  "Road 
at  the  Palisades,"  City  Art  Museum, 
St.  Louis;  "Boat  House,  Harlem  River, 
Winter,"  Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington, 
D.  C;  and  in  museums  at  Worcester, 
Mass. ;  Chicago,  111. ;  San  Francisco, 
Calif.;  Pittsburgh,  Pa.;  Youngstown,  O.; 
Savannah,  Ga. 

LAWSON,   H.   Raymond,  1331  Grace  Ave., 
Hyde  Park.  Cincinnati,  O. 
P. — M  ember  :    Cincinnati  AC. 

LAWSON,  Jess  M.,  120  Lexington  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

S.— Born  Edinburgh,  Scotland,  Feb.  18, 
1885.  Member:  British  Institute, 
Assoc.  Royal  College  of  Art,  London; 
Alliance;  NSS:  N.  A.  Women  PS. 
Awards:  Helen  Foster  Barnett  prize, 
NAD,  1918;  Widener  gold  medal, 
PAFA,     1919. 

LAWSON,  Katharine  S(tewart),  "Lone 
Pine  Studio,"  Westport,  Conn. 
S.— Born  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  May  9,  1885. 
Pupil  of  Lorado  Taft,  Herman  A.  Mac- 
Neil.  Member:  N.A.  Women  PS. 
Award  :     Shaw   Prize.  NAD,   1921. 

LAYBOURN-JENSEN     (Lars    Peter),    211 
Locust  St.,   Roselle  Park,  N.  J. 
P.,      S. — Born      Copenhagen,      Denmark, 
July  3,  1888.     Pupil  of  Danish  Academy. 
Member:      S.Indp.A. 

LAYMAN,  Elizabeth,  1731  East  McMillan 
St.,   Cincinnati,   O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

LAYNG,    George    W.,    220    Emerson    St., 
Pittsburgh,    Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

LAZARD,  Mrs.  Alice  A.,  Klaubers,  Louis- 
ville, Ky. 

P.,  T. — Born  New  Orleans,  La.,  Nov.  1, 
1893.  Pupil  of  Charles  Sneed  Williams 
and  AIC.  M  e  m  b  er  :  N.  O.  AA; 
Springfield,  111.,  A.A;  Chicago  AC;  AIC 
Alumni  Asso.. 

LAZZELL,  Blanche,  Provincetown,  Mass. 
P.,  E. — Born  Maidsville,  Monongalia 
Co.,  W.  Va.  Pupil  of  Charles  Guerin, 
William  Schumacher.  Member:  S. 
Indp.  A.;  Provincetown  Printers;  Prov- 
incetown AA.  Works  :  Wood  block- 
prints,  "The  Violet  Jug,"  Detroit  Art 
Inst.;  "Tulips,"  "The  Monongahela," 
"Trees"  and  "Fishing  Boat,"  W.  Va. 
University  Library. 

LEA,    Bertha.      See   Mrs.    Low. 

LEACH,  Bernard  (Howell),  care  of  Dr. 
W.  E.  Hovle,  Crowland.  Llandaff, 
Cardiff,   Wales. 

P.,  E.,  C,  L.,  W.,  T.— Born  Hong  Kong. 
China,     Jan.     5,    1887.      Pupil    of    Slade         J 
School  of  London  and  Frank  Brangwyn.        M 
Member:    Chicago   SE.  "T 

LEAKE.     Gerald,     390    Wadsworth    Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
I. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

LEARNED,     Arthur    G(arfield),     27    West 
46th  St..   New  York.   N.  Y. 
I.,    P. — Born    Chelsea,    Mass.,    Aug.    10, 
1872.      Studied    in    Munich,    Vienna    and 
Paris,    Member:     Chicago  SE;  NAC; 


480 


LEARY 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


LEIGHTON 


MacD.  C.  Work  in:  -New  York  Pub- 
lic Library;  Brooklyn  Institute  Mu- 
seum; Library  of  Congress,  Washington, 
D.  C;  University  of  Pa.  Illustrated: 
"Breviary  Treasures."  trans,  by  Nathan 
Haskell  Dole;   drawings  for   "Life,"   etc. 

LEARY,     Daniel     F.,     1034     Pennsylvania 
Ave.,  Monaca,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pittsburgh  AA. 

LEAVITT,  Agnes,  58  North  10th  St.,  San 
Jos^,   Cal. 

Ldscp.P.,  T.— Born  Boston,  1859.  Pupil 
of  Enneking,  Hardwick  and  Sandham  in 
Boston;  Spread  in  Chicago.  Award: 
Silver  star  for  water  col-or,  Boston  AC. 
Specialty,   landscapes   and  water   colors. 

LE  BLANC,  Emilia  de  Hoa,  1543  Exposi- 
tion Blvd.,  New  Orleans,  La. 
P. — Born  New  Orleans,  La.  Pupil  of 
Newcomb  Normal  Art  School,  AIC; 
and  studied  in  Europe.  Award:  Sil- 
ver medal,  N.  O.  AA.  Represented  in 
Delgado  Museum  of  Art,  New  Orleans, 
La. 

LE  BLANC,  Marie  de  Hoa,  1543  Exposi- 
tion Blvd.,  New  Orleans,  La. 
P.,  I. — Born  New  Orleans.  Pupil  of 
Newcomb  College  Normal  Art  School, 
and  studied  in  Europe.  Member: 
La.  Draw'g  Teachers'  Asso.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
gold  medal,   N.   O.   AA. 

LE      BOUTILLIER,     George,     Ridgefield, 
Conn. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

LE   BOUTILLIER.   Isabel  G.    (Mrs.   George 
Le  Boutillier).   Ridgefield.   Conn. 
P. — M  ember:    N.    A.   Women   PS. 

LEDFORD,  Mrs.  B.  F.  See  Wilhelmina 
Hazen. 

LE  DUC,  A(rthur  Conrad),  617  Lexington 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  King's  High- 
way, Haddonfleld,  N.  J. 
P. — Born  Washington,  D.C.,  March  23, 
1892.  Pupil  of  John  Sloan,  Academie 
Julian,  Colarossi.  Member:  S. 
Indp.  A. 

LEE,  Arthur,  care  of  Jno.  Williams  Co., 
556  West  27th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ; 
h.   Leonia,   N.    J. 

S..  P. — A  ward:  Hon.  mention  for 
sculpture,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 

LEE,  Bertha  Stringer,  2744  Steiner  St., 
San  Francisco,  Cal. 

P. — Born  San  Francisco,  Dec.  6,  1873. 
Pupil  of  Wm.  Keith  in  San  Francisco; 
Joseph  Mathews  in  New  York;  studied 
abroad.  Member:  San  Francisco 
Art  Assoc;  California  AC;  Arts  and 
Crafts  C.  Awards:  Chicago  Exp.. 
1893;  Seattle  Exp.;  San  Francisco  Art 
Assoc. ;  Sacramento  State  Fair.  Work: 
"Monterey  Coast,"  Del  Monte  Art  Gal- 
lery; "In  the  Gloaming,"  Golden  Gate 
Park  Museum.  San  Francisco. 

LEE,  Cora,  Oakmont,   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

LEE,  Henry  C,  Cornwall.  N.  Y. 
P.,  W..  L.— Born  New  York  City,  Mav 
3,  1864.  Pupil  of  Josef  Israels  and 
George  Holston.  Member:  Lotos 
C. ;  Salma.C.  Work  :  "French  Dunes," 
Bohemian   Club,   San  Francisco,   Cal. 


LEE,  Homer,  551  West  End  Ave.,  New 
York.   N.    Y. 

P.,  Engr.— Born  Mansfield,  O.,  May  18, 
1856.  Pupil  of  his  father,  John  Lee;  R. 
C.  Minor;  Robert  Mackintosh  of  Toronto, 
Canada;  also  studied  in  Europe.  Found- 
ed the  Homer  Lee  Banknote  Co.  of 
New  York.  Member:  Lotos  C.  1895; 
Salma.C.  1895:  A. Fund  S.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Vienna,  1873;  first  class 
medal,  State  of  Ohio,  1887;  hon.  men- 
tion, Paris  Exp.,  1900;  bronze  medal, 
Charleston   Exp.,   1902. 

LEE,  Laura,  5  Cazenove  St.,  Boston, 
Mass. ;  summer,  R.  F.  D.  No.  1,  Fram- 
ingham.    Mass. 

P. — Born  Charlestown,  Mass.,  Mar.  17, 
1867.  Pupil  of  School  of  Boston  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts;  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris.  Member:  Copley  S.;  N.A. 
Women  PS:   Boston  SAC. 

LEE,  Selma  V.  P.,  430  West  116th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.   (E.) 

LEE,     Thomas     A.,     Ardsley-on-Hudson, 

N.   Y. 

P. — M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

LEEDY,  Mrs.  Laura  A.,  713  Fairmount 
Ave.,  St.  Paul,  Minn. 

P.,  T. — Born  Bloomington,  111.,  Oct.  26, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Pousset-Dart.;  Minne- 
sota School  of  Art. 

LEEPER,    Vera    B(eatrice),    6    Morning- 
side   Ave.,    New   York,    N.    Y. 
P.,    C— Born   Denver.    Colo.,    March    13, 
1893.     Pupil  of  Eben   S.   Comins,   Boston 
Museum  School,  and  studied  in  Paris. 

LEESON,  E(dith)  M(argaret).  See  Mrs. 
Everett. 

LEHMER,    Caroline,    332   Broadway.    Cin- 
cinnati,  O. 
P. — Member:    Cincinnati  Woman's  A.C. 

LEICH,  Chester,  315  Mercantile  Bldg.;  h. 
610  Riverside  Ave.,  Evansville,  Ind. 
P.,  E. — Born  Evansville,  Ind.,  Jan.  31, 
1889.  Studied  in  Florence,  Munich, 
Berlin,  and  with  Siebelist  in  Hamburg. 
Member:     Chicago  SE;  Brooklyn  SE. 

LEIGH,  William  R(obinson),  11  East  44th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I. — Born  Berkelev  Co.,  W.  Va.,  Sept. 
23,  1866.  Pupil  of  Maryland  Inst.,  Bal- 
timore under  Hugh  Newell;  Raupp. 
Gysis,  Leofftz  and  Lindenschmid  in 
Munich.  Member:  Allied  AA. 
Salma.  C. ;  AWCS.  Awards:  Hon. 
mention,  Paris  Salon,  1892;  two 
silver  and  three  bronze  medals,  Munich 
Academy;  first  class  medal.  Appalachian 
Exp.,  Knoxville,  Tenn.,  1911.  Work: 
3  portraits,  Washington  and  Lee  Uni- 
versity; "Getting  Acquainted,"  Nayas- 
set  Club,  Springfield,  Mass.;  "The  Great 
Spirit,"  "The  Poisoned  Pool,"  "The 
Maya  Historian,"  "The  Stampede." 
"Hunting  with  a  Boomerang — Hopi 
Reservation,"  Fine  Arts  Museum,  Hunt- 
ington,  L.    I.,   N.    Y. 

LEIGHTON,  Kathryn  W(oodman),  1633 
West  46th  St..  Los  Angeles,  Calif. 
P.— Born  Plainfield.  N.  H.,  Mar.  17, 
1876.  Pupil  of  Boston  Normal  Art  S. 
Member:  Calif.  AC;  West  Coast 
Arts. 


481 


L 


LEINDORFER-LUBZER      WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


LEUSCH 


LEINDORFER-LUBZER,       Mrs.       Adele, 
Canoe  Ave,,  Livingston,   N.  J. 
P. — Born  in  Austria,  June  22,  1876.    Pu- 
pil of  Robert-Fleury  in  Paris.     Mem- 
ber:  S.Indp.A. 

LEISENRING,  L.  Morris,  1320  New  York 
Ave.;  h.  1777  Church  St.,  Washington, 
D.   C. 

P.,  Arch. — Born  Lutherville,  Md.,  Oct. 
29,  1875.  Pupil  of  Maryland  Institute; 
Drexel  Institute;  PAFA;  Univ.  of  Penn- 
sylvania; Duquesne  in  Paris;  Ameri- 
can Academy  in  Rome.  Member: 
"Wash.  AC;  Wash.  WCC;  Wash.  Chap- 
ter AIA. 

LEISENRING,  Mathifde  Mueden  (Mrs.  L. 
M.  Leisenring),  1777  Church  St.,  Wash- 
ington,   D.    C. 

Port. P. — Born  Washington.  Pupil  of 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  and  of  Washington;  Lau- 
rens, Constant  and  Henner  in  Paris. 
Member:  S.Wash.A;  Wash.  WCC. 
Wash.  AC.  A  wa  r  d  s  :  Third  Cor- 
coran prize,  S.  Wash. A.  1903;  second 
Corcoran  prize.  Wash. WCC  1903;  second 
honor,  Appalachian  Exp.,  Knoxville, 
Tenn.,  1910.  Instructor,  Corcoran  Gal- 
lery, Washington. 

LEITH-ROSS,  Harry,  Woodstock,  Ulster 
Co.,   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Mauritius,  Jan.  27,  1886.  Pu- 
pil of  Birge  Harrison  and  J.  F.  Carlson; 
Laurens  in  Paris  Member:  -Salma. 
C;  Conn,  AFA;  Allied  AA.  Award: 
Porter  Prize,  Salma.  C,  1915;  Charles 
Noel  Flagg  prize,  Conn.  AFA.  1921;  2nd 
prize,  Duxbury,  Mass.,  AA,  1921. 

LEITNER,  L(eander),  10  Beekman  PL, 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Edgemoor, 
Del. 

P.,  I.,  C— Born  Delphos,  O.,  April  30, 
1873.  Pupil  of  J.  B.  Whittaker,  Henry 
Prelwitz,  Joseph  Boston  and  F.  V.  Du 
Mond.  Member:  S.  Indp.  A.;  Lg. 
of  N.Y.A. 

LEMMON,  G.  N.,  314  Maple  Ave,  Marietta, 
Ga. 
P. — M  ember:     Pittsburgh  AA. 

LEMOS,   Frank  B.,  Palo  Alto,  Calif. 
E.— M  ember:     Calif.  PM. 

LEMOS,  Pedro  J.,  Museum  of  Fine  Arts, 
Leland  Stanford  Junior  University, 
Stanford  University,  Calif.  ;  h.  460 
Churchill  Ave.,  Palo  Alto,  Calif. 
E.,  P..  I.,  C.  W.,  T.— Born  Austin.  Nev., 
May  25.  1882.  Pupil  of  Mary  Benton, 
Arthur  Dow,  San  Francisco  Inst,  of  Art. 
Member:  Cal.  SE;  Chicago  SE; 
Calif.  P.M.;  Bohemian  C.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention  for  etching,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  gold  medal  for  prints, 
California  State  Fair,  1916.  Director 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Leland  Stanford 
University;  also  of  Rionido,  Calif.,  Sum- 
mer School  of  Art;  Editor,  School  Arts 
Magazine.  Illustrated:  "Easy  Steps  in 
Bible  Stories";  "Elo  the  Eagle";  "Her- 
alds of  the  Morning,"  etc.  Author  of 
series  of  articles:  "Pen  Drawing  for 
Reproduction";  "Schoolroom  Prints"; 
"Sketching  from  Nature";  "Easy  Draw- 
ing Lessons";  "Print  Methods";  "Art 
Simplified";   "Applied   Art  " 


L'ENGLE,    Lucy,    144    East    19th    St.;    h. 

535  Park  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer, Provincetown,  Mass. 

P.— Born     New     York,     Sept.     28,     1899. 

Member:     S.Indp.A. 
L'ENGLE,    W(illiam)     J.,     Jr.,    144    East 

19th  St.;  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born    Jacksonville,    Fla.,     April    22. 

1884.      Pupil    of    Richard    Miller,    J.    P. 

Laurens,      Collin      and      Louis      Biloul. 

Member:     S.  Indp.  A. ;  Provincetown 

A.A. 
LENSKI,  Lois  L.,  139  East  16th  St.,  New 

York,  N.  Y.   (P.) 

LENTELLI,  Leo,  51  West  10th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  S.— Born  Bologna,  Italy,  Oct.  29,  1879. 
Member:  NSS  1907;  N.Y.Arch.Lg. 
1909.  Awards  :  Avery  prize,  N. Y.Arch. 
Lg.  1911  and  1921;  collaborative  prize 
and  Avery  prize,  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1913; 
purchase  prize,  San  F.  AA.  1916. 
Work:  Figure  of  the  Saviour  and 
sixteen  angels  for  the  reredos  of  the 
Cathedral  of  Saint  John  the  Divine, 
New  York;  group  over  entrance  of  Mis- 
sion Branch  Library,  San  Francisco; 
five  figures  for  fagade  of  San  Francisco 
Public  Library;  decorations  for  St. 
Louis  Orpheum  Theatre;  Flagpole,  Rice 
Memorial  Playfield.  Pelham,  N.  Y. ; 
panels,  Straus  Bank  Bldg.,  New  York. 
Former  instructor  of  sculpture,  Cali- 
fornia School  of  Fine  Arts;  instructor 
of  drawing,  ASL  of  N.Y. 

LENZ.  Alfred,  71  Broadway,  Flushing. 
N.  Y.   (S.) 

LEONARD,  George  H(enry),  71  Rue  Bois- 
sonade.  Paris,  France. 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Boston,  May  3,  1869. 
Pupil  of  G6r6me,  Bouguereau  and 
Aman-Jean  in  Paris.  Member: 
Paris  AAA;  Boston  AC. 

LEONARD,   William   J(ackson),  Norwell, 

p.— Born  Hinsdale,  N.  H..  1869.  Pupil 
of  Laurens  and  Constant  in  Paris. 

LEPPERT,  Rudolph  E.,  354  Fourth  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Harrison,  West- 
cliGstGr     Co.     IN.    "y. 

I.— Born  New  York  City,  Dec.  20,  1872. 
Pupil  of  G.  deF.  Brush,  and  C.  deGrimm. 
Member:     Salma.    C. 

LESSHAFFT,  Franz,  1020  Chestnut  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P. — Born  Berlin,  Germany,  March  8, 
1862.  Pupil  of  Royal  Academy  of  Fine 
Arts,  Berlin,  under  Anton  V.  Werner, 
Thumann  and  Meyerheim.  Member: 
Phila.  Sketch  C;  Fellowship  PAFA; 
S.  Indp.  A.;  Phila.  AC.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Berlin;  hon.  mention  for 
water  color,  AAS,   1902. 

LESTER,  William  H(arold),  121  South 
Hill  St.,  Los  Angeles,  Calif.;  summer. 
Batons  Ranch,  Wolf,  Wyoming. 
I.,  E.,  W. — Born  Valparaiso,  Chili,  S.  A., 
July  23,  1885.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Mem- 
ber:  Chicago   SE ;   Brooklyn   SE. 

LEUSCH,       Franziska       A(ugusta),      114 
Wharton  Ave.,   Glenside,   Pa. 
P.,  C,  T. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.    Pupil 
of  Fred  Wagner.     Instructor  in   Phila- 
delphia Normal  School. 


482 


Robert  Aitken,  N.A.     By  Sidney  Dickinson 


Walter  McEwen 


LEVER 


WHO*S  WHO  IN  ART 


LEWIS 


LEVER,  Hayley,  253  West  42d  St.,  New 
York.  N.  Y. 

P.,  E.,  T.— Born  Adelaide.  South  Aus- 
tralia, Sept.  28.  1876.  Studied  in  Paris, 
London,  New  York.  Member:  Royal 
British  Artists,  London;  Royal  Inst.  Oil 
Painters.  London;  Royal  West  of  Eng- 
land Academy;  NAC  (life);  Contem- 
porary; New  Soc.  Artists;  P.-G. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  CI  Pitts- 
burgh, 1913;  silver  medal,  NAC,  1914; 
Carnegie  prize,  NAD,  1914;  gold  medal, 
P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  gold  medal, 
NAC,  1916;  Sesnan  gold  medal,  PAFA, 
1917;  Phila.  WCC  prize,  1918.  Work: 
"Port  of  St.  Ives,"  Sydney  Art  Gal- 
lery, Australia;  "Fishing  Boats,"  Ade- 
laide Art  Gallery,  Australia;  "Winter, 
St.  Ives,"  Brooklyn  Institute  Museum; 
"Sunshine,  St.  Ives,  Cornwall,"  Penn- 
sylvania Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts, 
Philadelphia;  "Dawn,"  Corcoran  Gal- 
lery, Washington,  D.  C;  "'Smeaton's 
Quay,  St.  Ives,"  Fort  Worth  (Tex.)  Mu- 
seum; "Boats  Gloucester,"  and  "Chang- 
ing Nets,  Gloucester,"  Detroit  Insti- 
tute; "Gloucester,  Mass.,"  Los  An- 
geles Museum;  "Fishermen's  Quarters," 
Dallas  Art  Museum;  "Hudson  River," 
National  Arts  Club.  Instructor  at  Art 
Students'  League  of  New  York. 

LEVERING,  Albert,  617  West  170th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

I.— Born  Hope,  Ind.,  1869.  Practiced 
architecture;  studied  drawing  in  Mu- 
nich. On  staff  of  "Puck,"  "Life"  and 
"Harper's  Weekly."  Member:  SI 
1912. 

LEVI,  Julian  Clarence,  Tilden  Bldg.,  105 
West  40th  St.;  h.  150  West  59th  St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  Arch. — Born  New  York  City,  Dec.  8, 
1874.  Pupil  of  William  R.  Ware  at  Co- 
lumbia University;  Scellier  de  Gisors  in 
Paris.  Member:  AIA;  French  Inst. 
In  Am.;  S.  B-A.  A.;  Arch.  Lg.  of  N.  Y. 
Awards  :  French  Government  Di- 
ploma, 1904;  honorable  mention,  Paris 
Salon,   1?04. 

LEVITT,  Joel  J.,  6  West  28th  St.,  New 
York,    N.   Y. 

P.— Born  in  Russia,  April  29,  1875. 
Pupil  of  Repin;  Imperial  Academy  of 
Art,  Petrograd.  Member:  Salma. 
C.  Represented  in  Wilna,  Russia,  Mu- 
seum; Petrograd  Museum;  Toronto 
Museum. 

LEVY,  Alex(ander)  O(scar),  41  Berkeley 
Place,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I. — Born  Bonn,  Germany,  May  26, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Duveneck,  Chase  and. 
Henri.  Member:  Buffalo  SA;  Buf- 
falo AC. 

LEVY.  Beatrice  S..  1540  East  57th  St., 
h.  6040  Drexel  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
P..  E.— Born  Chicago.  April  3.  1892.  Pu- 
pil of  ATC;  Voyt  Preissig  and  Charles 
Hawthorne.  Member:  Chicago  SE; 
Chicago  AC;  Chicago  SA;  Art  Service 
League.  Award  :  Hon.  mention 
for  etching,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work    in  Chicago  Art  Institute. 


483 


LEVY,  Herman,  209  East  56th  St.,  Chi- 
cago, 111. 

P.— Born  Hartford,  Conn.,  1868.  Pupil 
of  Beaux-Arts  and  Julian  in  Paris. 
Member:     Palette  and  Chisel  C. 

LEVY,  William  Auerbach,  210  West  14th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
E.,  P.— Born  in  Russia,  Feb,  14,  1889. 
Pupil  of  NAD  in  New  York;  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris  under  Laurens. 
Member:  Sal.  SE;  Chicago  SE; 
P-G.;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A.;  Wash.  AC. 
Awards:  Mooney  traveling  scholar- 
ship, NAD,  1911;  first  figure  prize,  Chi- 
cago SE.  1914;  bronze  medal.  P. -P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  Logan  prize  $25,  Chicago 
SE,  1918;  third  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD, 
1921.  Work  in:  Art  Institute 
of  Chicago;  Worcester  Museum;  New 
York  Public  Library;  Carnegie  Institute 
of  Pittsburgh;  "Corner  of  My  Studio," 
Detroit  Institute  of  Arts.  Instructor  of 
etching  at  National  Academy  of  Design 
and  Educational  Alliance,  New  York. 

LEWIS,  Alice  L.,  62  Benevolent  St.,  Prov- 
idence, R.  I. 

P..  T.— Born  Providence,  R.  I.,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Collin  in  Paris;  J.  L.  Tadd  in 
Philadelphia.  Member:  Providence 
WCC. 

LEWIS,  Alonzo  Victor,  2611  Eastlake 
Ave.,    Seattle,    Wash.    (P.) 

LEWIS,      (Arthur)      Allen,      Southlngton, 

Conn. 

P.,  Etcher,  I.,  Engr.— Born  Mobile,  Ala., 
Apr.  7,  1873.  Pupil  of  George  Bridgman 
in  Buffalo;  G6r5me  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SE;  N.  Y.  'SE;  P-G; 
Brooklyn  SE;  Calif.  P.M.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp..  1904; 
Logan  prize,  Chicago  SE  1915;  gold 
medal  P.-P  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Barnett 
prize,  Brooklyn  SE,  1917.  Work  in: 
New  York  Public  Library,  Brooklyn  In- 
stitute Museum ;  Herron  Art  Insti- 
tute, Indianapolis;  Chicago  Art  Insti- 
tute; Oakland  (Cal.)  Public  Museum; 
Newark  Public  Library;  Detroit  Insti- 
tute  of   Arts. 

LEWIS,      Bertram,      1209      Eighth     Ave., 
Brooklyn,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

LEWIS,    Elizabeth    H.,   215  East   15th   St., 

New   York,    N.    Y. ;   summer,    St.   Peter's 

Rectory.   Peekskill,   N.   Y. 

P.,   C,   L.,   T.— Born  in  Peekskill,   N.   Y. 

Member:      Lg.    of   N.Y.A. ;    S.Indp.A. 
LEWIS,    Helen   V(aughan),  Irvington-on- 

Hudson,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born    New    York    City,    Mar.,    1879. 

Pupil  of  Cox,  Du  Mond  and  Beckington. 

Member:  Pa.   S.  Min.  P. 

LEWIS,  Josepiiine  M(iles),  Carnegie 
Studios,  154  West  57th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

P. — Born  New  Haven.  Conn.,  March  10. 
1865.  Pupil  of  John  F.  Weir  and  John 
H.  Niemeyer  at  Yale  School  of  Art; 
Frederick  MacMonnies  and  Aman-Jean 
in  Paris.  Member:  N.  A.  Women 
PS:  New  Haven  PCC.  Award:  Shaw 
memorial   prize,   NAD,   1916. 


LEWIS 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


LINK 


LEWIS,  Mrs.  Laura  C,  2004  Ontario  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pa.,  Aug-.  21, 
1874.  Pupil  of  Phila.  School  of  Design 
for  Women;  PAFA;  ElHott  Daingerfield; 
W.  L.  Lathrop  and  William  M.  Chase, 
Me  m  b  e  r  :       Plastic    C. 

LEWIS,  Louise  G.,  Agnes  Scott  College, 
Atlanta,   Ga.    (P.) 

LEWIS,  Phillips  F(risble),  843  Sixth  Ave., 
Oakland;  summer,  Peter's  Villa,  Mon- 
terey, Calif. 

P.— Born  Oakland,  Calif.,  Aug-.  26,  1892. 
Pupil  of  Calif.  School  of  Arts  and  Crafts 
and  Armin  C.  Hansen.  Member:  San 
F.  AA;  Oakland  AA. 

LEYENDECKER,  Frank  X.,  80  West  40th 
St.;  h.  75  East  81st  St.,  New  York,  N.Y. 
I. — Born  Montabour,  Germany,  Jan.  19, 
1877.  Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Constant  In 
Paris.      Member:    SI. 

LEYENDECKER,  G.,  80  West  40th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y.    (P.,  I.) 

LEYENDECKER,  J(oseph)  C(hrlstlan), 
80  West  40th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h. 
114  Pelham  Road,  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 
I. — Born  Montabour,  Germany,  March 
23,  1874.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Julian  Academy 
in  Paris.     Member:  Salma.C. 

LICHTENAUER,  J(oseph)  Mortimer,  24 
West  59th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Port,  and  Mural  P. — Born  New  York, 
May  11,  1876.  Pupil  of  Mowbray  in 
New  York;  Merson  and  Laurens  in 
Paris.  Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1902; 
Mural  P.;  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  S.  Conn.  A.; 
Salma.  C.  Awards:  President's 
prize,  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  1903  and  1907. 
Work  :  Proscenium  Arch,  Frazee 
Theatre,  New  York;  35  panels  in  Shu- 
bert  Theatre,  New  York;  "Portrait  of 
Gen.  Julius  Stahel";  "Portrait  of  Gen. 
Palmer  Pierce";  National  Museum  of 
Art,  Washington;  24  bas-relief  for  Rice 
Memorial  Playfield,  Pelham,  N.  Y. 

LIE,  Jonas,  58  West  57th  St.;  h.  2  East 
81st  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Ldscp.P.— Born  Norway,  April  29,  1880. 
Pupil  of  NAD  and  ASL  of  N.  Y.  M  e  m  - 
b  er  :  ANA,  1912;  Am.  PS;  S.  In  dp.  A.; 
Los  Angeles  Modern  AS;  SPNY;  Salma. 
C.  Awards:  Silver  medal.  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  first  Hallgarten  prize  ($300), 
NAD  1914;  silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915;  Greenough  memorial  prize, 
Newport  AA  1916.  Work:  "Fishing 
Boats  at  Sunrise,"  Carnegie  Institute, 
Pittsburgh;  "The  Conquerors,"  Metro- 
politan Museum,  New  York;  "Culebra 
Cut,"  Detroit  Institute;  "Afterglow," 
Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  also  repre- 
sented in  Peabody  Institute,  Baltimore, 
Md.;  Memorial  Art  Gallery,  Rochester, 
N.  Y.;  Museum  of  Art,  Syracuse,  N.  Y.; 
Art  Association  of  Dallas,  Tex.;  Art 
Association  of  Lafayette,  Ind. 

LIELLO,     John.     6    Patchen    Place,     New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

LIGGET,  Jane  S.,  157  North  21st  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa.    (P.) 

LIGGETT,     John,    Jr.,    2ll    Fourth    Ave., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 


LINCOLN,    Agnes    Harrison,    637    Hackett 
Ave.,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 
P.— M  ember:     N.  A.  Women  PS. 

LINCOLN,  F.  Foster,  Union  Village,  RFD, 
Woonsocket,  R.  I. 
I.— Member:   SI  1910. 

LINDBORG,  Ingeborg  A.  See  Mrs. 
Andr  easen  -Lindborg-. 

LINDE,  Ossip  L.,  care  of  Guaranty  Trust 
Co.,  1  Rue  des  Italiens,  Paris,  Prance; 
Westport,    Conn. 

P.— Born  Chicago.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Lau- 
rens in  Paris.  Member:  Allied  AA; 
•Salma.  C. ;  SPNY.  Awards:  Hon. 
mention,  Paris  Salon,  1907;  third  class 
medal,  Paris  Salon,  1910.  Represented 
In  Oakland   (Cal.)   Museum. 

LINDENMUTH,    Arlington    N.,    26    North 
Sixth  St.,  Allentown,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

LINDENMUTH,  Tod,  26  North  6th  St., 
Allentown,  Pa.;  summer,  Provlncetown, 
Mass. 

P.,  E. — Born  Allentown,  Pa.,  May  4, 
1885.  Pupil  of  Henri,  Webster  and 
Browne.  Member:  Salma.  C. ;  Pro- 
vlncetown AA;  Alliance;  Wash,  WCC. 
W  o  r  k  :  "Mending  Nets"  and  Province- 
town  Wharf,"  Toledo  Museum;  "Garden 
Near  the  Dunes,"  "Pennsylvania  State 
College  Museum;  "The  Runway,"  Roch- 
ester Memorial  Art  Gallery;  and  repre- 
sented in  the  New  York  Public  Library. 

LINDER,  C.  Bennett,  Carnegie  Hall,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 
P.— M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

LINDIN,  Carl  (Olof)  (Eric),  Woodstock, 
Ulster    Co.,    N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Sweden,  1869.  Pupil  of  Lau- 
rens, Constant  and  Aman-Jean  In 
Paris.  Award  :  First  prize,  Swed- 
ish Club,  Chicago.  Decorations  in  Hull 
House,   Chicago,   111. 

LINDING,  Herman  M(agnuson),  154  East 
64th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P..  S.,  C. — Born  in  Sweden,  June  1, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Callmander,  Carl  Wil- 
helmson,  Colarossi.  Member:  S. 
Indp.  A.;  Whitney  Studio  Club;  Alliance. 

LINDNER,     Norman,     159    Driving    Park 
Ave..  Rochester,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember  :    Rochester  AC. 

LINDNEUX,  Robert  O(ttakar),  2939  East 
Colfax  Ave.,  Denver,  Colo. 
P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Dec.  11, 
1871.  Studied  in  Dusseldorf,  Germany. 
M  e  mb  e  r  :  Denver  A.  A.  'Specialty, 
animals. 

LINDSAY,    Henry    A.,    20    Exchange    PI., 
New  York,   N.    Y. 
P.— M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

LINDSLEY,  E(mily)  E(arle),  23  Chats- 
worth  Ave.,  Larchmont,  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer, Mt.  Washington,  Mass. 
P.,  I.,  T.— Born  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y., 
Feb.  25.  1858.  Pupil  of  W.  Chase,  John 
Weir,  C.  Ferrari.  Member:  N.A. 
AVomen  PS. 

LINK.  B.  Lillian,  260  West  76th  St., 
New   York,    N.   Y. 

S.— Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  Mrs. 
Charles  Sprague-Smith,  George  Grey 
Barnard  and  Herbert  Adams.  Mem- 
ber:    MacD.C. ;  Alliance.     Awards; 


484 


LINS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


LOCHOW 


Avery  prize,  N.Y.Arch.Ivg-.  1907;  sculp- 
ture  prize,   N.   Y,   Woman's   AC.    1912, 

LINS,   Theodora.      See  Mrs.   Landt. 

LINSON,  Corwin  Knapp,  Atlantic  High- 
lands, N.  J. 

P.,  I.,  C.  W. — Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y., 
Feb.  25,  1864.  Pupil  of  Gerome  and  Lau- 
rens in  Paris.  M  e  m  b  e  r  :  NYWCC; 
Salma.  C.  Work:  "The  Olympian 
Columns,"  Westboro  Library,  Mass.; 
illustrated:  "I.  N.  R.  I.,"  by  Roseg-ger; 
"The  Lost  Word,"  by  Dr.  H.  Van  Dyke; 
"Life  of  the  Master,"  by  Dr.  Watson; 
"Modern  Athens,"  by  George  Horton; 
own  articles  in  "Scribner's,"  "Century," 
"Cosmopolitan,"  "The  House  Beauti- 
ful," etc..  including  "Pont  Aven  Vign- 
ettes," "Color  at  Vesuvius,"  "Sunset  at 
"Jerusalem";  five  memorial  windows  in 
Baptist  Temple,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

LINTON,  Frank  B.  A.,  1707  Chestnut  St.; 
h.  1310  North  15th  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Feb.  26,  1871. 
Pupil  of  Gerome,  Benjamin-Constant, 
Bouguereau,  Bonnat  and  Laurens  in 
Paris.  Member:        Internationale 

Union  des  Beaux-Arts  et  des  Lettres, 
Paris;  Phila.  AC. 

LIPPERT,  Leon,  621  Main  St.,  Cincinnati, 
O.;  h.  658  Nelson  PL,  Newport,  Ky. 
P. — Born  in  Bavaria,  March  15,  1863. 
Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy,  under 
Nowottny  and  Duveneck,  and  studied 
abroad.     Member:  Cincinnati  AC. 

LISLE,  Mabie,  care  of  the  Seattle  Fine 
Arts  Society,  Seattle,  Wash.    (P.) 

LITCHFIELD,   J.    Homer,   56   Charles   St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:  NYWCC. 

LITLE,  Arthur,  care  Salmagundi  Club, 
45  Fifth  Ave;  15  West  29th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

I.— Member:  SI  1912;  Salma.C;  AI 
Graphic  A. 

LITTLE,  Gertrude  L.,  3705  Wallingford 
Ave.,   Seattle,   Wash. 

P. — Born  Minneapolis,  Minn.  Pupil  of 
Seattle  AS;  ASL  of  N.Y.;  School  of  Am. 
S.  Min.  P.  of  N.Y.;  William  M.  Chase. 
Member:  Seattle  FAS.  Award  : 
1st  prize  for  miniatures,  Seattle  FAS, 
1920. 

LITTLE,  J(ohn)  Wesley,  Picture  Rocks, 
Pa. 

Ldscp.P. — Born  Forksville,  Sullivan  Co., 
Pa.,  Aug.  24,  1867.  Pupil  of  NAD  and 
of  Leonard  Ochtman  in  New  York. 
Member:  Wash.WCC:  Phila.WCC; 
Phila. Sketch  C;  Chicago  WCC.  Award: 
Silver  medal,  AAS.  Phila.,  1902.  Work: 
Mural  decoration,  Franklin  Bldg.,  Wil- 
liamsport.   Pa. 

LITTLE,  Philip,  Daniel's  Street  Court; 
h.  10  Chestnut  St.,  Salem,  Mass.;  sum- 
mer, MacMahan  Island,  Me. 
P.,E. — Born  Swampscott,  Mass.,  Sept.  6, 
1857.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School. 
Member:  Boston  GA;  Chicago  SE; 
Boston  SE;  Portland  (Me.)  AA  (life); 
P-G;  Brooklyn  SE;  NAC  (life). 
Awards:  Hon.  mention  AIC,  1912, 
for  "The  Brook";  silver  medal  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work:  "In  the 
Wake      of      the      Moon,"      Pennsylvania 


Academy,  Philadelphia;  "Where  Haw- 
thorne Wrote  and  Derby  Traded," 
City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis.  Mo.;  "An 
Off  Shore  Breeze,"  Minneapolis  Society 
of  Fine  Arts;  "Seining  at  Dawn,"  Bow- 
doin  College  Art  Gallery.  Brunswick, 
Me.;  "Gulls  in  Fog,"  Portland  (Me.) 
Society  of  Art;  "Surf  at  Sunset,"  Nash- 
ville Art  Association;  "Awakening  of 
the  Day."  Milwaukee  Art  Association; 
"The  Old  Wharf."  Dubnriue  Art  Asso- 
ciation; "A  Relic  of  History,"  Essex 
Inst.,  Salem;  "Transport  Going  East  ofC 
Marblehead,  19"! 7,"  R.  L  School  of  De- 
sign; "February  Thaw,"  Boston  Mu- 
seum :  etchings  in  Congressional  Library, 
Washington;  Curator  Art,  Essex  Insti- 
tute, Salem,  Mass. 

LITTLEJOHN,  C(ynthia  Pugh),  1221 
Leontine,  New  Orleans,  La. 
P. — Born  Assumption  Parish.  La.  Pupil 
of  Ellsworth  Woodward  and  A.  A.  Dow. 
Member:  NAC ;  New  Orleans  Arts 
and  Crafts  Club. 

LITZINGER,  Dorothea  M.  (Mrs.  John  W. 
Thompson),  335  East  50th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  E. — Born  Cambria  County,  Pa.,  Jan. 
20.1889.  Pupil  of  NAD:  SPNY.  Illus- 
trates   for   "Country   Life    in   America." 

LIVEZEY,  Will(iam)  E..  538  South  Dear- 
born St.;  h.  2320  Cleveland  Ave.,  Chi- 
cago.  111. 

P.,  S..  I. — Born  near  Unionvllle.  Mo.. 
April  12.  1876.  Illustrated  "The  Days  of 
Long  Ago."  by  W.   E.   Comstock.   etc. 

LLOYD.  Lucile  (Mrs.  Addison  Brown). 
941  Mira  Vista  Terrace,  Pasadena, 
Calif. 

P.,  L— Born  Cincinnati,  Aug.  20.  1894. 
Pupil  of  Frank  Fairbanks,  and  Eugene 
Savage.  Member:  American  Book- 
plate Soc. 

LLOYD,    Mary   Lowell,   624   South  Wash- 
ington  Sq.,   Philadelphia,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

LLOYD,     Mary     Wingate     (Mrs.     Horatio 
Gates  Llovd),   Haverford,   Pa. 
P.— Born  New  York,   June  3,   1868.     Pu- 
pil  of   Chase,    Cecilia    Beaux   and  Mow- 
bray.    Member:  Plastic  C. 

LLOYD,  Sara  A.  Worden  (Mrs.  Hinton 
S.  Lloyd),  Hamilton,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Xenia.  O.  Pupil  of  R.  Swain 
Gifford,  Volk  and  Chase  in  New  York. 
Work:  "Sunshine  and  Shadow,"  Mt. 
Holyoke  College:  Portrait  of  John  J. 
Jones,  Colgate  University:  Portrait  of 
Miss  Slade.  Hamilton  CN.  Y.)  High 
School:  Portrait  W.  G.  Morehead,  The- 
ological  Seminary,  XenIa,  O. 

LOBER,  Georq  John,  6  East  15th  St.;  h. 
535  West  113th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Chicnero,  TIL.  Nov.  7.  1891. 
Pupil  of  Calder,  Borglum  and  Longmans, 
NAD  and  Beaux  Arts  Inst.  Member: 
N.Y.  Arch.  Lg. ;  NSS.  Award  :  Avery 
collaborative  prize,  N.  Y. ;  Arch.  Lg., 
1911;  hon.  mention,  AIC,  1918.  Repre- 
sented in  Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington, 
D.  C;  Memorial  Museum,  San  Fran- 
cisco. 

LOCHOW,  Curt  F.,  1421  Frink  Blvd., 
Seattle,   Wash.    (P.) 


485 


LOCKE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


LOOMIS 


LOCKE,  Alexander  S.,  103' Pineapple  St.; 
h.  87  Winthrop  St.,  Brooklyn,  New 
York.   N.  Y. 

Mural  P. — Born  New  York,  Feb.  14, 
1860.  Pupil  of  John  La  Farge.  Mem- 
ber: N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1894;  Mural  P.; 
NAC. 

LOCKE,  Charles  W(heeler),  care  of 
Traxel  Galleries;  h.  3906  Hazel  Ave., 
Norwood,    O. 

P.,  I.,  E. — Born  Cincinnati,  Ohio,  Aug. 
31,  1899.  Pupil  of  Art  Academy  of 
Cincinnati. 

LOCKMAN,  De  Witt  M.,  58  West  57th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— M  ember:  Port. P.;  Salma.C;  ANA 
1917;  Allied  AA.  Award:  Silver 
medal,  P.-x^,  Exp.,  San  P.,  1915;  Lip- 
pincott   prize,   PAFA,    1918. 

LOEB,  Dorothy,  4346  North  Hermitage 
Ave.,  Chicago,  111.;  summer.  Province- 
town,  Mass. 

P.,  E. — Born  in  Bavaria,  July  3,  1887, 
of  American  parents.  Pupil  of  AIC;  T. 
W.  Stevens;  Hawthorne,  and  studied  in 
Paris  and  Munich.  Award:  Tuesday 
Art  and  Travel  Club  European  Scholar- 
ship. Decorations  in  Lane  Technical 
High  'School  and  Smith  Public  School. 
Chicago. 

LOEBL,     Florence     Weinberg,     135     West 

79th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,   W.— Born  New  York,   Nov.   13,   1894. 
Pupil  of  Kenneth  Hayes  Miller.     M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :     S.Indp.A.;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A. 

LOEWENGUTH.   Frederick   iVi.,   401  Pow- 
ers  Bldg.,    Rochester,   N.   Y. 
P..   C— Born  Rochester,  N.   Y.,  April  18. 
1887.       Studied     in    London    and     Paris. 
Member:   Rochester  Art   Club. 

LOGAN,  IVlaurice,  care  of  Dregge  and 
Farnum.  448  Fourth  St.,  San  Francisco, 
Calif.    (P.,    L) 

LOGAN,  Robert  Fulton,  Villa  Adrien, 
Route  des  Gardes,  Meudon,  Seine  et 
Oise,   Prance. 

P.,  E.,  T. — Born  Lauder,  Manitoba, 
Canada.  Pupil  of  Boston  School  of  the 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts;  AIC;  Philip  L. 
Hale.  Member:  Conn.  AFA.;  Chi- 
cago SE;  Soc.  Int.  Gravure  Originale 
en  Noir;  Paris  AAA.  Work:  "Span- 
ish Iris,"  Art  Society  of  Hartford;  "Les 
Molineaux-Billancourt,"  Luxembourg 
Museum,  Paris.  Assistant  Director, 
Atelier  of  Painting,  Bellevue  Art  Train- 
ing Centre,  A.E.F.,   1919. 

LOGASA.     Charles,     Room     405     Westory 
Bldg.,  Washington,   D.  C. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

LOHR,    Alfred,    care    of    Ralo    Toy    Co., 
Worcester,   Mass. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 


LOHMANN.  F. 
Cincinnati,  O. 
P. — M  ember 

LOKKE,    Marie. 


D.,    2609    Jefferson    Ave., 

:    Cincinnati   AC. 

See  Mrs.  Mathiesen. 

LOMBARDO,    Emilio  Vincent,  422  Massa- 
chusetts Ave.,   Boston.   Mass. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 


LONDONER,   A(my),   1947   Broadway;   h. 

Hotel  Endicott,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  sum- 
P.— Born  Lexington,  Mo.,  Apr.  12,  1878. 
Pupil  of  Robert  Henri  and  John  Sloan. 
Member:  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  S.Indp.A.; 
Lg.   of  N.Y.A. 

LONG,  Adelaide  Husted  (Mrs.  George  T. 
Long),  57  North  Broadway,  White 
Plains,    N.    Y. 

P..  T.,  W.— Born  New  York.  Pupil  of 
ASL  of  N.Y.,  John  Twachtman,  Ernest 
Knaufft  and  George  T.  Collins;  Anglade 
in  Paris.     Member:  NAC. 

LONG,  Ellis  B(arcroft),  127  Richmond  St., 
Baltimore,  Md. 

P.,  S.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Oct.  30, 
1874.  Pupil  of  Andre  Castaigne  and  E. 
S.  Whiteman  in  Baltimore;  Cox,  Mow- 
bray, Saint  Gaudens  and  D.  C.  French 
in  New  York.     Member:  Char.  C. 

LONGACRE,     Breta,    27    West    67th    St., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:   N,   A.   Women   PS. 

LONGACRE,  Lydia  E(astwick),  27  West 
67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Min.P.— Born  New  York,  Sept.  1,  1870. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.,  under  Chase  and 
Mowbray;  Whistler  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Am.  S.  Min.  P.;  Pa.  Soc.  Min.  P.; 
N.   A.    Women  PS. 

LONGFELLOW,     IVIary     King,    116    State 

St.,    Portland,    Me. 

P.— M  ember:    Boston  WCC. 

LONGMAN      (Mary)      Evelyn      B(eatpice) 

(Mrs.  N.  H.  Batchelder),  Windsor,  Conn. 
S.— Born  Winchester,  O.,  Nov.  21,  1874. 
Pupil  of  AIC  under  Taft;  French  In 
New  York.  Member:  NSS  1906;  ANA 
1909;  NA,  1919;  Am.  Numismatic  'Soc; 
N.  Y.  Municipal  AS.  Award:  Silver 
medal.  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904:  silver 
medal.  P.  P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  'Shaw 
memorial  prize,  NAD,  1918;  W.M.R. 
French  gold  medal,  AIC,  1920;  Widener 
gold  medal,  PAFA,  1921.  Work: 
Bronze  doors  of  Chapel,  U.  S.  Naval 
Academy,  Annapolis;  bronze  doors  of 
Library,  Wellesley  College,  Wellesley, 
Mass.;  Ryle  memorial.  Public  Library, 
Paterson,  N.  J.;  "Torso"  and  "Victory," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York;  "Vic- 
tory," and  "Electricity,"  Toledo  Museum, 
Allison  monument,  Des  Moines,  la.; 
"Electricity,"  Western  Union  Telegraph 
Bldg.,  New  York;  centennial  monum'ent, 
Chicago;  Naugatuck  War  Memorial, 
Naugatuck,  Conn.;  also  represented  in 
Chicago  Art  Institute:  City  Art  Museum, 
St.  Louis;  Cincinnati  Museum  of  Art; 
Cleveland  Museum;  Herron  Art  Inst., 
Indianapolis. 
LOOMIS,  Chester,  Englewood,  N.  J. 
P.,  I. — Born  near  Syracuse,  N.  Y.,  Oct. 
18,  1852.  Pupil  of  Harry  Thompson  and 
Bonnat  in  Paris.  Member:  SAA 
1888:  ANA  1906;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1891; 
A.  Fund  S;  Mural  p.  Awards: 
Gold  medal,  Mass.  Charitable  Mechan- 
ics' Assoc,  1890;  President's  prize,  N.Y. 
Arch.Lg.  1904.  Work:  "Christopher 
Sly,"  Herron  Art  Institute,  Indianapo- 
lis; windows  and  mural  paintings  in 
Cornell   Univ.,    Ithaca. 


486 


LOOMIS 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


LOWELL 


LOOMIS,     M.     C,    1445    North    California 
Ave.,    Chicago,    111. 

P. — Born  at  Fairview,  Pa.  Studied  at 
San  Francisco  School  of  Design  under 
Virgil  Williams,  and  at  the  Chicago 
Art  Institute  under  Vanderpoel,  Grover 
and   Boutwood. 

LORD,     Austin     W.        Died     January    19, 
1922. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.  C. 

LORD,  Caroline  A.,  975  East  McMillan  St., 
Cincinnati,    O. 

P..  T. — Born  Cincinnati,  March  10, 
1860.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy; 
ASLi  of  N.  Y. ;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  Cincinnati  Woman's  AC 
(hon.).  Instructor  in  Cincin.  Art  Acad. 
Award  :  Bronze  medal,  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago,  1893.  Work:  "First 
Communion"  and  "Old  Woman,"  Cin- 
cinnati Museum. 

LORD,    Harriet,    208   East    68th    St.,    New 
York.    N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     N,  A.  Women  PS. 

LORENZANI,  Arthur  E.,  23  McDougal 
Alley.  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S..  T.— Born  Carrara,  Italy,  Feb.  10, 
1885.  Pupil  of  Royal  Academies  of  Arts, 
Carrara  and  Rome.  Member:  Assoc. 
Internationale  Artistica,  Rome.  Award: 
$200  prize  at  International  Exp.,  Parma, 
Italy. 

LORING,  William  C,  62  Humboldt  Ave., 
Providence,    R.    I. 

P.,  T. — Born  Newton  Center,  Mass., 
Aug.  10,  1879.  Studied  in  New  York, 
Boston,  London  and  Paris.  Member: 
Boston  AC;  Providence  AC;  Providence 
WCC.  Head  of  free  hand  department 
of  drawing  and  painting,  R.  I.  School 
of  Design.  Represented  in  Brown  Uni- 
versity; Rhode  Island  State  House; 
Rhode  Island  School  of  Design;  Royal- 
ston    (Mass.)    Public    Library. 

LORRAINE,  Alma  Royer,  1617  California 
Ave.,  'West  Seattle.  Wash. 
P..  T. — Born  Randolph,  O.  Pupil  of 
AIC,  and  studied  in  Seattle  and  Rome. 
Award  :  Silver  medal,  Alaska-Yukon- 
Pacific  Exp.,  Seattle,  1909.  Work: 
"Aqueducts  of  Claudius,"  West  Ches- 
ter Seminary. 

LORRAINE,  Helen,  St.  Elizabeth's  Hos- 
pital; h.  2619a  Park  Ave.,  Richmond,  Va. 
Medical  I. — Born  Webster  Grove,  Mo., 
June  23,  1892.  Pupil  of  Nora  Houston. 
Adele   Clark   and   Max  Brodel. 

LOTHROP,  iVIrs.  0.  B.,  50  W^est  67th  St., 
New   York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

LOTHROP.  Gertrude  Fay,  Lester  Studios, 
30  East  57th  St..  New  York;  summer, 
Shelter   Island.    N.    Y. 

P.,  I..  W. — Born  Springfield,  Mass.. 
Nov.  19,  1889.  Pupil  of  Louis  Gaspard 
Monte. 

LOUDERBACK,  Waiter,  The  Chelsea, 
West   23rd   St.,   New   York,   N.   Y.    (L) 

LOVE,    C.    W.,    16    West    46th    St.,    New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 


487 


LOVEN.   Frank  W.,  3435   Boulevard,   Jer- 
sey City,   N.  J. 

P.,  L— Born  Jersey  City,  N.  J.,  Oct.  2, 
1868.  Pupil  of  Birge  Harrison,  F.  V. 
Du  Mond  and  John  Carlson.  Mem- 
ber:     Salma.    C. 

LOVETT-LORSKI,  Boris,  Layton  Art 
School,  Milwaukee,  Wis.;  summer,  33 
Perkins  St.,  Winthrop,  Mass. 
S.,  T.— Born  in  Russia,  Dec.  25,  1891. 
Pupil  of  Hugo  Zaleman.  Member: 
S.Indp.A.;  Copley  S.  Awards:  Prix 
de  Rome,  Imperial  Academic,  1914  and 
1915.  Work:  Portrait  bust,  Grayson 
Stetson,  Boston  University. 

LOW,  Mary  Fairchild  (Mrs.  Will  H. 
Low),  Lawrence  Park,  Bronxville,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  New  Haven,  Conn.,  1866.  Pu- 
pil of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts; 
Carolus-Duran  and  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris.  Member:  SAA  1896.  ANA 
1906;  International  Woman's  AC,  Lon- 
don; Assoc. Soc. Nat.  des  Beaux  Arts. 
Awards  :  Paris,  three  years'  scholar- 
ship from  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts; 
medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893; 
bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  bronze 
medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  gold 
medal,  Dresden,  1902;  Julia  Shaw  prize,  ■ 
SAA  1902;  gold  medal,  Rouen,  1903;  gold 
medal,  Marseilles,  1905;  gold  medal, 
Normandy  Exp.,  Rouen,  1911.  Repre- 
sented in  Museum  at  Rouen,  France; 
Union  League  Club,  Chicago;  City  Art 
Museum,  St.  Louis;  Museum  of  Vernon, 
France. 

LOW,     Will     H(icok),     Lawrence     Park, 
Bronxville,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I..  T.,  W.,  L.— Born  Albany,  N.  Y., 
May  31,  1853.  Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux- 
Arts,  under  Gerome  and  of  Carolus- 
Duran  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA 
1888.  NA  1890;  SAA  1878;  Mural  P.; 
N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1889;  Century  Assoc; 
Lotos  C;  Nat. Inst.  A.L.  Awards: 
Silver  medal  for  drawing,  Paris  Exp., 
1889;  medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago, 
1893;  Lotos  Club  Fund,  NAD  1895;  sil- 
ver medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901. 
Work:  "The  Orange  Vender,"  Art 
Institute,  Chicago;  "Christmas  Morn," 
National  Gallery,  Washington;  "Auro- 
ra," Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  mural  decorations;  ceiling  of 
reception  room,  Waldorf  Hotel,  and 
ballroom  Hotel  Astoria,  New  York; 
panels  in  Essex  Co.  Court  House,  New- 
ark, N.  J.;  Luzerne  Co.  Court  House, 
Wilkesbarre,  Pa.;  Federal  Bldg.,  Cleve- 
land; St.  Paul's  P.  E.  Church,  Albany, 
N.  Y. ;  "The  Sylvan  Year,"  Art  Museum, 
Montclair,  N.  J.;  32  panels  in  State 
Education  Bldg..  Albany,  N.  Y. ;  Frieze 
in  Legislative  Library,  N.  Y.  State  Cap- 
itol; decorative  painting,  "Victory  1918," 
Columbia  University.  Author:  "A 
Chronicle  of  Friendship,"  "A  Painter's 
Progress,"  Delivered  Scammon  course 
of  lectures,  AIC  1910. 

LOWE,  Alice  Leszlnska.     See  Mrs.  H.  G. 
Ferguson, 

LOWELL,   Edith  Allen,  116  Carnegie  Hall. 
New  York.   N.  Y. ;   summer,   66  Crescent 
St.,  Greenfield,  Mass. 
P.,    W. — Born    Greenfield,    Mass.      Pupil 


LOWELL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


LUND 


of  Augustus  Saint  Gaudens,  George 
Auguste  Renouard. 

LOWELL,  Orson,  Astor  Trust  Bldg.,  5th 
Ave.  and  42nd  St.,  New  York*  h. 
Rochelle  Park,  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I. — Born  Wyoming,  la.,  Dec.  22, 
1871.  Pupil  of  Vanderpoel  and  Grover 
at  AIC.  Member:  SI  1901;  Guild  of 
Free  Lance  Artists;  New  Rochelle  AA. 
Work  :  Drawings  in  Cincinnati  Mu- 
seum;  La  Crosse  (Wis.)  AA;  Maryland 
Institute,  Baltimore;  Mechanics'  Insti- 
tute,  Rochester. 

LOWENHEIM,  F(rederick),  303  Fifth 
Ave.,  New  York.  N.  Y. ;  h.  99  Leland 
Ave.,  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 
I. — Born  Berlin,  Germany.  Pupil  of 
Kunst-Schule,  Berlin;  ATC.  Mem- 
ber:     SI,    1911;    Salma.   C,   1911. 

LUCAS,  Albert  P(ike),  1947  Broadway. 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  S.— Born  Jersey  City,  N.  J.  Pupil 
of  Hubert,  Boulanger,  Dagnan-Bouveret 
and  Courtois  in  Paris.  Member: 
ANA;  Soc.  Nat  des  Beaux- Arts,  Paris, 
NAC;  Lotos  C;  Allied  AA;  Salma.  C. 
Awards:  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp., 
1900;  bronze  medal,  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901.  Work  :  "October  Breezes," 
National  Gallery,  Washington;  "Ec- 
stasy," marble  figure,  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York. 

LUCAS,  E.  B.,  204  Richmond  St.,  Balti- 
more,  Md.,    (P.) 

LUCAS,    J.    Carrell,    6   East   Pleasant   St., 
Baltimore,   Md. 
Min.P.— M  ember  :    Charcoal   C. 

LUCAS,  Jean  W(illiams),  418  Potomac 
Ave.,  Hagerstown,  Md, 
P.,  T. — Born  North  Hagerstown,  Md., 
Aug.  5,  1873.  Pupil  of  Henri  Dainger- 
field  and  Whittemore.  Member:  N. 
A.  Women  PS;  Pa.  S.  Min.  P.  Award: 
Honorable  mention  for  miniature,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  Francisco,  1915. 

LUCE,  Mrs.  Laura  H.,  120  E.  Main  St., 
Titusville.  Pa. 

Idscp.P.,  T.,  L.— Born  Salem,  N.  Y., 
June  19,  1845.  Pupil  of  A.  H.  Wyant, 
C.  B.  Coman  and  H.  B.  Snell  in  New 
York.     Member:     N.  A.  Women  PS. 

LUCE,  Mrs.  Marie  Huxford,  Skaneateles, 
N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Slcaneateles,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
J.  S.  H.  Keever  in  Holland;  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Charles  H.  Woodbury  In  Boston. 
Member:  NYWCC;  N.  A,  Women 
PS. 

LUCIUS,    Florence    G.,    5    West    16th    St., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 
P.,   S.— M  ember:     N.  A.  Women  PS. 

LUDOVICI,  Alice  E.,  167  North  Orange 
Grove  Ave.,  Pasadena,  Cal.;  summer, 
Santa  Barbara,  and  Carmel-by-the-Sea, 
Calif. 

Min.  P. — Born  Dresden,  Germany,  Nov. 
7,  1872;  Italian  and  English  descent. 
Pupil  of  Julius  Ludovici  in  New  York. 
Member:  Cal.  S.  Min.  P.  (pres.). 
Awards:  Silver  medal  for  miniatures, 
Alaska-Yukon-Pacific  Exp.,  Seattle, 
1909;  gold  medal  for  miniatures,  Cal.  S. 
Min.  P.,  1914;  gold  medal,  Pan. -Cal. 
Exp.,    San   Diego,    1915,    for  miniatures. 


LUEBKERT,  Alma,  518  Kosciusko  St., 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y.   (P.) 

LUFKIN,    Lee.     See  Mrs.   Wm.   J.   Kaula. 

LUISI,  N.,  93— 16th  St.,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

LUKEMAN,  (Henry)  Augustus,  68  West 
56th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer, 
Stockbridge,   Mass. 

S.— Born  Richmond,  Va.,  Jan.  28,  1872. 
Pupii  of  Launt  Thompson  and  D.  C. 
French  in  New  York;  Ecole  des  Beaux- 
Arts  in  Paris,  under  FalguiSre.  Mem- 
ber: N.Y.  Arch.Lg.  1898;  NSS  1898;  ANA 
1909.  Award:  Bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work:  "McKinley," 
Adams,  Mass.;  and  Dayton,  O.,  "Manu," 
Appellate  Court,  New  York;  four  figures 
for  Royal  Bank  Bldg.,  Montreal;  four 
figures,  Brooklyn  Institute  Museum; 
Columbus  Custom  House;  "Prof.  Joseph 
Henry,"  Princeton  Univ.;  "Kit  Carson," 
Trinidad,  Colo;  Straus  Memorial,  New 
York,  1915;  U.  S.  Grant  memorial, 
San  Diego,  Cal.;  Soldiers'  monument, 
Somerville,  Mass.;  statue,  "Franklin 
Pierce,"  Concord,  N.  H. ;  "Women  of 
the  Confederacy,"  monument,  Ra- 
leigh, N.  C. ;  "Gen.  Wm.  Shepard," 
Westfield,  Mass.;  "Honor  Roll,"  Pros- 
pect Park,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ;  "Soldiers' 
Memorial,"  Red  Hook  Park,  Brooklyn, 
N.  Y. 

LUKS,  George  (Benjamin),  680  Fifth  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Williamsport,  Pa.,  Aug.  13, 
1867.  Pupil  of  PAFA  and  Diisseldorf 
Academy;  studied  in  Paris  and  London. 
Member:  Port.  P.;  Am.  PS;  NYWCC; 
Boston  AC.  Awards  :  Fourth  W.  A. 
Clark  prize  ($500>.  and  Corcoran  hon. 
mention,  1916;  Hudnut  prize,  NYWCC, 
1916;  Temple  gold  medal,  PAFA,  1918; 
Logan  Medal,  AIC,  1920.  War-  Corre- 
spondent in  Cuba,   1895-96. 

LUM,  Mrs.  Bertha,  136  St.  Anne  Alley, 
Chinatown;  h.  3665  Washington  St.,  San 
Francisco,    Calif. 

P.,  E. — Born  in  Iowa.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
Frank  Holme  and  Anna  Weston. 
Member:  Boston  SAC;  Cal.  SE; 
Asiatic  Soc.  of  Japan;  Alumni  AIC. 
Award  :  Silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San.  F.,  1915.  Specialty,  wood  block 
prints. 

LUMIS,  Harriet  R(andall)  (Mrs.  Fred  W. 
Lumis),    28    Bedford    Road,    Springfield, 

TV /To  oc 

P.— Born  Salem,  Conn.,  May  29,  1870. 
Pupil  of  Willis  S.  Adams;  Leonard 
Ochtman:  New  York  Summer  School  of 
Art;  Hugh  Breckenridge.  Member: 
Conn.  AFA;  Springfield  Art  Lg.;  Phila. 
Alliance. 

LUMSDON,    Mrs.    E,    Christine,   Carnegie 

Studios,    154  West  57th   St.,   New  York, 

N.   Y.. 

P.,   T. — Born   Brooklyn,   N.   Y.      Pupil   of 

Carolus-Duran,     Henry    Mosler,     Childe 

Hassam    and    George    de   Forest    Brush. 

Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  S.  Indp. 

A. 

LUND,   Harold,  Leonia,  N.  J.   (L) 


LUNDBERG 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


McCAN 


LUNDBERG,  A.  F.,  48  No.  Grant  Ave. 
W.,   Columbus,   O. 

Scenic  P. — M  ember:  Pen  and  Pencil 
C,    Columbus. 

LUNDBORG,  Florence,  63  Avenue  de 
Breteuil,  Paris,  France. 
P.,  I. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.  Stud- 
led  at  Mark  Hopkins  Inst,  of  Art,  and 
In  Paris  and  Italy.  Member:  N. 
A.  Women  PS;  San  F.  AA;  MacD.  C. 
Awards:  Gold  medal,  San  F.,  AA; 
bronze  medal,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work:  Mural  decorations  for  Cali- 
fornia Bldg-.  at  Panama-Pacific  Exposi- 
tion; "Queen  of  Hearts,"  at  Henriettes, 
Paris.  Illustrated  "Rubaiyat,"  "Yosem- 
Ite  Legends,"  "Honey  Bee";  "Odes 
and  Sonnets,"  etc. 

LUNGREN,    Fernand    (Harvey),    Mission 
Canyon  Road,   Santa   Barbara,  Cal. 
P.,    I.— Born    Maryland,    Nov.    13,    1859. 
Member:    Cal.    AC.      Specialty,    the 
desert. 

LUNDGREN,  Martin,  5242  Bernard  St., 
Chicago,  111. 

Mural  P. — Born  in  Sweden  in  1871. 
Pupil  of  AIC,  and  Louis  Betts.  Mem- 
ber:   Palette  and  Chisel  C. 

LUNDIN,  Mrs.  Emelia  A.,  553  Stuart 
Bldg.,  Seattle,  Wash. 
P.,  W. — Born  Stockholm,  Sweden,  Jan. 
16,  1884.  Pupil  of  Paul  Gustin,  P. 
Tadema.  Member:  Seattle  Fine 
Arts   Soc. 

LUQUIENS,  Elizabeth  Koll,  189  East  Rock 
Road,  New  Haven,  Conn.;  summer, 
Wonalancet,    N.   H. 

P.— Born  Salem.  O..  Jan.  19,  1878.  Pu- 
pil of  Albert  G.  Thompson;  Delecluse 
and  Mucha  in  Paris.  Member:  New 
Haven  Paint  and  Clay  C. 

LUQUIENS,  Hue  Mazelet,  2425  Manoa 
Ave.,  Honolulu,  Hawaii. 
E.,P. — Born  Auburndale,  Mass.,  June  30, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Bonnat  and  Merson  in 
Paris.  Member:  Chicago  SE;  Conn. 
AFA;  New  Haven  PCC;  P-G.  Award: 
Winchester  fellowship,  Yale  Art  School, 
1904. 

LUTHER,  Jessie,  2098  Pawtucket  Ave.. 
East  Providence,  R.  I.;  h.  Box  546, 
Providence,    R.    I. 

P.,  S.,  C,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Providence, 
R.  I.,  Nov.  3,  1860.  Pupil  of  S.  R.  Bur- 
leigh; Paul  Bartlett  and  Ralphael  Col- 
lin in  Paris.  Member:  Providence 
AC  and  Boston  SAC. 

LYMAN,  Mary  Elizabeth,  Middlefield, 
Conn. 

P.— Born  Middlefield,  Conn.,  Dec.  2, 
1850.  Pupil  of  Bail,  Yale  School  of 
Fine  Arts,  and  John  H.  Niemeyer. 
Member:   New   Haven   PCC. 

LYNCH,  Anna,  9  Tree  Studio  Bldg.,  Chi- 
cago, 111.;  h.  54  South  Crystal  St.,  Elgin, 
111. 

Mln.  P.— Born  Elgin,  111.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
Bouguereau,  Simon,  Cottet  and  Mme. 
Deblllemont  in  Paris.  Member  : 
Alumni  AIC;  Chicago  SA;  Chicago 
WCC;  Paris  A.  Woman's  AA;  Chicago 
AC;  Chicago  S.  Min.  P.;  Cordon  C. 
Awards  :  Miniature  prize,  Chicago 
AC;   bronze  medal,   P.-P.   Exp.,   San  F., 


1915;    Hon.   men.    AIC.      Work:      Por- 
trait of  Judge  Joseph  E.  Gary,  Chicago 
Court  House;  portrait  of  Judge  Arba  E. 
Waterman,   Memorial  Hall,   Chicago. 

LYNCH,  Virginia,  270  East  142nd  St., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 

P.,  C,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  New  York  City, 
Dec.  2,  1878.  Pupil  of  Julius  Schledorn 
in  Munich,  ASL  of  N.Y.,  also  studied 
in  China  and  Japan.  Member:  NAC, 
N.A.  Women  PS;   S.  Indp.  A. 

LYND,   J.    Norman,   "New  York  Herald" 
New  York,   N.   Y.;  h.   300  Denton  Ave., 
Lynbrook,   L.   L,    N.   Y. 
■T- — Born     Northwood,     Logan     Co.,     O., 
Nov.  15,  1878.     Member:   SI,  1913. 

LYNN,  Mrs.  Katherine,  Princeton,  N.  J. 
P.— M  ember:     Wash.  WCC. 

LYON,  Jeannette  Agnew  (Mrs.  William 
T.  Lyon),  9806  Lament  Ave.,  Cleveland, 
O. 

Ldscp.  P.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.  Pupil 
of  Robert  C.  Minor  of  New  York;  Mes- 
dag  at  the  Hague;  Constant  in  Paris. 

McALISTER,  R,  F.,  230  West  Eighth 
Ave.,  Columbus,  O. 

I.— M  ember:  Pen  and  Pencil  C,  Co- 
lumbus. 

McAllister,   Ethel    Louise,   607   6th   St., 
N.   E.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.,  I.,   T. — Born  Providence,  R.  I.,   April 
7,   1898.     Pupil  of  Messer,   Brooke,   Tar- 
bell,   Critcher  and  Bertha  Perrie. 

McAULEY,   Mary  E.,  230  North  Craig  St., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

McBEY,  James.  4  East  39th  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (P.,   E.) 

McBURNEY,  James  E.,  609  Fine  Art* 
Bldg.,   Chicago,   111. 

P.,  I.,  L.,  T.— Born  Lore  Citv,  O.,  Nov. 
22,  1868.  Studied  with  Arthur  W.  Dow, 
Howard  Pyle,  Charles  H.  Davis;  and 
in  Paris:  Member:  Calif.  AC;  Cliff 
Dwellers,  Chicago.  Award:  Silver 
m.edal.  Pan. -Cal.  Exp.,  San  Diego,  Cal., 
1915.  Work:  "The  Mission  Period" 
and  "The  Spanish  Period,"  Southern 
California  Counties'  Commission,  San 
Diego.  Instructor,  College  of  Fine  and 
Applied  Arts,  A.  E.  F.  University,  COte 
d'Or,  France,  1919.  Lecturer  on  History 
of  Art,  AIC,   1920. 

McCabe,  Junius   D.,  1310  State  St.,   Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

McCAIG,  Mrs.  Flora  T.,  5122  Kenmore 
Ave.,    Chicago,    111. 

P.— Born  Royalton,  N.  Y.,  Sept.  7,  1856. 
Pupil  of  PAFA  and  Carroll  Beckwlth. 
Member:  Buffalo  SA.  Work:  "A 
Mothers'  Meeting,"  Women's  Union. 
Buffalo,  N.  Y.;  "First  Lessons,"  Kinder- 
garten Training  School;  mural  paint- 
ings in  Genesee  Hotel,   Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

McCAN,  J(ames)  Ferdinand,  O'Connor 
Bldg.,  Victoria,  Texas. 
P. — Born  Tralee,  County  Kerry,  Ireland, 
Sept.  25,  1869.  Pupil  of  Kensington  Art 
School,  London,  Eng.  Member:  Soc. 
Tex.    A.       (vice-pres.). 


489 


McCARTAN 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


McCORMACK 


McCARTAN,  Edward,  157  East  35th  St.; 
h.  148  West  126th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Ecole  des 
Beaax  Arts  in  Paris.  Member:  NSS 
1912;  Allied  AA;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg. 
Awards  :  Barnett  prize  for  sculpture, 
NAD,  1912;  Widener  gold  medal.  PAFA, 
1916.  Represented  in  Fine  Arts  Aca- 
demy, Buffalo;  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York;  City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis. 

McCARTER,  Henry,  200  South  Fifteenth 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

I.,  T. — Born  Norristown,  Pa.,  July  5, 
1865.  Pupil  of  Eakins  in  Philadelphia; 
Puvis  de  Chavannes,  Bonnat  and  Alex- 
ander Harrison  in  Paris.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA.  Awards  :  Bronze 
medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  sil- 
ver medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Beck 
prize,  Phila.WCC  1906;  gold  medal  for 
illustrations,    P. -P.Exp.,    San   F..    1915. 

McCarthy,  C.  J.,  143  East  21st  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y, ;  summer,  Woodstock, 
N.   Y. 

I.— Born  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  May  21,  1887. 
Pupil  of  F.  Luis  Mora  and  F.  R.  Gruger. 
Member:     Salma.   C. 

McCarthy,  Helen  K.,  1716  Chestnut  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer,  Huntingdon, 
Pa. 

P.— Born  Poland,  O.,  Sept.  6,  1884.  Pu- 
pil of  Phlla.  School  of  Design.  Mem- 
ber: Plastic  C;  Alumni  of  Pa.School 
of  Design;  Inter.  Soc.  AL;  N.  A.  Women 
PS.  Award:  Gold  medal.  Plastic  C, 
1914;  Mary  Smith  prize,  PAFA,  1918; 
sketch  prize,   N.   A.   Women  PS,   1919. 

McCartney,  Edith,  1143  Connecticut 
Ave.,   Washington,   D.   C.    (P.) 

McCAY,  Winsor,  "New  York  American," 
238  William  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.  (Car- 
toonist.) 

MacCHESNEY,  Clara  T(aggart),  15  West 
67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  On- 
teora,  Tannersville,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Brownsville,  Cal.  Pupil  of  San 
Francisco  School  of  Design,  under 
Virgil  Williams;  Gotham  Art  School  In 
New  York,  under  Mowbray  and  Beck- 
with;  Girardot,  Courtois  and  Colarossi 
Academy  in  Paris.  M  em  b  e  r  :  AWCS; 
N.  A.  Women  PS;  NAC  (life)  SPNY; 
Art  Workers'  C. ;  N.  Y.  Municipal  AS; 
Barnard  C;  Lyceum  C.  of  London. 
Awards  :  Two  medals,  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  Dodge  prize  NAD 
1894;  gold  medal  for  water  color, 
AC  Phila.  1900;  second  Hallgarten 
prize,  NAD  1901;  bronze  medal.  Pan- Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo.  1901;  bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work:  "Retrospec- 
tion." Boston  Art  Club;  "Portrait  of 
George  Pardee,"  State  Capitol,  Sacra- 
mento, Cal.;  still  life  and  "Knitting," 
National  Arts  Club,  New  York;  "Por- 
trait of  Mr.  McMahon,"  Emigrant  Sav- 
ings Bank,  New  York;  "The  Discov- 
ery," Union  League  Club,  Chicago;  "A 
Good  Story,"  National  Gallery,  Wash- 
Inton;  "Portrait  of  Dr.  Dudley,"  Al- 
toona  (Pa.)  Library;  "The  Philos- 
opher," Aldine  Club,  New  York; 
"Sleep,"  Erie  Art  Club. 


McCLAIN,  Helen  Charleton),  344  West 
72nd  St.,  New  York,  N-.  Y. 
P. — Born  Toronto,  Ont.,  Canada,  May 
25,  1887.  Member:  N.  A.  Women 
PS.  Award  :  National  Arta  Club 
prize,  N.  A.  Women  PS,  1918. 

McCLEARY,   Mrs.  Bee   L.,  5639  Callowhill 
St.,  Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

McCLELLAN,  Mary,  5531  Wayne  Ave., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P.,  I. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  July  12, 
1860.  Pupil  of  PAPA;  Academic  Dele- 
cluse  in  Paris.  Member:  Plastic  C; 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila.  Alliance. 
Award:  Plastic  Club  gold  medal, 
1919. 

McClelland,   Rachel   p.,   5th  and  Wil- 
kins  Ave.,    Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

McCLURE,  Maud,  Eagle's  Nest  Camp, 
Oregon,  111. 

S.— Born  Mt.  Morris,  111.,  Oct.  4.  1884. 
Pupil  of  AIC  and  Lorado  Taft.  Mem- 
ber:     Alumni  AIC;   Chicago   AC. 

McCOMAS,  Francis,  Monterey.  Calif. 
P.— Born  Fingal.  Tasmania,  Oct.  1.  1874. 
Member  of  the  jury,  Panama-Pacific 
International  Exp.,  1915.  Member: 
Phila.  WCC;  AWCS.  Awa  rd  :  Dana 
gold  medal,  Phila.  WCC;  1918.  Two 
mural  decorations  on  the  Del  Monte 
Lodge,  Pebble  Beach,  Calif.;  and  repre- 
sented in  the  Metropolitan  Museum  of 
Art,  New  York;  Park  Museum  of  San 
Francisco,  Portland  Art  Society. 

McCOMB,      M(arie)      L(ouise),     2009     Mt. 
Vernon   St.,   Philadelphia,   Pa. 
I.— Born  Louisville,  Ky.    Pupil  of  PAFA. 
Award  :  Traveling  Scholarship  PAFA, 
1912. 

McCOMMON,      Mrs.      Frances      V.,      5712 
Forbes   St.,   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

McCONNELL,  Emien,  Haddonfield,  N.  J. 
I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Aug.  2, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Chase  and  Pyle.  Mem- 
ber:   Fellowship   PAFA. 

MacCORD,  Charles  William,  458  John  St., 
Bridgeport,  Conn.;  summer,  Stock- 
bridge,    Mass. 

P.— Born  Allegheny  City,  Pa.,  Feb.  3, 
1852.  Self-taught.  Member:  Salma. 
C.  1897;  Thumb  Tack  C.  Bridgeport 
(pres.  1903-04);  Lotos  C.  Work: 
"Light  on  the  Hills,"  Bridgeport  Public 
Library;  "The  Last  Ray,"  Sea  Side 
Club,  Bridgeport. 

MacCORD,  Mary  N(icholena),  458  John 
St.,  Bridgeport.  Conn. 
P. — Born  Bridgeport,  Conn.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS;  AWCS;  Conn. 
AFA;  NYWCC;  NAC;  New  Haven  PCC; 
N.  Y.  Soc.  Painters;  Wash.  WCC;  Wash. 
AC;  Bridgeport  Art  Lg. 

McCORMACK,    Mrs.    Nancy    Mai    Cox,    19 

East  Pearson  St.,  Chicago,  111. 
S. — Born  Nashville,  Tenn.,  Aug.  15, 
1885.  Pupil  of  Victor  Holm,  St.  Louis; 
Charles  Mulligan,  Chicago.  Member: 
WS  Sc;  Cordon  C;  Chicago  AC;  Nash- 
ville Art  Assoc;  Alumni  AIC.  Work: 
"Harmony,"    Nashville    Museum;    Car- 


490 


McCORMICK 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


McEWEN 


mack  Memorial,  Nashville,  Tenn.; 
Woodruff  Memorial,  First  National 
Bank,  Joliet,  111.;  panels  in  Trinity  Ch., 
Chicago. 

McCORMICK,  Howard,  Leonia,  N.  J. 
P.,  I.,  Engr. — Born  in  Indiana,  Aug.  19, 
1875.  Pupil  of  Forsyth  and  Chase; 
Laurens  in  Paris.  Member:  Salma. 
C,  1907;  P-G. ;  Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 
Work:  Hopi,  Apache  and  Navajo 
habitat  group,  American  Museum  of 
Natural  History,  New  York;  "Hopi 
World"  (gesso),  John  Herron  .Art  Inst.; 
Wood  engravings  in  numerous  maga- 
zines. 

McCORMICK,  Katharine  Hood,  1716 
Chestnut  St.;  h.  3416  Race  St.,  Philadel- 
phia, Pa. ;  summer,  Pocono  Lake  Pre- 
serve,  Pocono,    Pa. 

P.,  1.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Sept.  17, 
1882.  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member: 
Fellowship   PAFA. 

McCOUCH,  Gordon  (Mallet),  Ascona, 
Switzerland. 

P..  E.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pa..  Sept.  24. 
1885.  Pupil  of  Howard  Pyle  in  Wil- 
mington; Frederic  Bridgman  in  New 
York;  Heinrich  von  Ziigel  in  Munich. 
Member:    Zurcher  Kunstgesellschaft. 

McCOY,   Julia,   512    Shaw   Ave.,    McKees- 
port,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

McCREA,  S(amuel)  Harkness,  Scraggy- 
crag,  Darien,  Conn. 

T.dscp.P.— Born  Palatine,  Cook  Co.,  111., 
March  15.  1867.  Studied  in  San  Fran- 
cisco, Chicago,  New  York,  Paris  and 
Munich.      Member:    Salma.C. 

McCREERY,  Franc  Root,  15  Elmview 
Place,   Buffalo,   N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Kansas.  Pupil  of  Students' 
School  of  Art,  Denver,  Colo.;  AIC,  Buf- 
falo SA. 

McCREERY,      Frances,      1003      Allegheny 
Ave.,  N.   S.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

McCULLOUGH,    Minnie,  1219  Woodycrest 
Ave.,  New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

McCURDY,    Caroline    Gardiner,    99    East 
81st   St.,   New   York,    N.   Y. 
P. — Studied    at   Norwich   Academy   and 
in   Paris.      Member:      N.   A.  Women 
PS;    S.   Indp.  A. 

McCUTCHEON,  Jolin  T(inney),  care  The 
Chicago  Tribune,  1018  Fine  Arts  Bldg.; 
h.  37  East  Schiller  St.,  Chicago.  111. 
Caricaturist. — Born  near  South  Raub, 
Tippecanoe  Co.,  Ind.,  May  6.  1870.  Pu- 
pil of  Ernest  Knaufft  in  New  York. 
Member:  SI  1911.  On  staff  Chicago 
"Tribune"  since  1903;  correspondent 
during  Spanish  War.  Author:  "Stories 
of  Filipino  Warfare,"  "Bird  Center  Car- 
toons,"  etc. 

McDADE,    Ira,    118    South    Graham    St., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

McDERMiTT,  William  T.,  State  College, 
Pullman.   Wash.    (P.) 

McDonald,      Mrs.      Ann      Heebner,      10 

South  18th  St.;  summer,  8305  Seminole 
Ave.,    Chestnut   Hill.   Philadelphia,   Pa. 


P.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of  PAFA; 
Hugh  H.  Breckenridge;  Whistler  School 
in  Paris.  Member:  Fellowship 
PAFA;  Plastic  C;  NAC;  N.  A.  Women 
PS. 

MacDONALD,    Donald,   1040   Boylston   St., 
Boston,  Mass. 
P. — M  ember:   Boston   AC. 

MacDONALD,  Frank  E.,  4420  Norledge 
PL,   Kansas   City,   Mo.    (P.) 

MacDONALD.  Harold  L.,  Purcellville.  Va. 
P.,  S.,  I.,  T.— Born  Manitowoc,  Wis., 
May  13,  1861.  Pupil  of  Boulanger  and 
Lefebvre  in  Ptiris.  Member:  S.Wash. 
A. 

Mcdonald,  Wllliam  P(urcell),  Rook- 
wood  Pottery,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P.— Born  Cincinnati,  Sept.  18,  1863.  Pu- 
pil of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy  under 
Duveneck.  Member:  Cincinnati  AC; 
Duveneck  Soc.  PS.  On  Rookwood  Pot- 
tery staff  since  1882. 

MacDONALL,  Angus  (Peter),  Westport, 
Conn. 

P..  I.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  Apr.  7. 
1876.  Illustrates  for  "Life."  "Scribner's," 
"Judge,"  "American."  "Saturday  Even- 
ing Post,"  "Country  Gentleman."  etc. 

MacDOUGALL,  Joiin  A.,  46  Clifford  Rd., 
Nantucket,  Mass. 

Min.P.,  T.— Born  New  York,  1843.  Pu- 
pil of  NAD  in  New  York;  Cormon 
in  Paris.  Member:  Am.S.Min.P. 
Award  :  Silver  medal,  Charleston 
Exp.,   1902. 

MacDOUGAL,  R(obert)  B(ruce),  137 
West  12th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer, Nantucket.  Mass. 
P.,  T.— Born  Newark,  N.  J.,  Dec.  25, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Joseph  DeCamp,  Frank 
DuMbnd.      Member:     Salma,    C. 

McEWEN,  Alexandrine,  Society  of  Arts 
and  Crafts,  47  Watson  St.,  Detroit, 
Mich. 

I..  C,  W.,  D. — Born  in  England.  Mem- 
ber:     Detroit    SAC;    Boston    SAC. 

McEWEN,  Katharine,  Society  of  Arts  and 
Crafts.   47   Watson   St..   Detroit,   Mich. 
P.,    C,    D.— Born    in    England.      Pupil   of 
Chase  and  Woodbury.     Member:  De- 
troit SAC;  N.  A.  Women  PS. 

McEWEN,  Walter,  11  Rue  Legendre:  h. 
59  Rue  Galilee,  Paris,  France;  Cen- 
tury Assoc,  7  West  43d  St..  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Chicago.  Feb.  13.  1860.  Pupil  of 
Cormon  and  Robert-Fleury  In  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1903;  Paris  SAP  (first 
vice-pres.);  Nat. Inst. A. L.  Counselor 
Cresson  Scholarship,  PAFA  Students. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention.  Paris  Salon, 
1886;  silver  medal,  Paris  Exp..  1889;  first 
class  gold  medal,  Berlin.  1891;  medal. 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  medal 
of  honor,  Antwerp,  1894;  second  class 
medal,  Munich.  1897;  silver  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  first  gold  medal, 
Munich,  1901;  first  class  medal.  Vienna, 
1902;  Lippincott  prize,  PAFA  1902;  Har- 
ris prize.  AIC  1902;  gold  medal.  St, 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  first  medal,  Li&ge, 
1905;  hors  concours  (jurv  of  awards). 
P.-P.Exp..  San  F.,  1915.  Chevalier 
Legion     of     Honor     1896,     Officer     1908; 


491 


McFADDEN 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


McKENZIE 


Order  of  St.  Michael,  Bavaria;  Or- 
der of  Leopold  II  Belgium,  1909; 
Proctor  prize,  NAD,  1919.  Work: 
"Sunday  in  Holland,"  Luxembourg 
Museum,  Paris;  decorations  in  Library 
of  Congress,  Washington;  "An  Ances- 
tor," Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington; 
"The  Letter,"  Art  Association,  In- 
dianapolis; "Lady  in  White  Satin 
Gown"  and  "The  Judgment  of  Paris," 
Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  "Phyllis," 
Pennsylvania  Academy,   Philadelphia. 

McFADDEN,     Sarah     Yocum.       See     Mrs. 

Frederick    A,    Boyle. 
McFEE,   Henry  Lee,  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 

P. — M  ember:      Pittsburgh  AA. 
McGILLIVRAY,    F(iorence)    H(elena),  292 

Frank      St.,      Ottawa,      Can.;      summer, 

Whitby,    Ontario,    Can. 

P.— Born    Whitby,    Ontario,    Can.,    1864. 

Pupil    of    Simon    and   Menard    in    Paris. 

Member:     Inter.    Art    Union,     Paris; 

N.  A.  Women  PS;  Ontario  SA.    Work: 

"Afterglow,"    and    "Stack    in    Winter," 

owned  by   the   Canadian   Government. 

MacGILVARY,  Norwood  Hodge,  61  Poplar 
St.,  Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  in  Bangkok,  Siam,  Nov.  14, 
1874.  Pupil  of  Davidson  College;  Mark 
Hopkins  Inst,  San  Francisco;  Myron 
Barlow;  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member: 
NYWCC;  AWCS;  Allied  AA;  Providence 
WCC;  Providence  AC;  N.Y.  Arch.  Lg.; 
Brooklyn  SE.  Award  :  Silver  medal, 
P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work: 
"Twilight  After  Rain,"  National  Gallery, 
Washington.  D.  C. 

MacGINNIS,  H(enry)  R.,  School  of  In- 
dustrial Arts,  State  and  Willow  Sts., 
Trenton,  N.  J.;  h.  38  West  State  St., 
Trenton,  N.  J.;  summer,  Wentworth,  N. 
H. 

P.,  T. — Born  Martinsville,  Ind.,  Sept. 
25,  1875.  Pupil  of  J.  O.  Adams  and 
T.  C.  Steele,  Indiana;  Collin  and  Cour- 
tois  in  Paris;  Royal  Academy,  Munich. 
Member:  S,  Indiana  A.  Award: 
Hon.  mention.  Royal  Academy,  Munich. 
Work:  Mural  painting,  Memorial 
Room,  Gregory  School,  Trenton,  N.  J. 

McGRAW,  Mrs.  T.  A.,  Jr.,  1710  Jefferson 
Ave.,  Detroit,   Mich.    (P.) 

MacGREGOR,  Donald,  1523  Chestnut  St.; 
h.  2048  North  29th  St.,  Philadelphia, 
Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of  PAFA 
under  Chase.  Member:  Phila.Sketch 
C;  Fellowship  PAFA.  Award:  Silver 
medal,   AAS   1902. 

MacGREGOR,  Sara  Newlin  (Mrs.  Donald 
MacGregor),  1523  Chestnut  St.;  h.  2048 
North  29lh  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Mln.P.,  I. — Born  in  Pennsylvania.  Pu- 
pil of  Wm.  M.  Chase,  Ben  Gilman,  Ce- 
cilia Beaux  and  Henry  Thouron.  M  e  m- 
ber:  Fellowship  PAFA;  Plastic  C; 
Award:   Bronze   medal.   AAS   1902. 

McGUIRE,    William    J.,    174   Marshall    St., 
Paterson,   N.   .7. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

MclLRATH,    Vira,   Lambertville.   N.   J. 
P.— M  ember:     Fellowship  PAFA;  N. 
A.   Women   PS. 


MclNTIRE,  Katharine  Angela,  160  Wav- 
erly  PL,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer, 
Ogunquit,    Me. 

P.,  E. — Born  Richmond,  Va.,  Nov.  20, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Alice  Beckington, 
George  Bridgman  in  New  York;  Mme. 
La   Forge   in   Paris. 

MaclNTOSH,  Marian  T.,  291  Nassau  St., 
Princeton,    N.    J. 

P.— Born  Belfast,  Ireland.  Pupil  of 
Heinrich  Knirr  and  Henry  B.  'Snell. 
Member:    Phila.    Alliance;    Plastic    C. 

MacKAY,  Edwin  Murray,  241  East  Euclid 
Ave.,  Detroit,  Mich.;  summer.  Silver- 
mine,  Norwalk  Conn. 
P.— Born  Detroit,  Mich.  Pupil  of  Lau- 
rens, Blanche  and  Kenyon  Cox.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :  Scarab  C. ;  Conn.  Soc.  A. 
Work:  Portraits  of  "Ex-Gov.. 
Sleeper,"  Mich.  State  Capitol  Bldg. ; 
"Justice  McAlvey,"  "Chief  Justice 
Steere,"  "Justice  Ostrander,"  Mich. 
Supreme  Court,  Lansing,  Mich.  Draw- 
ings in  N.  Y.   Public  Library. 

McKAY,   Helen  C,  1015  North  Euclid  St., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

McKELL,  James  C,  524  Walnut  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa.    (I.) 

McKENZIE,  R(obert)  Talt,  University  of 
Pennsylvania;  h.  2014  Pine  St.,  Phil- 
adelphia,   Pa. 

S.,  W.,  L.— Born  Almonte,  Ont.,  Canada, 
May  26,  1867.  Member:  Phila.Sketch 
C;  Fellowship  PAFA  (assoc);  Century 
Assoc.  Awards  :  Silver  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  King's  medal,  Swe- 
den, 1912;  hon.  mention,  P.-P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Work:  "Sprinter,"  Fitz 
William  Museum,  Cambridge,  England; 
"College  Athlete,"  Ashmolean  Museum, 
Oxford,  England;  "Juggler"  and  "Com- 
petitor," Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  "Competitor,"  Canadian  National 
Gallery,  Ottawa,  Canada;  "Onslaught  "  a 
group,  and  "Relay,"  statuette.  Art  Gal- 
lery, Montreal,  Canada;  statuettes  "Boy 
Scout"  and  "Blightv"  and  "Capt.  Guv 
Drummond,"  memorial  statue,  Canadian 
War  Museum,  Ottawa,  Canada;  portraits 
in  low  relief  of  Samuel  Jackson  and 
Nathaniel  Chapman,  F.  K.  Huger  and 
Crawford  W.  Long,  Univ.  of  Pa.;  D.  W. 
W.  Keen,  Brown  Univ.,  Providence;  Dr. 
A.  A.  Browne,  McGill  Univ.,  Montreal, 
Canada;  "The  Youthful  Benjamin 
Franklin,"  bronze  statue,  Univ.  of  Pa. 
Campus;  "Portrait  of  Weir  Mitchell," 
and  medals  for  Franklin  Inst.,  Philadel- 
phia; "Portrait  of  Thomas  Buchanan," 
National  Gallery,  Edinburgh;  "Sir  George 
Drummond,"  St.  Margaret's  Home.  Mon- 
treal, Canada;  "Baron  Tweedmouth" 
and  "Lady  Tweedmouth,"  Guisachan, 
Scotland;  fountain  with  panel  in  high  re- 
lief "Laughing  Children,"  Athletic  Park 
Playground,  Philadelphia;  "Rev.  George 
Whitfield,"  bronze  statue.  Triangle  of 
the  University  of  Pa.  dormitories,  1919; 
"Norton  Davis  Aviator,"  St.  Paul's 
School;  Victory  Memorial,  Cambridge, 
Eng.  Professor  and  director  of  depart- 
ment in  physical  education,  Univ.  of  Pa. 


492 


McKERNAN 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


MacMONNIES 


McKERNAN,  Frank,  524  Walnut  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa.;  h.  Ridley  Park,  Pa. 
P..  I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Sept.  19,  1861. 
Pupil  of  PAFA  and  of  Howard  Pyle. 
Member:  Phila. Sketch  C;  Fellow- 
ship PAFA. 

MacKILLOP,  William,  Van  Dyck  Studios. 
939  Eighth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
St,  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts;  Jean 
Paul  Laurens  and  Ernest  Laurent  In 
Paris.     Member:     Allied  AA;   Salma. 

C.  Award  :  Silver  medal,  P.-P.  Exp., 
•San   F.,   1915. 

MacKINNON,    Mrs.     Mary,    12    Gramercy 
Park,   New   York,   N.   Y. 
I.— M  ember:     SI. 

McKINSTRY,  Elizabeth,  1046  Elmwood 
Ave.,   Buffalo,   N.   Y.    (S.) 

McKINSTRY,  Grace  E.,  228  West  72nd 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  Faribault,  Minn. 
Port. P.,  S.,  T.— Born  Fredonia.  N.  Y. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  AIC;  Julian  and 
Colarossi  academies  and  Collin  in  Paris. 
Member:  Minneapolis  Artists' 

League:  S.  Wash.  A;  Lg.  of  American 
Pen  Women  (hon.) ;  Awards:  first 
prize  Minn.  State  Art  Soc,  1905; 
Hon.  mention,  Minn.  State  AA  1914. 
Work:  Portraits  in  the  Capitol,  St. 
Paul,  Minn.;  Univ.  of  Minn.,  Minneap- 
olis; Lake  Erie  College,  Palnesville,  O.; 
Charleton  College,  Northfield,  Minn.; 
Shattuck  School,  Faribault,  Minn.; 
Army    and     Navy     Club,     Washington. 

D.  C,    etc. 

McLAIN.  Mary,  16  East  60th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y.    (MIn.  P.) 

McLANE,  Jean  (Mrs.  John  C.  Johansen), 
]2  West  9th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Port. P.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Sept.  14, 
1878.  Pupil  of  AIC,  and  Duveneck. 
Member:  ANA,  1912;  Port.  P. 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  first  prize.  Inter. Lg.,  Paris, 
1907  and  1908;  EUing  prize,  N.Y. Wo- 
man's AC  1907;  Burgess  prize,  N.Y. Wo- 
man's AC  1908;  Julia  A.  Shaw  prize, 
NAD  1912;  third  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD 
1913;  LIppIncott  prize,  PAFA  1914;  sil- 
ver medal,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F..  1915. 
Work:  "Girl  In  Gray,"  Museum  of 
Art.  Toledo,  O.;  "Virginia  and  Stanton." 
Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  "Girl  in 
Green,"  Syracuse  Art  Museum;  "Por- 
trait of  a  Boy,"  San  Antonio  (Tex.) 
Museum. 

Mclaughlin,  Charles  J.,  Rookwood 
Pottery,  Cincinnati,  O.;  321  Front  St., 
Covington,    Ky. 

P.,  D.,  Dec. — Born  Covington,  Ky.,  June 
6,  1888.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Acad- 
emy and  Duveneck.  Member  :  Cin- 
cinnati AC;  MacD.  C.  of  Cincinnati; 
Cincinnati  Arch.  Lg.  Designer  at  Rook- 
wood  Potteries,   1913-1920. 

MacLAUGHLIN,  Donald  Shaw,  569  Fifth 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Etcher.  P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Nov.  9, 
1876.  Pupil  of  W.  D.  Hamilton.  M  e  m- 
ber:  Paris  AAA;  Salon  Champs  de 
Mars.  Awards  :  Silver  medal  for 
etching.  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
medal   of   honor,    Limoges    1903;    bronze 


medal.  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  gold  medal. 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work: 
"Lauterbrunnen,"  Carnegie  Institute, 
Pittsburgh. 

MacLELLAN,  Charles  A.,  1305  Franklin 
St.,  Wilmington,  Del.;  summer,  Tren- 
ton,  Ontario,   Can. 

P..  I. — Born  Trenton,  Ontario,  Can., 
June  22.  1885.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Howard 
Pyle.       Member:      Wilmington    SFA. 

McLELLAN,  Ralph,  Pennsylvania  Mu- 
seum and  Industrial  Art  School,  Pine 
and  Broad  Sts..  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.,  E.,  T. — Born  San  Marcos,  Tex.,  Aug. 
27,  1884.  Pupil  of  Philip  Hale,  Edmund 
Tarbell  and  Frank  Benson  in  Boston. 
Member:  Copley  S.;  Concord  AA. 
A  w  a  r  d  s  :  Dunham  prize,  Conn.  AFA, 
1917;  Isador  medal,  NAD,  1919.  Instruc- 
tor In  Pennsylvania  Industrial  Art 
School. 

MacLEOD,  A(lexander)  S.,  628  Montgom- 
ery St.,  San  Francisco,  Calif.;  h.  5974 
Vine  St.,  Kerrisdale  P.  O.,  B.  C,  Can- 
ada. 

P.,  E. — Born  Orwell,  Prince  Edward 
Island.  Canada,  April  12,  1888.  Pupil  of 
Van  Sloun.     Member:   Calif.   SE. 

MacLEOD,  John,  West  Fort  Lee,  N.  J. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

McMANUS,  Blanche.  See  Mrs.  F.  M. 
Mansfield, 

McMANUS,     George,     International     Fea- 
tures   Service,    246   AVest   59th   St.,    New 
York,    N.    Y. 
I.— M  ember:     SI. 

McMANUS,  James  Goodwin,  Sage  Bldg.), 
86  Pratt  St.,  P.  O.  Box  298;  h.  18  Lenox 
St.,   Hartford,   Conn. 

P..  T.— Born  Hartford,  Conn.,  Feb.  5, 
1882.  Pupil  of  C.  N.  Flagg,  Robert  B. 
Brandegee,  W.  G.  Bunco,  Montague 
Flagg  and  Walter  Grifhn.  Member: 
Conn.  AFA;  Hartford  Municipal  Art 
Soc.  Work:  "Portrait  of  Alfred  E. 
Burr,"  Burr  Grammar  School,  Hartford; 
"Dr.  George  C.  Bailey,"  Brown  School, 
and  St.  Francis'  Hospital,  Hartford.  In- 
structor at  Harlford  Public  High  School 
and  the  Conn.  League  of  Art  Students. 

McMEIN,  Miss  Neysa  Moran,  226  Fifth 
Ave.;  h.  57  West  57th  'St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Quincy,  111.,  Jan.  25,  1889. 
Pupil  AIC.  M  e  m  b  e  r  :  SI.  Work: 
Covers  for  "McClure's,"  "American 
Magazine,"   etc. 

McMILLEN,  Mildred,  3  Central  St., 
Provincetown,    Mass. 

Wood  Engr. — Born  Chicago,  111.,  June 
8,  1884.  Studied  In  Chicago,  New  York, 
Paris.  Work:  "A  Merry-Go-Round," 
National  Museum  of  Canada,  Ottawa; 
"Low  Tide,  Etaples"  and  "The  Ship 
Yard,"  New  York  Public  Library, 

MacMONNIES,  Frederick  W(illiam),  20 
West  10th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.,  and 
Givernv-par-Vernon,  Eure,  France. 
S.,  P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Sept.  28, 
18G3.  Pupil  of  NAD.  ASL  and  Augustus 
Saint  Gaudens  in  New  York;  of  Fal- 
guiere,  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  and  Mer- 
cie  In  Paris.  Member:  SAA  1891; 
ANA  1901.  NA  1906;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1892; 


493 


MacMONNIES 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


MACDONALD 


NSS1893;Nat.Inst.AL;NAC.  Awards: 
Hon,  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1889;  second 
class  medal,  Paris  Salon,  1891;  medal, 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  first 
class  gold  medal,  Antwerp,  1894;  medal, 
ACPhila.1895;  medal,  Atlanta  Exp., 1895; 
grand  prize  of  honor,  Paris  Exp.,  1900; 
medal,  Munich;  first  prize,  Boston  AC; 
hon.  mention  for  painting,  Paris  Salon, 
1901;  gold  medal  for  sculpture,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  hon.  mention  for 
painting,  Paris  Salon,  1902;  third  medal 
for  painting,  Paris  Salon,  1904.  Cheva- 
lier of  the  Legion  of  Honor  1896;  Cheva- 
lier Order  of  St.  Michael  of  Bavaria. 
Work:  "Nathan  Hale,"  City  Hall  Pk., 
New  York;  "Army"  and  "Navy"  and 
"Horse  Tamers,"  Brooklyn,  New  York; 
"Bacchante,"  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York,  and  Luxembourg,  Paris; 
"Victory,"  West  Point,  N.  Y.;  "Sir 
Henry  Vane,"  Boston  Public  Library; 
central  bronze  door  and  statue  of 
"Shakespeare,"  Library  of  Congress, 
Washington;  "Pioneer  Monument," 
Denver;  "Pan  of  Rohallion,"  Fine  Arts 
Academy,    Buffalo,    N.    Y. 

MacMONNIES,  Mary  Fairchild.     See  Mrs. 

Will  H.  Low. 
McMULLENj   Mrs.   Elizabeth   M.,  6  Forbes 

Terrace,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

McMUNIGLE,    Mary   G.,   4502  Fifth  Ave,, 
Pittsburgh,   Pa, 
P, — M  ember:     Pittsburgh    AA. 

McMURTRIE,  Edith,  1430  South  Penn 
Sq.;  h.  Pelham  Court,  Philadelphia; 
summer,  Orr's  Island,  Me. 
P.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil 
of  PAFA.  Member:  Fellowship  PA 
FA;  S.  Indp.  A.;  Phila.  Alliance. 
Award  :  Cresson  traveling  scholarship, 
PAFA.  Work:  "The  Circus,"  Penn- 
sylvania Academy  of  Fine  Arts.  In- 
structor,   Wilmington    High    School. 

McNAMEE,  Dorothy  Swinburne  (Mrs. 
Luke  McNamee),  1723  Corcoran  Street, 
Washington,  D.  C.     (P.) 

MacNEIL,  Carol  Brooks  (Mrs.  H.  A,  Mac- 
Neil),  care  of  The  American  Academy 
in  Rome,  Rome,  Italy, 
S.— Born  Chicago,  111,,  Jan,  15,  1871.  Pu- 
pil of  AIC  under  Lorado  Taft;  Mac- 
Monnies  and  Injalbert  in  Paris.  M  e  m- 
ber:  NSS,  1907;  N,  A,  Women  PS. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp,, 
1900;  bronze  medal,  St,  Louis  Exp.,  1904, 

MacNEIL,  H(erman)  A(tkins),  care  of  The 
American  Academy  in  Rome,  Rome, 
Italy. 

S.— Born  Everett,  Mass.,  Feb,  27,  1866. 
Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art  School  in 
Boston;  Chapu  at  Julian  Academy  and 
Falguiere  at  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  In 
Paris.  Member:  NSS  1897  (ex- 
pres.);  ANA  1905,  NA  1906;  SAA  1901; 
N.Y.Arch.Lg,  1902;  Century  Assoc; 
N.  Y.  Municipal  AS;  Nat.  Inst.  AL. 
Awards:  Rinehart  Roman  scholarship, 
1896-1900;  designer's  medal,  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  silver  medal,  At- 
lanta Exp.,  1895;  silver  medal,  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  gold  medal.  Pan- Am. Exp., 
Buffalo,    1901;    gold    medal,    Charleston 


Exp.,  1902;  commemorative  gold  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  commemorative 
medal,  Jewish  Settlement  in  America; 
gold  medal,  Buenos  Ayres  Exp.,  1910; 
gold  medal  for  medals,  P. -P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915;  medal  of  honor  for  sculpture, 
N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1917.  Work:  "Sun  Vow" 
and  "Primitive  Chant,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  "Sun  Vow,"  Cor- 
coran Gallery,  Washington;  "Coming  of 
the  White  Man,"  City  Park,  Portland, 
Ore.;  "McKinley  Memorial,"  Columbus, 
O.;  "Soldiers  and  Sailors  Monument," 
Whitinsville,  Mass.;  "Soldiers  and  Sail- 
ors Memorial,"  Albany,  N.  Y.;  Senator 
Orville  Hitchcock  Piatt  Memorial,  State 
Capitol,  Hartford,  Conn.;  "The  Moqui 
Prayer  for  Rain,"  Art  Institute,  Chi- 
cago; "The  Sun  Vow,"  Art  Museum, 
Montclair,  N.  J.;  groups  "Physical  and 
Intellectual  Development,"  Northwest- 
ern Univ.,  Evanston,  111.;  Ezra  Cornell 
monument,  Cornell  University,  Ithaca, 
N,  Y.;  "D.  L,  Moody,"  Northfield 
Univ.,  Northfield,  Mass.,  "Gen.  Wash- 
ington," Washington  Arch,  New  York. 
Designer  of  Pan-American  medal  of 
award.  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  medal  of  honor; 
United  States  Government  quarter  dol- 
lar. 
Mcpherson,  J.  C,  68  Perry  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A, 

McQUAIDE,     Lee     F.,     223     Atwood     St., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P, — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

MacRAE,  Elmer  L(Ivingston),  care  Mon- 
tross  Gallery,  550  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  Cos  Cob,  Conn. 
P.— Born  New  York,  July  16,  1875.  Pu- 
pil of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Twachtman, 
Beckwith,  Blum  and  Mowbray,  M  e  m- 
ber:  NYWCC;  Am.  PS;  Pastellsts; 
Greenwich   SA, 

MacRAE,  Emma  Fordyce,  12  West  69th 
St,;  h,  8  West  77th  St„  New  York, 
N.  Y, ;  summer,-  Atlantic  Highlands, 
Gloucester,    Mass, 

P, — Born  Vienna,  Austria,  Apr.  27,  1887. 
Pupil  of  Luis  Mora,  Robert  Reid,  Ken- 
neth Hayes  Miller.  Member:  MacD, 
C. 

McRICKARD,  James  P.,  Third  St.,  Bay- 
side,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Nov.  7,  1872.  Pupil  of  ASL 
of  N.  Y. ;  Douglas  Volk,  and  George  de 
Forest  Brush.  Member:  Salma.  C. ; 
S.Indp.A.;    Lg.    of   N.Y.A. 

McTIGHE,  Anne,  140  West  57th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P. — Member:   N. 'A.   Women   PS. 

MACDONALD,  Arthur  N.,  54  North  17th 
St.,  East  Orange,  N.  J. 
Engr. — ^Born  Attleboro,  Mass.,  Mar.  31, 
1866.  Member:  American  Book- 
plate Soc.  1919.  Awards:  Two  first 
prizes.  Am.  Bookplate  Soc,  1919. 

MACDONALD,  F(rank)  E.,  4420  Norledge 
Place,  Kansas  City,  Mo. 
P..  I.— Born  Kansas  City.  Mo.,  Feb,  8, 
1896.  Pupil  of  Roland  Thomas.  G,  V. 
Millett,  and  J.  D.  Patrick.  Mem- 
ber:   Kansas    City    AG. 


494 


MACFARLAN 


WHO*S  WHO  IN  ART 


MAHONEY 


MACFARLAN,  Christina,  1805  Chestnut 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of  Chase, 
Breckenridge  and  Cecilia  Beaux.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :  Fellowship  PAFA. 

MACKALL,  R.  IVlcGIII,  The  Charcoal  Club, 
1230  St.  Paul  St..  Baltimore,  Md. 
P..  E.,  C— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Apr.  15, 
1889.  Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Richard 
Miller  in  Paris.  Member:  Salon 
d'Automne,  Paris;  Mural  decorations  in 
First  English  Lutheran  Church;  Church 
of  the  Fourteen  Holy  Martyrs;  St. 
Luke's  Church;  Lobby  of  the  Century 
Theatre,   Baltimore   Md. 

IVIACKAY,  William  A(ndrew),  345  East 
33d  St.;  and  "The  Players,"  16  Gramercy 
Park,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer, 
Coytesville,  Fort  Lee,  N.  J. 
Mural  P.,  I.— Born  Philadelphia,  July  10. 
1878.  Pupil  of  Constant  and  Laurens 
in  Paris;  Academy  in  Rome;  Robert 
Reid  in  New  York.  Member:  SI  1910; 
Mural  P.;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1911;  Players 
C. ;  Paris  AAA.  W  o  r  k  :  Mural  paint- 
ings in:  Senate  Reading  Room,  Con- 
gressional Library,  Washington;  House 
of  Representatives,  St.  Paul,  Minn.;  Su- 
preme Court  Room,  Essex  County  Court 
House.  Newark,  N.  J.;  Castlegould, 
Port  Washington,  L.  I.;  fagade  of  19 
East  57th  St.,  New  York;  decoration 
and  painting  Knickerbocker  42nd  St. 
Bldg. ;  Robbins  Corporation;  Vincent 
Bldg. ;  Cambridge  Bldg.;  Astor  Court, 
New  York,  N.  Y.  Murals  in  Freer  Gal- 
lery,  Washington,  D.  C. 

MACKENZIE,    J.     B.,    1906    Sansom    St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Phila.  AA. 

MACKENZIE,  Janet,  166  Van  Dyke  Ave., 
Detroit,   Mich.      (P.   T.) 

MACKENZIE,  Roderick  D.,  The  Art 
Studio,  School  of  Art,  223  Dauphin  St.. 
Mobile,    Ala. 

P.,  S.,  I.,  E.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  London, 
England,  April  30,  1865.  Pupil  of  Con- 
stant. Laurens,  Jules  Lefebvre,  Chapu, 
and  the  Ecole  National  des  Beaux-Arts. 
Member  :  Royal  Society  of  Arts, 
London.  Award  :  Curzon  Gold 
Medal,  India.  Works:  "State  Entry 
Delhi,  Durbar,  1903,"  Museum  at  Cal- 
cuta:  "The  Chitor  Elephants,"  gate  to 
Fort,   Delhi,   India. 

MACKNiGHT,  Dodge,  East  Sandwich. 
Mass. 

P.— Born  Providence.  R.  I.,  Oct.  1.  1860. 
Pupil  of  Cormon  in  Paris.  Member: 
Phila.  WCC;  Boston  WCC.  Work: 
Fifteen  water  colors.  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts.  Boston;  "The  Almond  Tree."  In- 
stitute of  Arts,  Detroit;  "The  Bed  of  the 
Brook,"  R.  I.  School  of  Design,  Prov- 
idence; 10  water  colors,  Fogg  Museum. 
Cambridge;  260  water  colors  in  Fitz- 
Gerald  Gallery.  Brookline;  represented 
in    Gardner   collection,    Boston. 

MACKY.     Constance     L..     178     Park     Hill 

Ave.,   San  Francisco,  Calif.    (P.) 

MACRUM,   George    H.,   care  of  American 
Express.    Paris.    France. 
P..  T.— Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.     Mem- 
ber:   Allied  AA;  Salma.  C;  Phila.  AC. 


Awards:  Gold  medal,  Appalachian 
Exp.,  Knoxville,  Tenn.,  1911;  Turnbull 
P'-ize,  Salma. C,  1914;  silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San  F..  1915.  Work  :  "The  Pile 
Driver."  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the 
Fine  Arts;  "The  Pardon  on  the  Moun- 
tain," Canadian  National  Gallery,  To- 
ronto, Canada. 

MACSOUD.  Nicolas  S.,  191  Clinton  St.; 
h.  212  Chnton  St.,  Brooklyn,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Zahle,  Mt.  Lebanon,  Syria, 
March  7,  1884.  Pupil  of  NAD.  Mem- 
ber: Brooklyn  S.  Min.  P. ;  Brooklyn 
SA;   Salma.   C;   Wash.   WCC. 

MACY,  Harriet,  1321  2Sth  St.,  Des  Moines, 
la. 

P.— Born  Des  Moines.  la.  Pupil  of  Cum- 
rr.ing  School  of  Art,  Des  Moines;  ASL 
of  N.  Y.  Member:  Iowa  AG. 
Award  :  Des  Moines  Women's  C.  1915. 

MADEIRA,  Mrs.  Clara  N.,  2300  Pine  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
PAFA;  Simon  and  Cottet  in  Paris. 
Member:  Phila.  WCC;  Fellowship 
PAFA;  Phila.  Alliance;  N.  A.  Women 
PS;  Wash.  WCC. 

MAESCH,  F(erdinand),  303  Fifth  Ave.; 
h.  1350  Ogden  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Muhlhausen,  Germany.  June 
21.  1865.  Studied  in  Germany  and 
France.  Work:  Portrait  of  Hon. 
Herbert  T.  Ketcham.  Surrogate  Court. 
Kings   Co.,   N.   Y. 

MAGEE,  James  C.  718  Walnut  St.,  h. 
4156  Leidy  Ave.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Brooklyn.  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
PAFA;  Chase  in  N.  Y.;  Robert  Henri 
in  Paris.  Member:  S.  Indp.  A. ; 
AAS;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A.;  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Concord  AA.  Awards  :  Silver  medal. 
AAS.  1902;  gold  medal,  AAS.  1907. 
Represented  in  Johnson  collection. 
Philadelphia;  Lord  Richmond  collection, 
London. 

MAGER,     (Charles)     Gus,     Sand     Brook, 

N.  J.;  h.  80  Glen  Ave.,  Wyoming.  N.  J. 
P.— Born  Newark,  N.  J.,  Oct.  21,  1878. 
Member:  Newark  AL;  Peoples'  Art 
Guild.   N.   Y.;   S.Indp.A. 

MAGONIGLE,  Edith  M.  (Mrs.  H.  Van 
Buren  Magonigle).  829  Park  Ave..  New 
York.   N.   Y. 

Mural  P.— Born  Brooklyn.  N.  Y.,  May 
11.  1877.  Member:  N.  A.  Women 
PS.  Work:  Frieze  on  Administra- 
tion Bldg.,  Essex  County  Park  Commis- 
sion.  Newark,    N.    J. 

MAGONIGLE,  H.  Van  Buren,  101  Park 
Ave.;  h.  829  Park  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y 
P.,  A.,  W.— Born  Bergen  Heights,  N.  J., 
Oct.  17.  1867.  Pupil  of  Vaux,  Radford. 
Charles  C.  Haight.  McKim.  Mead,  and 
White.  Member:  AIA;  Architectu- 
ral League  of  Kentucky;  Society  of 
Beaux-Arts  Architects;  Alumni  Ameri- 
can Academy  in  Rome.  Works  : 
McKinley  National  Memorial,  Canton, 
Ohio;  National  Maine  Monument,  New 
York;    Firemen's    Memorial,    New   York. 

MAHONEY.  John  H.,  909  Lexington  Ave.. 
Indianapolis,    Ind. 
S.— Member:   Ind.    SS. 


495 


MAHONY 


WHO'S   WHO  IIS  ART 


MANSHIP 


MAHONY,  Felix,  Conn.  Ave.  and  M  St.; 
h.  The  Champlain,  1424  K  St.,  Wash- 
ington,   D.    C. 

P.,  I.,  L.,  T.— Born  New  York,  N.  T. 
Pupil  of  Steinlen  in  Paris.  Member: 
"Wash.  AC;  Beachcombers;  Province- 
town  A. A.  Director,  National  School 
of  Fine  and  Applied  Art,  Washington, 
D.    C. 

MAINE,  Henry  C,  210  Oxford  St.,  Roches- 
ter, N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:  Rochester  AC. 

MAJOR,  Ernest  L.,  Fenway  Studios,  Bos- 
ton,   Mass. 

P.,  T.— Born  Washington,  D.  C,  1864. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.,  and  Boulanger 
and  Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Member: 
Boston  AC;  Boston  GA.  Instructor  in 
Mass.  Normal  Art  School,  Boston. 
Awards  :  Silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp., 
■San  F.,  1915;  Bok  prize,  PAFA,  1917. 

MAKIELSKI,  Leon  A.,  R.  F.  D.  5,  Geddes 
Ave.,  Ann  Arbor,  Mich. 
P.— Born  Morris  Run,  Pa.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
Julian  Academy  and  Grande  Chau- 
miere  Academy  in  Paris.  Awards  : 
Traveling  John  Quincy  Adams  Scholar- 
ship, AIC,  1908;  2nd  prize,  1918;  1st 
prize,  1920,  Detroit  Inst,  of  Arts.  In- 
structor in  Arch.,   U.   of  Mich. 

MALCOM,  Thalia  W.  (Mrs.  Donald  C. 
Malcom),  114  East  66th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  care  of  Morgan  Harjes, 
14  Place  Vendome,  Paris,  France. 
P.— Born  New  York  City,  Sept.  10, 
1883.  Pupil  of  Randall  Davey  and  Albert 
Andr6. 

MALLISON,    Euphame   C(Iason),   30  West 

54th  St.,  New  York.  N.  Y. 

P.,    C. — Born   Baltimore,    Md.,    Apr.    30, 

1895. 

MALLONEE,  Miss  Jo,  39  West  39th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Stratton, 
Me. 

P.,  C— Born  Stockton,  N.  Y.;  Sept.  4, 
1892.  Pupil  of  G.  Bridgman.  Mem- 
ber:    ASL  of  N.Y.;   Lg.   of  N.Y.A. 

MALM,  Gustav  N.,  Malm  Studio,  Linds- 
borg,   Kan. 

P.,  I.,  C,  W. — Born  Svarttorp,  Sweden, 
Jan.  20,  1869.  Studied  in  Sweden. 
Member:  Smoky  Hill  Art  Club.  Au- 
thor and  illustrator  of  "Charlie  John- 
son," a  study  of  the  Swedish  emigrant. 

MALONE,  Laetitia  Herr  (Mrs,  John  E. 
Malone,  Lancaster,  Pa. 
P.,  I. — Born  Lancaster,  T's,.,  May  30, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Mora,  Beaux,  An- 
shutz  and  McCarter  at  PAFA.  M  e  m- 
ber:  Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila.  Alli- 
ance. 

MANDL.  A(doiph),  2336  Columbia  Ave., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P.— Born  Munich,  July  13,  1894.  Pupil 
of  Daniel  Garber  and  LeRoy  Ireland. 
Member:    Fellowship    PAFA. 

MANGRAVITE,    Joseph    G.,    9    East    59th 
St.,   New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 


MANIGAULT,     E(dward>     Middieton,    130 

West   57th   St.,   New  York,   N.   Y.;   sum- 
mer,   Colebrook,    N.    H. 
P. — Born    London,    Ontario,    Can.,    June 
14,  1S87.  Pupil  of  Kenneth  Hayes  Miller. 

MANLEY,  Thomas   P.,  38   St.  Luke's  PI., 

Montclair,   N.   J. 

P.,  E.— Born  Buffalo.  N.  Y.,  Nov.  29, 
1853.  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member: 
NAC;  NYWCC.  Award:  Bronze 
medal  for  etchings,  St.  Louis  Exp..  1904. 
Work  in:  Montclair  Art  Association, 
and  the  Yale  Club,  New  York. 

MANN,    Edith    Marian,    "ill   Winona   Ave., 
Germantown,   Philadelphia,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:       Fellowship       PAFA, 
1916. 

MANNHEIM.  Jean,  500  Arroyo  Drive. 
Pasadena,  Cal. 

P. — Born  Kreuznach,  Germany.  Nov..  18. 
1862.  Pupil  of  Ecole  Delecluse,  Cola- 
rossi,  London  School  of  Art.  Mem- 
ber: Cal.  A.C.  Awards:  Gold 
medal,  Seattle,  Exp.,  1909;  gold  and 
silver  medals,  San  Diego  Exp.,  1915. 
Represented  in  Denver  (Colo.)  Museum. 

MANOIR,  Irving  K.,  4  East  Ohio  St.; 
821  North  Trumbull  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  I.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Apr.  28,  1891. 
Pupil  of  Wellington  Reynolds,  H.  M. 
Walcott,  and  AIC.  Member:  Chi- 
cagro  SA;  Chicago  AC.  Work  :  "Blue 
Hills,"  in  Joliet  (111.)  Public  Library; 
mural  decoration  in  Vincennes  (Ind.) 
High  School.  Teacher  at  Chicago  Art 
Institute. 

MANON,  Estelle  Ream,  716i^  Tely  St.; 
h.  2405  Patee  St.,  St.  Joseph,  Mo. 
P.,  T.— Born  Lincoln,  111.,  May  11,  1884. 
Pupil  of  William  M.  Chase  and  Charles 
W.  Hawthorne.  Member:  St.  Jo- 
seph AL  and  Oklahoma  AL.  Head  of 
art  department,  Oklahoma  City  High 
School. 

MANSFIELD.  Blanche  McManus  (Mrs. 
Francis  Miltoun  Mansfield),  9  Rue  Fal- 
guiere,   Paris,  France. 

I.,  P. — Born  East  Felicinna,  La.,  Feb. 
2.    1870.      Studied    in    Paris.       Specialty, 

•  book  and  periodical  illustration.  Au- 
thor "The  American  Woman  Abroad," 
"Our  French   Cousins,"    etc. 

MANSFIELD,  Louise  B(uckingham),  368 
Hancock  St.,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P..  L— Born  Le  Roy,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  16, 
1876.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber: N.  A.  Women  PS;  Brooklyn  SA; 
Brooklyn  WCC;  ASL  of  N.  Y. 

MANSHIP,  Paul,  42  Washington  Mews, 
New    York,    N.    Y. 

S.— Born  St.  Paul,  Minn.,  Dec.  25.  1885. 
Member:  NSS  1912:  N.Y.Arch.Lg. 
1913;  ANA  1914,  NA  1916.  Awards: 
American  Academy  In  Rome  schol- 
arship, 1909-12;  Barnett  prize,  NAD, 
1913;  Widener  gold  medal,  PAFA, 
1914;  gold  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915;  Helen  Foster  Barnett  prize, 
NAD,  1917,  Work:  "Centaur  and 
Nymph."  Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  "The  Duck  Girl."  bronze  foun- 
tain. Fairmount  Park,  Philadelphia: 
"Centaur  and  Dryad"  and  "Flight  of 
Night,"    Detroit  Institute   of  Arts;    "In- 


496 


MANSON 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


MARSCHALL 


dian  and  Pronghorn  Antelope"  and 
"Dancing  Girl  and  Fawns,"  Art  In- 
stitute of  Chicago;  City  Art  Museum, 
St.  Louis;  Pratt  Institute,  Brooklyn; 
"Playfulness,"  Minneapolis  Institute  of 
Art;  "Dancer  and  Gazelles,"  Cleveland 
Museum;  Luxembourg,  Paris,  also  Cor- 
coran Gallery  of  Art,  Washington,  D. 
C;  designer  of  Civic  Forum  medal; 
J.  P.  Morgan  Memorial,  Metropolitan 
Museum  of  Art.  Portrait  of  John  D. 
Rockefeller. 

MANSON,   Harold,  Calverton,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  e  m  b  e  r  :     S.Indp.A. 

MANUEL,     Margaret,    64    East    90th    St., 
New  York,   N.   Y.    (E.) 

MANY,   Alexis   B.,   826   Connecticut  Ave., 
Washington,    D.    C. 

P. — Born  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  Aug.  10, 
1879.  Member:  Salma.C;  Wash. 
SA;  Wash.  AC.  Awards:  Bronze 
medal,  S.  Wash.  A.,  1921;  Corcoran 
prize,   S.   Wash.  A.,  1921. 

MANYARD,     Adolph     Best,     725    Seventh 
Ave..    New    York,    N.    Y. 
P.— M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

MAQUARRE,      D.,      224a     Sixth     Avenue, 
Brooklyn,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

MARAFFI,      Lulgl,     1311     Christian     St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

S.,  C— Born  Aversa,  Italy,  Dec.  4,  1891. 
Pupil  of  Grafly.  Member:  Graphic 
Sketch  C,  Phila.  Award  :  Steward- 
son  prize  and  two  Cresson  Scholar.ships 
PAFA.  Work:  Bronze  portrait  of 
Edward  T.  Stotesbury,  Drexel  Bank, 
Philadelphia. 

MARCUS    (Edwin).   1604   University  Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y. ;   summer,    South   Bay 
House,   Blue  Point,  L.  I.,   N.   Y. 
Cartoonist — Born     New     York,     N.     Y., 
March  16,  1885.     Pupil  of  Twachtman. 

MARCUS,    Peter,   30   West    59th    St.,    New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  E..  W.— Born  in  New  York  City, 
Dec.  23,  1889.  Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux 
Arts,  Ecole  des  Beaux  Arts  Decoratifs 
In  Paris;  Charles  H.  Davis;  Henry  W. 
Ranger.  Member:  N.Y.  Arch.  Lg. ; 
Conn.  AFA.;  Lotos  C;  Salma.  C;  New 
Haven  PCC.  Award  :  Hon.  men- 
tion. Conn.  AFA,  1918.  Author  and 
illustrator  of  "New  York,  the  Nation's 
Metropolis." 

MARGULIES,     Joseph,     974     East     178th 
St.,  New  York,   N.  Y.    (E.) 

MARGULIES,    Pauline,    Cooper    Hall,    20 
East  Seventh  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born    New    York,    N.    Y.,    Sept.    1, 
1895.     Pupil  of  Abastenia  Eberle,  G.  W. 
Brewster    and    Fraser. 

MARIE-TERESA  (Sister),  The  College  of 
St.  Catherine,  St.  Paul,  Minn. 
P.,  T.— Born  Stillwater,  Minn.,  Apr.  27, 
1877.  Pupil  of  New  York  School  of  Art; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.;  PAFA;  Robert  Henri; 
studied  in  Florence  and  Munich. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention  for  painting, 
St.  Paul  Inst.,  1916;  bronze  medal  for 
oil,  St.  Paul  Inst.,  1918;  hon.  mention, 
Minn.  State  Art,  1919;  silver  medal  and 
prize,  Minnesota  AA,  1920.  Mem- 
ber:    St.    Paul  AS;    College  AA. 


MARIN,  John,  291  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  h.  4  Sixth  St.,  Weehawken,  N.  J. 
P.,  E.— Born  Rutherford,  N.  J.,  1875. 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Dele- 
cluse  in  Paris.  Member:  P-G;  Paris 
Salon  d'Automne,  1908.  Award  : 
Prize,  Fellowship,  PAFA  1900.  Work: 
"Mills  of  Meaux,"  owned  by  French 
Government;  "Falling  Leaves,  Au-' 
tumn,"  San  Francisco  Art  Museum; 
Art   Institute  of  Chicago. 

MARK,  Louis,  130  West  57th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  L. — Born  In  Hungary,  Aug.  25,  1867. 
Pupil  of  Bouguereau  and  Robert-Fleury 
In  Paris.  Member:  NAC.  Awards: 
Silver  medal  and  hon.  mention,  Paris; 
diploma  d'honneur,  Torino;  gold  medals 
at  Munich.  Budapest,  San  Francisco. 
Work:  "Trinkets"  and  "Fever,"  Roy- 
al Museum,  Hungary;  "Idyll,"  Buffalo 
Academy  of  Fine  Arts;  "Col.  Henry  Wa- 
terson,"  New  York  Manhattan  Club. 

MARKHAM,  Charlotte  (Hobbs),  704  Mar- 
shall St.,  Milwaukee;  summer,  521 
North  5th  St.,  Manitowoc,  Wis. 
P.,  T. — Born  Manitowoc,  Wis.,  Jan.  22, 
1892.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  Wis. 
PS. 

MARKHAM,  Marion  E(sther),  430  La  Fay- 
ette St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T.— Born  Syracuse,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  15, 
1875.  Pupil  of  Chase;  Syracuse  Univ. 
Member:  S.  Indp.  A.  Work: 
"Girl  in  Red"  and  "Portrait  of  a  Child," 
Syracuse  Mus3um   of  Fine  Arts. 

MARKS,  Stella  Lewis  (Mrs.  Montague 
Marks),  Bryant  Park  Studios,  80  West 
40th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Brighton, 
Melbourne,  Australia. 
P. — Born  Melbourne,  Australia,  Nov.  27, 
1892.  Member:  R.  M.  S..  London ;  N.  A. 
Women  PS.  Work:  "H.  R.  H.  The 
Princess  Patricia  of  Connaught,"  owned 
by  H.   R.   H.   The  Duke  of  Connaught. 

MARR,  Carl,  Royal  Academy  of  Fine 
Arts,  Munich,  Bavaria. 
P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  Feb. 
14,  1858.  Pupil  of  Weimar  Academy 
under  Schaus;  Berlin  Academy  under 
Gussow;  Munich  under  Seitz  and  Llnden- 
schmit.  Member:  Academies  of 
Munich,  Berlin,  Athens,  etc.:  Nat. Inst. A. 
Jj.  Awards:  Gold  medal,  Prize  Fund 
Exhibition,  New  York,  1886;  medals, 
Vienna,  Berlin,  Munich,  Dresden,  Ma- 
drid, Salzburg,  Barcelona,  Antwerp, 
Budapest;  first  medal,  IJ&ge  1905. 
Work  :  "Dusk,"  Museum  of  Art,  To- 
ledo; "Gossip"  and  "The  Mystery  of 
Life,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York. 
Asst.  Director,  Academy  of  Fine  Arts, 
Munich. 

MARS,  Ethel,  34  Rue  St.  Louis,  Vernon, 
Eure,    France. 

P.,  Eng.,  C— Born  Springfield,  111. 
M  ember:  P-G;  Societe  des  Dessina- 
teurs  Humoristes,  and  Salon  d'Automne, 
Paris.  Represented  in  collection  of  the 
French  Government.  Specialty,  colored 
woodblock  prints. 

MARSCHALL,      Frederick,     Great     Kills, 
S.  I.,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P.— M  ember:  A.Aid  S. 


497 


MARSCHENER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


MASON 


MARSCHENER,     Arthur    A.,    1720    Field 
Field  Ave.,    Detroit,    Mich. 
P.,    E.— Born    Detroit,    Mich.,    Apr.    11, 

1884.  Pupil  of  J.  P.  Wicker.  Mem- 
ber:    Chicago  SE. 

MARSH,  Mrs.  Alice  Randall,  Nutley,  N. 
Rochelle,  N.  Y. ;  Sakonnet  Point,  R.  I. 
Min.P.— Born  Coldwater,  Mich.  Pupil 
of  AIC;  Merson,  Collin,  Whistler  and 
MacMonnies  in  Paris.  M  e  n\  b  e  r  :  Am. 
S.Min.P. 

MARSH,    Charles    H(oward),   care   of   the 
College     of     Fine     Arts,     University     of 
Redlands,     Redlands,     Calif.;     summer, 
Laguna   Beach,    Calif. 
P.,    E.,    T.— Born   Magnolia,   la.,   Apr.    8, 

1885.  Pupil  of  W.  V.  Cahill,  Guy  Rose, 
Clarence  Hinckle,  andStickney  Memo- 
rial School  of  Pasadena.  Member: 
Calif.  AC;  Laguna  Beach  AA. 
Award  :  First  prize.  Southern  Cali- 
fornia Fair  Exhibition,  Riverside,  Calif,, 
1920. 

MARSH,  Fred  Dana,  Wykagyl  Park.  New 
Rochelle,  N.  Y.;  Sakonnet  Point.  R.  I. 
P.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  April  6,  1872. 
Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  SAA  1902; 
ANA  1906;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1902;  Mural  P. 
1904.  Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal.  Pan- Am. Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901;  bronze  medal.  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904.  Work:  "Berkshire," 
Rochester  Art  Gallery;  decorations  in 
Hotel  McAlin,  New  York;  United 
Engineering  Societies  Bldg. ;  Museum  of 
Safety,   New  York,   N.   Y. 

MARSH,    Mary    E.,   10891/2    W.   35th  Place, 
Los  Angeles,   Calif. 

P. — Born  Cincinnati,  Ohio.  Pupil  of 
Birger  Sandzen,  Chicago  AFA,  Cincin- 
nati Art  Academy.  Member:  Calif. 
AC;  Laguna  Beach  Art  Asso.  Assist- 
ant Art  Curator,  Los  Angeles  Museum. 

MARSHALL,  Frank  H(oward),  P.  O.  Box 

418,  Jamestown,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  in  England,  1866.  Pupil  of 
ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Chase  School,  New  York; 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under  Lau- 
rens; studied  in  Madrid  and  London. 
Member:    Salma.C.    1910. 

MARSHALL,    Frank    W(arren),    652    An- 

gell  St..  Providence,  R.  I. 
P.,  I.— Born  Providence,  R.  I.,  Sept.  24, 
1866.  Pupil  of  R.  I.  School  of  Design; 
Julian  Academy,  Paris.  Member: 
Providence  AC;  Providence  WCC.  In- 
structor of  drawing  at  Rhode  Island 
School  of  Design;  art  editor.  Providence 
"Journal." 

MARSHALL,    May   C,   1921  K  St.,    N.  W., 
Washington,    D.    C. 
P.— M  ember:     S.  Wash.  A. 

MARSHALL,    Rachel.      See    Mrs.    Arthur 
L,    Hawks. 

MARTIN,    Easoin    J.,    340    East    61st    St., 
New   York.    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

MARTIN,    Edna    M.,    227   Fall   River  Ave., 
Seekonk,   Mass. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence,    WCC. 

MARTIN,    Paul,    141    East    27th    St.,    New 
York,   N.  Y.    (P.) 


MARTINEZ,  Xavler  (Timoteo  Martinez 
y  Orozco),   816   Scenic  Ave.,  Piedmont, 

Cal. 

P.,  Etcher,  T.— Born  Guadalajara,  Mex- 
ico, Feb.  7,  1874.  Pupil  of  Mark  Hop- 
kms  Inst.,  San  Francisco;  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts  under  GerOme  and  Carri^re. 
Member:  San  F.  Sketch  C;  Bohe- 
mian C.  Awards:  Gold  medal,  San 
F.Art  Assoc.  1895;  hon.  mention,  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  hon.  mention  for  etching, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F..  1915. 

MARTI  NO,  Michel,  1931  Broadway,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  62  Lyons  St.,  New 
Haven,   Conn. 

S. — Born  Alvignano,  Casserta,  Italy, 
Feb.  22,  1889.  Pupil  of  Lee  Lawrie  and 
H.  Kitson.  Award  :  English  Fellow- 
ship prize  to  Yale  University.  Work: 
"Landing  of  Pilgrims,"  "Battle  of  Lex- 
ington," Strong  School,  New  Haven; 
White  Plains  High  School  Memorial 
Tablet;  commemorative  medal,  Ameri- 
can Public  Health  Society;  Memorial 
Flag  Staff,   Brooklyn,   N.  Y. 

MARTI  NY,  Philip,  400  West  23rd  St..  New 
York,   N.  Y. 

S. — Born  Alsace,  then  France,  May  19, 
1858;  came  to  America  in  the  early 
eighties.  Pupil  of  Eug&ne  Dock  in 
France;  Augustus  Saint  Gaudens  in 
United  States.  Member:  ANA 
1902;  SAA  1891;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  Work  : 
Doors  for  St.  Bartholomew's  Church, 
New  York;  McKinley  Monument, 
Springfield,  Mass.;  Soldiers  and  Sailors 
Monument,  Jersey  City,  N.  J.;  portrait 
statue  of  ex-Vice-President  G.  A.  Ho- 
bart,  Paterson,  N.  J.;  sculpture  in  Hall. 
of  Records.  New  York;  two  groups  in 
Chamber  of  Commerce,  New  York. 

MARULIS,  Athan,  211  Fourth  Ave., 
North,  Seattle,  Wash. 
P. — Born  Athens,  Greece,  Dec.  25,  1889. 
Pupil  of  Manos,  Paul  M.  Gustin,  Yasu- 
shi  Tanaka.  Member:  Seattle  Fine 
Arts   Soc. 

MARVIN,   F.   H.,  Provincetown,  Mass. 
P.— Born  in  New  York  City.    Work  In: 
Toledo  Museum. 

MARWEDE,    Richard    L.,    976    Anderson 
Ave.,   New   York,   N.   Y. 
P.— Born      New      York,      N.      Y.,      Feb. 
5,  1884.    Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.     Mem- 
ber: ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Alliance. 

MASE,    C(arolyn)    C(ampbe!i),    396   Gene- 
see St.,  Utica,   N.  Y. 

Landscp.  P. — Born  Matteawan,  N.  Y. 
Pupil  of  J.  H.  Twachtmaa.  Member: 
Conn.  AFA;  N.  A.  Women  PS. 

MASON,  John,  1502  North  17th  St.,  Phila- 
delphia,  Pa. 

P.,  D.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  1868. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under 
Laurens  and  Constant.  Member: 
Alliance.  Award  :  Bronze  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1889.  Work:  Decoration 
of  dining  room  of  Harmonic  Club,  New 
York;  "Portrait  of  Admiral  Dewey"  and 
"Portrait  of  Major  S.  Ellis  Briggs," 
in   Armory,    New   York  City. 


498 


MASON 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


MATTHEWS 


MASON,  Mary  (Stuard)  Townsend,  8233 
Seminole  Ave.,  Chestnut  Hill,  Phila- 
delphia,  Pa. 

P.— Born  Zanesville,  O.,  Mar.  21,  1886. 
Pupil  of  Chase  and  Breckenrictfee  at 
PAFA;  Maryland  Inst.,  Baltimore. 
Member:  Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila. 
Alliance;  Plastic  C,  1917.  Awards: 
Cresson  traveling  scholarship,  PAFA, 
1909;  Gold  medal,  Plastic  C,  1921. 
"Work:  "Blue  and  Gold,"  Fellowship 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine 
Arts. 

MASON,  Maud  M.,  18  East  9th  St.,  New 
York,    N.   Y. 

P.,  C,  T.— Born  Russellville,  Ky., 
Mar.  18,  1867.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Dow  and 
Snell  in  New  York;  Brangwyn  in  Lon- 
don. Member:  MacD.C.;  Boston 
SAC;  N.Y.  Soc.  C;  N.  A.  Women  PS; 
NAC;  Pen  and  Brush  C.  A  wa  r  d  s  : 
Gold  medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915; 
bronze  medal,  NAC,  1920. 

MASON,  Robert  Lindsay,  230  East  Church 
Ave.,  Knoxville,  Tenn. 
I..  P..  W.— Born  Knoxville.  Tenn..  June 
5,  1874.  Pupil  of  Howard  Pyle.  Mem- 
ber: Nicholson  Art  Lg-. ;  Wilmington 
FAS.  Award  :  Rush  Strong  medal, 
Southern  Appalachian  Exposition.  Il- 
lustrations for  books  and  magazines, 
"Harper's."  etc.;  author  of  short  stories 
and  articles  on  out-of-door  life,  with  il- 
lustrations. 

MASON.  William  Albert,  212  West  Chel- 
ten  Ave..  Germantown.  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.,  T.— Born  Dec.  25,  1855.  Member: 
ACPhila.;  Fellowship  PAFA  (assoc). 
Director  of  drawing,  public  schools  of 
Philadelphia. 

MASSIE,     Julia     M.,     5919     Ichoripitoulas 
St.,    New   Orleans,    La. 
P. — Born   in   Mississippi,    Nov.    27,    1875. 
Member:     N.     O.     AA.       Award  : 
N.   O.   AA  gold  medal. 

MASTERS.  Frank  B.,  38  East  22nd  St., 
New  York.  N.  Y. ;  summer,  10  Fenwick 
Road,  Winchester,  Mass. 
I. — Born  Watertown.  Mass.,  Sept.  25. 
1873.  Pupil  of  C.  H.  Woodburv  and 
Howard  Pyle.  Member:  SI  1907; 
Salma.C. 

MASTON,  R.  Thomas,  246  Conkey  Ave., 
Rochester,    N.    Y. 

P.^ — Born  Greenfield,  Ind.  Pupil  of 
E.  E.  Siebert.  Member  :  Rochester 
AC. 

MATCHEREK,    Karl    A.,    204    South    Re- 
becca St.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember  :     Pitts.  AA. 

MATHESON,  Johanna,  2021  East  Mercer 
St.,    Seattle,   Wash.    (P.) 

MATHEWS.  Arthur  F(rank),  670  Fell 
St.,  San  Francisco,  Cal. 
P.,  T.— Born  Wisconsin,  Oct.  1,  1860. 
Pupil  of  Boulanger  in  Paris;  also  stud- 
ied architecture.  Work  :  Mural  deco- 
ration (15  panels),  Oakland  (Cal.) 
Library:  mural  paintings.  California 
State  Capitol  Bldg.  :4  triptych  panels. 
University  of  Calif.  Libr. ;  in  The  Me- 
chanics' Inst.,  Rochester;  Library  of 
Stanford    University;    decorations    wall 


and  dome  of  Commanding  Hall,  Ma- 
sonic Temple,  San  Francisco;  "Cali- 
fornia Landscape,"  Metropolitan  Muse- 
um, New  York.  Director  California 
School  of  Design  1890-1906;  managing 
editor  "Philopolis  Magazine." 

MATHEWS,  F(erdinand)  Schuyler,  17 
Frost  St.,  Cambridge,  Mass. 
P.,  C.  I..  W.— Born  New  Brighton,  S.  I., 
N.  Y.,  May  30,  1854.  Pupil  of  Cooper 
Union  in  New  York;  traveled  in  Italy. 
Author  and  illustrator:  "The  Golden 
Flower,"  "Familiar  Trees,"  "Fieldbook 
of  American  Wild  Flowers,"  "Fieldbook 
of  Wild  Birds  and  Their  Music," 
"Fieldbook  of  American  Shrubs  and 
Trees."      Botanical    artist    on    stafC    of 

■  Gray  Herbarium,  Harvard  University 
Specialty,  landscape  in  water  color  and 
illumination. 

MATHEWS,  Lucia  Klelnhans  (Mrs.  Ar- 
thur F.  Mathews),  670  Fell  St.,  San 
Francisco,    Cal. 

P.,  I.,  C. — Born  San  Francisco,  Aug.  29, 
1872.  Pupil  of  A.  F.  Mathews,  Whistler. 
Award:  Silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915. 

MATHEWSON,  Frank  C(onvers),  29  Wa- 
terman St.,  Providence,  R.  I.;  summer, 
Matunuck,  South  Kingston,  R.  I. 
P. — Born  Barrington,  R.  I.,  May  12, 
1862.  Pupil  of  Laurens  and  National 
School  of  Decorative  Art  in  Paris. 
Member:  NYWCC;  Pi'ovidence,  AC; 
Providence  WCC;  Chicago  WCC;  Alli- 
ance. Award  :  Sullivan  prize,  Provi- 
dence, 1903.  Work:  "Ogunquit  Pas- 
ture," Rhode  Island  School  of  Design, 
Providence;  "The  Weisser  Thurm," 
Boston  Art  Club. 

MATHEWSON,    Lucy    Stickney,    1755    N 
St.,    Washington,    D.    C. 
P.— M  ember:   Wash.   WCC. 

MATHIEU,  Hubert,  South  Dakota  State 
College,    Brookings,    South    Dakota.    (I.) 

MATHUS,     Henry,    39    Henry    St.,    Edge- 
wood,    Providence,   R.   I. 
Lith.— M  ember:  Providence  WCC. 

MATSEN,  Ida  M.,  4910  Burk  Ave.,  Seat- 
tle,   Wash.    (P.) 

MATTEL  Virgilio  P.,  19  Mayor  St.,  Ponce, 
Porto   Rico. 

P.— Born  Porto  Rico,  June  30,  1898. 
M  e  m  b  e  r.  S.Indp.A.  Award  :  First 
prize  Exhibition,  Ponce,  1919. 

MATTHeNa/S,  Anna  Lou,  6016  EUis  Ave., 
Chicago,   111. 

S.,  P..  I.— Born  Chicago,  111.  Pupil  of 
Taft  and  Vanderpoel  at  AIC;  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts  and  under  Collin,,  Simon 
and  Garrido  in  Paris.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;  SW  Sc.  Awards:  Hon. 
mention,  Minn.  State  Art  Com.,  1913; 
second  sculpture  prize,  Minn.  State  Art. 
Com.  1914.  Represented  in  St.  Paul 
Institute    of    Art. 

MATTHEWS,  William  P.,  643  West  215th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  St..  Louis.  Mo..  1878..  Pupil 
of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts.  Mem- 
ber: St.  Louis  AG;  2x4  Soc;  Soc. 
of  Ancients.  Awards:  Ives  landscape 
prize,  St.  Louis  AG,  1914  and  1915. 


499 


MATTOCKS 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


MAYER 


MATTOCKS,  Muriel,  4106  Lark  St.,  San 
Diego,  Calif. 

P.,  I. — Born  Hastings,  Neb.  Pupil  of 
M.  C.  Carr,  John  S.  Ankeney,  Birger 
Sandzen,  AIC. 

MATZEN,  Herman  N.,  Cleveland  School 
of  Art,  Cleveland,  O. 

S.,  T.— Born  m  i^enrnark,  July  15,  1861. 
Pupil  of  Munich  and  Berlin  Academies 
of  Fine  Art.  Member:  NSS;  NAC; 
Cleveland  SA.  Awards  :  Second 
medal,  Berlin,  1895;  first  medal, 
Berlin  Exp.,  1896.  Work:  "War" 
and  "Peace,"  Indianapolis  Soldiers 
and  Sailors  Monument;  "Schiller 
Monument,"  Detroit;  "Law"  and  "Jus- 
tice," Akron  (O.)  County  Court  House; 
"Wagner  Monument,"  Cleveland;  Burke 
Mausoleum;  "Moses"  and  "Gregory," 
Cleveland  Court  House;  "Cain  and 
Abel,"  Lake  County  Court  House;  Tom 
L.  Johnson  monument,  Cleveland  Pub- 
lic Square;  Holden  Mausoleum;  Thomas 
White  Memorial,   Cleveland. 

MATZKE,  Albert,  244  West  14th  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 
P.,  I. — Born    Indianapolis,    Ind.,    Aug.    8, 

1882.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Du 
Mond  and  George  Bridgman. 

MATZKES,  F.  W.,  115  Natchez  St.,  Pitts- 
burgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember  :    Pittsburgh   AA. 

MATZKIN,   Meyer,  110  Tremont  St.,  Bos- 
ton, Mass.;  29  Homestead  St.,  Roxbury, 
Mass. 
S.— Born    in   Russia,    Nov.    25,    1880. 

MAUCH,  F.  A.,  422  Kingsboro  St.,  Pitts- 
burgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

MAUNSBACH,  Olin  C,  104  West  40th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

MAURER.  Alfred  H(enry),  9  rue  Falguiere 
Paris,  France;  404  West  43rd  'St.,  New 
York,   N.  Y. 

P.— Born  New  York  Apr.  21,  1868.  Pu- 
pil of  NAD  under  Ward;  studied  In 
Paris.  Member:  Salma.C.  1901; 
Paris  AAA;  Paris  SAP.  Awards: 
Inness  prize,  Salma.  C,  1900;  first  prize 
($1,500).  C.  L  Pittsburgh,  1901;  first 
prize,  Worcester,  1901;  bronze  medal, 
Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver 
medal,  St.  Louis,  1904;  third  medal, 
Ll&ge  Exp.,  1905;  R-old  medal,  Int.  Exp., 
Munich,  1905.  Represented  in  Memorial 
Hall  Museum,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

MAURY,  Cornelia  Field,  5815  Pennsyl- 
vania Ave.,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 
P. — Born  New  Orleans,  La.  Pupil  of 
St.  Louis  School  of  Pine  Arts;  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  St. 
Louis  AG.  Represented  in  City  Art 
Museum,  and  Public  Library,  St.  Louis. 

MAXWELL,   Guida    B.,   180   Manheim    St., 
Germantown,    Philadelphia,    Pa. 
P.— Born     Philadelphia,     Oct.     1,     1896. 
Pupil    of    Fred    Wagner.      Member: 
Plastic  C. ;  Phila.  Alliance. 

MAY,     Beulah,    Fruit    and    Mabury    Sts.; 
h.   R.  F.   D.  No.  1,   Santa  Ana,   Calif. 
S. — Born    Hiawatha,    Kansas,    June    26, 

1883.  Pupil  of  Lorado  Taft,  Wm.  Chase, 


Charles  Grafly.  Member:  Calif. 
AC;   West   Coast  Arts. 

MAY,   Charles  C,  15  East  40th   St.,   New 
Yorti',  N.   Y.;  h.   Pleasantville,  N.  Y. 
P.,    A.— Born    Lee,     Mass.,    July,     1887. 
Member:     N.Y.   Arch.    Lg. 

MAY,  Thomas,  care  of  "Detroit  Journal," 
Detroit,   Mich. 

Cartoonist. — Born  Detroit,  June  30,  1860. 
On  staff  "Detroit  Journal"  since  1892. 

MAYER,    A.    E.,    21   West   58th    St.,    New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

MAYER,  Beia,  366  Fifth  Ave.;  h.  33  Ver- 
milyea  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  sum- 
mer. Beacon  Hill,  Port  Washington, 
L.   I.,   N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Hungary,  Aug.  5,  1887.  Pu- 
pil of  C.  Y.  Turner,  Olinsky  and  Ward. 
Member  :      Salma.    C. 

MAYER,  Casper,  American  Museum  of 
Natural  History,  1931  Broadway,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  24  Carver  St.,  Astoria, 
L.   I.,   N.   Y. 

S.— Born  in  Bavaria,  Dec.  24,  1871. 
Pupil  of  J.  Q.  A.  Ward,  schools  of 
Cooper  Union,  and  NAD  In  New  York. 
Award  :  Silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904.  Makes  anthropological  groups  for 
American  Museum  of  Natural  History. 

MAYER,     Edward     A(lbert),     2242     North 
Tripp  Ave.,   Chicago,  111. 
P. — Born   Columbus,    O.,    Jan.    8,    1889. 

MAYER.  H(enr)y,  15  West  67th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

Caricaturist. — Born  Worms-on -Rhine, 
Germany,  July  18,  1868;  son  of  London 
merchant;  came  to  United  States  in 
1886.  Member:  Salma.  C.  1898. 
Work:  "Impressions  of  the  Passing 
Show,"  New  York  "Times,"  1904-14; 
editor-in-chief  "Puck."  Author:  "A 
Trip  to  Toyland,"  "The  Autobiography  of 
a  Monkey,"  "Adventures  of  a  Japanese 
Doll,"  etc.  Contributor  to  many  week- 
lies in  the  United  States  and  Europe. 
Originator  of  "Travelaughs"  for  mov- 
ing pictures.  Creator  of  "Tiss  me" 
Doll. 

MAYER,  Louis,  253  West  42d  St..  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  R.  F.  D.  No.  2, 
Hopewell  Jet.,   N.   Y. 

P.,  S.— Born  Milwaukee,  Nov.  26,  1868. 
Pupil  of  Max  Thedy  in  Weimar;  Paul 
Hoecker  in  Munich;  Constant  and 
Laurens  in  Paris.  Member:  Inter- 
national Society  AL;  Wisconsin  PS; 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal  for  sculpture, 
St.  Paul  AI  1915;  silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San  F..  1915..  Work  in:  State 
Historical  collections  at  Des  Moines, 
Iowa  and  Madison.  Wis.;  Public  Li- 
brary, Burlington,  Iowa;  Springer  Col- 
lection, National  Museum.  Washington. 
D.   C;   Milwaukee  Art  Institute. 

MAYER,      Milton,     220     Broadway,     New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

MAYER,    William    G.,    6481    Frankstown 
Ave.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh  AA. 


500 


MAY  FIELD 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


MEIERHANS 


MAYFIELD,  R(obert)  B(ledsoe),  1638 
Dublin  St.,  New  Orleans,  La, 
P.,  Etcher. — Born  Carlinville,  111.,  Jan. 
1,  1869.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of 
Fine  Arts;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris 
under  Lefebvre  and  Constant.  Aw  a  r  d: 
First  gold  medal  of  New  Orleans  Art 
Assoc.  Work  :  "In  the  Studio,"  "The 
Giant  Oak,"  Delgado  Museum  of  Art, 
New  Orleans,  La.  Literary  editor  of  the 
"New    Orleans   Times-Picayune." 

MAYHEW,  Nell  Brooker,  5016  Aldama 
St.,  Los  Angeles,  Cal. 

P..  E.— Born  Astoria.  111.,  April  17,  1875. 
Pupil  of  University  of  Illinois  under 
Newton  A.  Wells;  AI  Chicago  under 
Johansen.  Member:  Calif.  AC;  Chi- 
cago SE;  Calif.  P.M.  Award  :  Medal 
for  color  etching,  Alaska-Yukon  Exp., 
Seattle,    1909. 

MAYNARD,  George  W(illoughby),  3321 
Giles  Place,  Kingsbridge,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Washington,  D.  C,  March  5, 
1843.  Pupil  of  NAD  in  New  York;  Royal 
Acad.  In  Antwerp.  Member:  ANA 
1881,  NA  1885;  SAA  1880;  AWCS;  A. 
Aid  S. ;  Salma.C.  (hon.);  Century  As- 
soc. Awards  :  Temple  gold  medal, 
PAFA  1884;  medal,  American  Art  As- 
soc, New  York,  1888;  Evans  prize, 
AWCS  1889;  designer's  medal,  Co- 
lumbian Exp..  Chicago,  1893;  Shaw 
prize,  SAA  1897;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901.  Work:  Decora- 
tions: "Moses  and  King  David,"  St. 
John's  Church,  Jamaica  Plain,  Mass.; 
"Music  and  Dance,"  Bijou  Theatre, 
Boston;  ceiling  Metropolitan  Opera 
House.  New  York;  frieze.  Appellate 
Court  House,  New  York;  "Adventure," 
"Discovery."  "Conquest,"  "Civilization" 
and  "The  Virtues,"  panels  in  Library 
of  Congress,  Washington;  frieze.  Essex 
Co.  Court  House,  Newark,  N.  J. ;  brass 
Inlay  in  floor,  Entrance  Hall.  Boston 
Public  Library;  brass  inlay  in  floor.  En- 
trance Hall.  Library  of  Columbia  Uni- 
versity, New  York.  Pictures:  "In 
Strange  Seas,"  Metropolitan  Museum. 
New  York;  "Sappho."  Pennsylvania 
Academy.  Philadelphia;  represented  in 
National  Gallery.  Washington;  numer- 
ous portraits  in  public  buildings.  Li- 
brarian of  National  Academy  of  Design. 

MAYNARD,  R(ichard)  F(leld),  33  West 
67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  284 
Genesee  St.,  Utica,  N.  Y. 
Port.P.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Apr.  23,  1875. 
Pupil  of  Chase,  Irving  R.  Wiles  and 
Blum  in  New  York.  Member: 
NYWCC;  MacD.  C;  Allied  AA;  SPNY; 
NAC. 

MAYOR,  Mrs.  Harriet  Hyatt,  Annisquam, 
Mass.;  winter,  Princeton,  N.  J. 
S.— Born  Salem,  Mass.,  Apr,  25.  1868. 
Pupil  of  Henry  H.  Kitson  and  Dennis 
Bunker  In  Boston.  Award  :  Silver 
medal.  Atlanta  Exp.,  1S95.  Specialty, 
portraits. 

MAZIERES,     Marquise    de    Traysseix,    22 

East  89th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y, 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A, 


MAZUR,  Wladysiaw,  1070  Central  Ave., 
Cincinnati,    O, 

S.— Born  Jaslo,  Poland.  May  3.  1874. 
Pupil  of  Academy  of  Fine  Arts  ftt 
Vienna.  Member:  Salon  d'Automne 
1904.  Award:  Bronze  medal,  P.-P. 
PJxp.,  San  F.,  1915, 

MAZZANOVICH,  L(awrence),  Westport, 
Conn, 

P.— Born  California.  Dec.  19,  1872.  Pu- 
pil of  AIC  and  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Me  m- 
ber:  Salma.  C.  1905;  NAC.  1913.  Rep- 
resented in  Hackley  Gallery,  Muskegon, 
Mich.,   and  Chicago  Art  Institute. 

MEADOWS,    Mrs.    Dell,    1133    West    86th 
PL,    Los   Angeles,    Cal, 
P.— M  ember:    Cal.    AC, 

MEAGHER,      M(arion)      T.,      939     Eiffhth 

Ave..  New  York.  N,  Y.;  summer,  Fish- 
ers'   Island,   N,   Y. 

P..  S..  T.— Born  New  York  City.  Pupil 
of  NAD,  Chase,  Beckwith,  R.  Swain 
Gifford  in  New  York,  and  studied  in 
Paris  and  Antwerp.  Artist  to  the  Dept. 
of  Anthropology,  American  Museum  of 
Natural  History  and  New  York  Oph- 
thalmic  College, 

MEARS,  Henrietta  Dunn,  16  Park  Drive, 
Brookline,  Mass.;  summer.  Province- 
town,    Mass. 

P.,  E.— Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  Feb,  28, 
1877.  Pupil  of  Hawthorne  and  Pape. 
Member:  Copley  S.;  Provincetown 
AA, 

MEESER,    Lillian    B.    (Mrs.    Spenser    B. 

Meeser),  Crozer  Campus,  Chester,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Ridley  Park.  Pa.,  July  8.  1864. 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  ASL  of  N.  Y,; 
Worcester  Art  Museum.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Plastic  C;  Phlla. 
Alliance, 

MEGE,  Violette  (Clarisse),  119  West  87th 
St.,    New  York,   N.   Y, 

P.,  S. — Born  in  arrondisement  de  Tizio- 
zon,  Alger,  French  Algiers.  March  19, 
1889.  Pupil  of  Georges  Rochegrosse, 
Ecole  Nationale  des  Beaux  Arts,  Acade- 
mie  Julian,  J.  P.  Laurens,  Humbert,  In 
Paris.  Member:  Societe  des  Ar- 
tistes Francais;  S.Indp.A.  Award: 
Fellowship  of  French  Government, 

MEINSHAUSEN,  George  F.  E.,  4617  Sta- 
tion Ave,,  Norwood,  O. 
P,,  I,,  Wood  Engr, — Born  Achim,  Han- 
over, Germany.  Jan.  6,  1855.  Pupil  of 
Cincinnati  Art  Academy.  Award  : 
Silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 
Work  :  Water  colors,  "The  Phan- 
tom Ship"  and  "The  Life  Boat,"  and 
wood-engravings  of  same.  Art  Muse- 
um, Cincinnati;  prints  in  Carnegie  In- 
stitute, Pittsburgh;  Library  of  Con- 
gress, Washington,  D,  C;  New  York 
Public   Library. 

MEIERHANS,  Joseph,  4924  Eleventh 
Ave..   Brooklyn,   N.  Y. 

P. — Born  in  Ober-Lunkhofen-Oargan, 
Switzerland.  Feb.  22.  1890.  Pupil  of 
A,  N,  Lindenmuth,  John  Sloan.  Mem- 
ber: Lg.  of  N.Y.A,;  S.Indp.A.;  A.S.L, 
of  N.Y, 


501 


MEISSNER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


MERO 


MEISSNER,    Alfred,    3057    North    Christi- 
ana Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
Port.    P.,    I.— Born    in    Chicago    in   1877. 
Pupil  of  AIC.     Member:    Palette  and 
Chisel  C. 

MELCHER,  Mrs.  Bertha  Corbett,  To- 
panga,   Cal. 

I.,  P.— Born  Denver,  Colo.,  Feb.  8,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Volk  in  Minneapolis;  Pyle  at 
Drexel  Institute,  Philadelphia.  Spe- 
cialty, miniatures  and  illustration  of 
children's  books. 

MELCHERS  (J.)  Gar!,  80  West  40th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  and  Fredericksburg, 
Va. 

P.— Born  Detroit,  Mich.,  Aug.  11,  1860. 
Pupil  of  Diisseldorf  Academy,  1877-80; 
Lefebvre  and  Boulanger  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1904,  NA  1906;  Paris 
SAP;  Soc.Nat.des  Beaux-Arts,  Paris; 
Inter.Society  of  Artists,  London;  Munich 
Secession  (cor.);  Berlin  R.Acad.;  Nat. 
Inst.A.L.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention, 
Paris  Salon,  1886;  first  class  medal, 
Amsterdam,  1887;  third  class  medal, 
Paris  Salon,  1888;  first  class  medal, 
Munich,  1888;  grand  prize,  Paris  Exp.. 
1889;  first  prize,  AIC  1891;  medal  of 
honor,  Berlin,  1891;  gold  medal,  ACPhila. 
1892;  medal  of  honor,  Antwerp,  1894; 
Temple  gold  medal,  PAFA  1896;  first 
class  medal,  Vienna,  1898;  gold  medal, 
Pan-Am.Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  gold  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  second  W.  A.  Clark 
prize,  Corcoran  Gal.  1910.  Knight  of  the 
Order  of  St.  Michael  of  Bavaria;  Cheva- 
lier of  the  Legion  of  Honor  of  France 
1895,  Officer  1904;  officer  R.  Prussian 
Order  of  Red  Eagle  1907.  Work:  "Ma- 
ternity" and  "Peasant  Nurse  and  Two 
Children,"  Luxembourg  Museum,  Paris. 
France;  "Penelope,"  and  "Maternity," 
Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington;  "Mother 
and  Child."  Carnegie  Institute.  Pitts- 
burgh; "Skaters,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy,  Philadelphia;  "Portrait  of 
ex-President  Roosevelt,"  National  Gal- 
lery, Washington;  "The  Vespers,"  "The 
Wedding,"  "Portrait  of  Mrs.  Melchers," 
"Ik  Marvel,"  "The  Fencing  Master," 
Institute  of  Arts,  Detroit;  "Portrait  of 
Charles  L.  Hutchinson."  Art  Institute, 
Chicago;  "Madonna."  Metropolitan  Mu- 
seum, New  York;  "Marriage,"  Minne- 
apolis Institute  of  Arts;  "Vespers/'  City 
Art  Museum,  St.  Louis;  "Still  Life," 
School  of  Design.  Providence;  "Drum- 
mer, Royal  Scots,"  Toronto  (Can.)  Mu- 
seum. 

MELIODON,  Jules  Andre,  Lincoln  Park, 
N.  J. 

S.,  T. — Born  Paris,  France,  June  1,  1867. 
Pupil  of  Falgui^re,  Fremiet,  Barrau  and 
Message  in  Paris.  Member:  N.  Y. 
Arch.  Lg. ;  Soc.  des  Artistes  Frangais; 
Soc.  des  Professeurs  Francais  en  Amev- 
ique.  Awards:  Hon.  mention,  Paris 
Salon,  1902;  Diploma  of  Officer  of 
Academy  189S;  Diploma  of  Officer  of 
Public  Instruction.  1004.  Work:  "The 
Explorer  Lesueur,"  Museum  of  Natural 
History.  Paris;  decorative  sculpture  on 
the  reconstructed  Sorbonne,  Paris; 
Bahai's  Vase  (with  Tiffany  and  L.  Bour- 
geois, architect).  Instructor  at  Y.  M. 
C.   A. 


MELLON,  Eleanor  M.,  157  East  35th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y.    (S.) 

MELVILL,  Mrs.  Antonia,  424  Music-Art 
Studio  Bldg.,  Room  424,  Los  Angeles, 
Calif. 

Port.  P. — Born  Berlin,  Germany,  Nov. 
28,  1875,  came  to  America  in  1894. 
Studied  in  London  under  ^Y.  P.  Frith 
at  the  Heatherley  School  of  Art. 
W  o  r  k  :  "Portrait  of  Bishop  J.  H. 
Johnson,"  Good  Samaritan  Hospital,  Los 
Angeles;  "Portrait  of  Mrs.  Dollard," 
Capitol  at  Pierre,  S.  D. ;  in  Public 
Library,   Sacramento,  Calif. 

MELZER,   William,   810   Park  Ave.,  Wee- 
hawken,  N.  J. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

MENDENHALL,  Emma,  2629  Moorman 
Ave.,  Cincinnati,  O. 

Ldscp.  P. — Born  Cincinnati.  Pupil  of 
Cincinnati  Art  Acad,  under  Nowottny 
and  Duveneck;  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris;  summer  school  under  Mrs. 
Rhoda  Holmes  Nicholls,  Woodbury  and 
Snell.  Member:  Cincinnati  Wo- 
man's AC;  AWCS;  N.  A.  Women  PS; 
Cincinnati    MacDowell    C. ;    NYWCC. 

MENTE,  Charles,  Congers,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I. — Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  Gabl 
and  Loefftz  in  Munich.  Member: 
AWCS;  Chicago  WCC.  Awards: 
First  prize,  Chicago  SA  1893;  gold 
meda),  AC  Phila.  1895;  silver  medal  and 
hon.  mention,  Atlanta  Exp,.,  1895;  Evans 
prize,  AWCS  1904. 

MENTEL,  Lillian,  2893  Romana  Place, 
Oakley.  Cincinnati,  O. 
P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Nov.  2. 
1882.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy 
and  Pratt  Inst.  Member:  Cincinnati 
Woman's  AC. 

MENZLER-PEYTON,  Bertha  S.  (Mrs.  Al- 
fred Conway  Peyton).  33  West  67th  St., 
New   York.    N.    Y. 

Ldscp.  P. — Born  Chicago,  111.  Pu- 
pil of  AI  Chicago;  Merson,  Collin  and 
Aman-Jean  in  Paris.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;  Chicago  WCC;  N.  A.  Women 
PS;  NYWCC;  AWCS;  Allied  AA. 
Awards:  Special  prize,  AIC,  1903; 
Young  Fortnightly  prize,  AIC,  1909; 
Grower  prize,  AIC,  1910.  Work  in: 
Union  League  Club,  Chicago;  Nike  and 
Klio  Clubs  and  West  End  Woman's 
Club,  Chicago;  Evanston  (111.)  Woman's 
Club;  Mural  decorations  in  Fine  Arts 
Bldg.,  Chicago.  Specialty,  Western 
scenery. 

MERCER,     Geneva,     4029    Bigelow    Blvd., 
Pittsburgh.   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

MERINGTON,  Ruth,  1  Wallace  St.,  New- 
ark. N.  J. 

P.,  T. — Born  London,  England.  Pupil  of 
NAD  and  ASL  in  New  York,  under 
Edgar  M.  Ward,  Bruce  Crane  and 
Birge  Harrison;  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris   under  Constant. 

MERO,  Lee,  care  of  Charles  Daniel  Frey, 
104  Michigan  Ave.,  South,  Chicago.  111. 
I.— Born  Ortonville,  Minn.,  May  30,  1885. 
Pupil  of  Robert  Koehler  in  Minneapo- 
lis; Robert  Henri  in  New  York.  Spe- 
cialty, advertising  art  and  decorative 
illustration. 


502 


MERRELS 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


M  EVEN  BERG 


MERRELS,  Mrs.  Gray  Price,  248  Oxford 
Street,  Hartford,  Conn. 
Min.  P.— Born  Topeka,  Kan.,  1884.  Pu- 
pil of  ASL  of  N.  y.  under  Shirley 
Turner.  Member:  Brooklyn  Soc. 
Min.    P. 

MERRIAM,  Irma  S.,  1531  Madrona  Drive, 
Seattle,  Wash.    (P.) 

MERRICK,  Arthur  T.,  32  Union  Square, 
New   York,    N.   Y.    (I.) 

MERRILL,    Hiram    C(ampbell),   522   West 

134th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  Wood  Engr. — Born  Boston,  Mass., 
Oct.  25,  1866.  Pupil  of  Douglas  Volk; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  NYWCC, 
1914.  Awards:  Bronze  medal.  Pan.- 
Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901,  and  at  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904,  for  wood  engraving.  Work 
in:  Carnegie  Institute,  Pittsburgh. 
MERRILL,  Katharine,  415  West  23rd  St.; 
42  Washington  Sq.  South,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
E.— Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  1876.  Pupil 
AI  Chicago;  Brangwyn  in  London. 
Member:  Chicago  SE;  NYWCC. 
Work  in:  Library  of  Congress,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C. 

MERRIMAN,  Helen  Bigelow  (Mrs.  Dan- 
iel Merriman),  73  Bay  State  Road,  Bos- 
ton, Mass.;  summer.  Intervale,  N.  H. 
P.,  W.— Born  Boston,  July  14,  1844, 
Pupil  of  Wm.  Hunt.  Member:  Bos- 
ton WCC. 

MERRITT,  Anna  Lea  (Mrs.  Henry  Mer- 
ritt).  The  Limes,  Hurstbourne-Tarrant, 
Andover,  Hampshire,  England. 
P.,  Etcher. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa., 
Sept.  13,  1844.  Pupil  of  Henry  Merritt  in 
London.  Awards  :  Centennial  Exp., 
Philadelphia,  1876;  hon.  mention,  Paris 
Exp.,  1889;  two  medals  (oil  painting  and 
mural  decoration),  Columbian  Exp., 
Chicago,  1893;  medal,  Atlanta  Exp., 
1895;  medal,  Pan. -Am.  Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901.  Work:  "Love  Locked  Out," 
National  Gallery  of  British  Art,  Lon- 
don; "Piping  Shepherd,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy,  Philadelphia;  numerous  por- 
traits, including  "James  Russell  Low- 
ell," Memorial  Hall,  Harvard  University, 
Cambridge,  and  "Mrs.  Arnold  Tojmbee," 
Lady  Margaret  Hall,  Oxford;  eight 
mural  paintings  in  St.  Martin's  Church, 
Wanersh,  Guildford.  England.  Author 
"Memoir  of  Henry  Merritt,"  "A  Hamlet 
in  Old  Hampshire,"  "An  Artist's  Gar- 
den." 

MERTON,  Owen,  57  Hillside  Ave.,  Flush- 
ing, Long  Island.  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Christchurch,  N.  Z.,  May  14, 
1887.  Pupil  of  Tudor-Hart  in  Paris. 
Represented  in  the  National  Gallery  of 
New  Zealand.  Designs  and  color 
schemes  for  flower  gardens. 

MERYMAN,  Richard  S(umner),  Corcoran 
Gallery  of  Art;  h.  813  Eighteenth  St., 
Wa.shington,  D.  C;  summer,  Dublin, 
N.  H. 

P..  T. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  April  4, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Thayer,  Tarbell,  Ben- 
son. Member:  Boston  GA. 
Award:  Silver  medal,  P.-P.  Exp., 
San  F.,   1915. 


MESSERSCHMITT,   Charles,   367    Orchard 
St.,   Rochester,   N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:   Rochester  AC. 

METCALF,     Marie     S.,    54     Stockton    PL, 
East   Orange.   N.   J. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence   WCC. 

METCALF,  Willard  L(eroy),  140  West 
79th  St.;  and  The  Century  Club,  7  West 
43rd  St.;  27  West  67th  'St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

Ldscp.P.,  T. — Born  Lowell,  Mass.,  July 
1,  1858.  Pupil  of  Museum  of  Fine  Arts 
and  George  L.  Brown  in  Boston;  Bou- 
langer  and  Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: AWCS;  Ten  Am. P.;  Nat.Inst.AL. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon 
1888;  medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago, 
1893;  Webb  prize,  SAA  1896;  hon.  men- 
tion. Paris  Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal,  Pan- 
Am. Exp..  Buffalo,  1901;  silver  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp..  1904;  Temple  gold  medal, 
PAFA  1907;  Clark  gold  medal  and  first 
prize,  Corcoran  AG  1907;  Harris  medal 
and  prize,  AIC  1910;  gold  medal,  Buenos 
Aires  Exp.,  1910;  medal  of  honor, 
PAFA  1911;  Sesnan  medal,  PAFA  1912; 
medal  of  honor,  P.-P. Exp.,  San  F,,  1915. 
Work:  "May  Night,"  Corcoran  Gal- 
lery, Washington;  "On  the  River,"  Cin- 
cinnati Museum;  "May  Pastoral."  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts.  Boston;  "The  Pre- 
lude." Worcester  (Mass.)  Art  Mu.seum; 
"The  Family  of  Birches,"  "Blossom 
Time,"  "The  White  Pasture";  "Old 
Church,  Deerfield,  Mass.";  "The  White 
Lilac,"  National  Gallery,  Washington; 
"Twin  Birches,"  Pennsylvania  Academy, 
Philadelphia;  "Unfolding  Buds,"  "The 
White  Veil."  Institute  of  Arts,  Detroit; 
"Ice-Bound,"  Art  Institute,  Chicago; 
"The  First  Snow"  and  "The  Partridge 
Woods."  Boston  Museum  of  Fine  Arts; 
"Le  Sillon."  Hackley  Art  Gallery,  Mus- 
kegon, Mich.;  "Dogwood  Blossoms," 
Carnegie  Institute,  Pittsburgh;  "Sum- 
mer Night,"  St.  Louis  Museum;  "The 
Golden  Hour,"  Rochester  Memorial 
Museum;  "Pelago.  Tuscany,"  Albright 
Gallery,  Buffalo;  "Little  White  House," 
New  Orleans  Museum. 

METEYARD,  Thomas  B(uford),  Moses 
Hill  Farm,  Fernhurst,  Sussex,  England. 
I.,  P.— Born  Rock  Island,  111.,  Nov.  12, 
1865.  Studied  in  Europe.  Member: 
St.  John's  Wood  AC,  London.  Spe- 
cialty,   decorative    illustrations. 

METZKES,  F.  W.,  435  Natchez  St.,  Pitts- 
burgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

MEURER,  Charles  A.,  Terrace  Park,  O. 
P. — Born  Germany,  March  15,  1865. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academv,  Bouguereau, 
Doucet  and  Ferrier  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Cincinnati  AC.  Specialty,  still 
life;    also    sheep    and    cattle. 

MEYENBERG,  John  C.  127  East  3d  St., 
Cincinnati.  O.;  h.  Covington,  Ky. ;  sum- 
mer. Tell   Citv.   Ind. 

S.,  C— Born  Tell  City.  Ind..  Feb.  4.  1860. 
Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy  under 
Thomas  S.  Noble;  Beaux- Arts  in  Paris 
under  Jules  Thomas.  Member  :  Cin- 
cinnati  AC.     Work:    "Egbert    Memo- 


503 


MEYER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


MIKKELSON 


rial,"  Fort  Thomas,  Ky.;  "Pediment," 
Covington  (Ky.)  Carnegie  Library; 
"Aunt  Lou  Memorial,"  Linden  Grove 
Cemetery;  Theodore  F.  Hallam,  bust, 
Court  House,  Covington,  Ky. ;  "Nancy 
Hanks,"  Lincoln  Park  entrance.  State 
of  Indiana;  "Benn  Pitman  Memorial, 
Cincinnati  Public  Library. 

MEYER,  Alvin  (William),  1606  Cherry 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  h.  Cambridge, 
Md. 

S.— Born  Bartlett,  111.,  Dec.  31,  1892. 
Pupil  of  Charles  Gratiy.  Member: 
Char.  C.  Award:  Cresson  Traveling 
Scholarship   of   the   PAFA. 

MEYER,  Enno,  972  McMillan  St.;  h.  3240 
Red  Bank  Ave.,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P.,  S.,  1. — Born  Cincinnati,  Aug.  16, 
1874.  Pupil  of  Duveneck.  Member: 
Cincinnati  AC  (ex-sec.  and  v,.-pre3.). 
Specialty,   animals. 

MEYER,    Ernest,   Tylerville,   Conn. 
P. — Born  at  Rothenburg,  Germany,  Dec. 
24,    1863.      Pupil   of   Chase,    Twachtman, 
Ward,    DuMond,    Turner.      Member: 
Conn.  AFA;  Salma.  C. 

MEYER,   George  Bernhard,  6  East  Pleas- 
ant St..   Baltimore,  Md. 
Min.P. — M  ember:  Charcoal  C. 

MEYER,  Herbert,  867  West  181st  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  March  6, 
1882.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.,  Twacht- 
man and  Du  Mond.  Member:  SI; 
Salma.  C;  Guild  of  Free  Lance  Artists. 

MEYEROWITZ,  William,  39  West  67th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  FoUey 
Cove,  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P.,  E.— Born  in  Russia,  July  15,  1887. 
Pupil  of  NAD.  Member:  S.  Indp. 
A.;  P.-G.;  Lg.  of  N.  Y.  A.;  Brooklyn 
SE.  Etchings  in  Public  Library,  Con- 
cord, Mass.,  and  Ralph  Cross  Johnson 
Collection,  Washington,   D.   C. 

MEYERS,   Harry   Morse,  7  West  42nd  St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
I. — M  ember:     Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

MEYERS,    O.    Erwln,    4    East    Ohio    St.. 
Chicago,  111. 
P. — M  ember:    Chicago    SA. 

MEYLAN,  Paul  J(ulien),  140  Wadsworth 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.,  P. — Born  Canton  of  Vaud,  Switzer- 
land, May  17,  1882.  Pupil  of  NAD  in 
New  York.  Member:  SI  1907;  AAS. 
Illustrated:  "Two  Faces,"  by  Marie  Van 
Vorst;  "The  Poor  Lady,"  by  Mary  E. 
Wilkins  Freeman;  "Sarolta,"  by  Agnes 
and  Egerton  Castle;  "Come  Out  of  the 
Kitchen"  and  "Ladies  Must  Live,"  by 
Alice  Duer  Miller;  "The  Unexpected," 
by  Elizabeth  Jordan,   etc. 

MEYNER,  Walter,  150  Nassau  St.;  h.  200 
West  101st   St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.,     I. — Born     Philadelphia,     Pa.,     Feb. 
12,  1867.     Pupil  of  PAFA.     Member: 
Salma.C;  Fellowship  PAFA;  S.Ind.A. 

MEYROWITZ,  Jenney  Delony  Rice  (Mrs. 
Paul  A.  Meyrowitz),  140  West  57th  St., 
New   York,   N.   Y. 

Port.P.,  Min.P.,  T. — Born  Washington, 
Hempstead  Co.,  Ark.,  May  13,  1866. 
Pupil   of   Cincinnati    Art   Academy;    St. 


Louis  Art  School;  Julian,  Delance  and 
D61ecluse  academies  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: NAC;  N.  A.  Women  PS.  W  o  r  k: 
"Jefferson  Davis,"  Arkansas  Capitol; 
"George  G.  Williams,"  N.  Y.  Clearing 
House  and  Chemical  National  Bank, 
New  York  City;  and  other  public  por- 
traits. 

MEYVIS,  Aime  Leon,  22  Centennial  Bldg.; 
h.  360  Main  St.,  East  Rochester,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  St.  Gilles- Waes,  Belgium,  May 
17,  1877.  Pupil  of  Mechanics'  Inst., 
Rochester;  Royal  Academy,  The  Hague. 
Member:  Rochester  AC;  Arti  et 
Amici,  Amsterdam.  Awards  :  Hon. 
mention.  Buffalo  Soc.  of  Artists,  1903; 
silver  medal,  Ville  de  Paris,  1904;  silver 
medal,  Enghien-les-Bains,  1904;  bronze 
medal,  Inter.Exp.,  Utrecht,  Holland, 
1909.  Work  in:  Modern  Museum,  The 
Hague,  Holland;  Sibley  Hall  Library, 
Rochester. 

MICKS,  J  (ay)  Rumsey,  57  West  10th  St., 
h.  10  Last  16th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ; 
summer,  66  Cayuga  St.,  Seneca  Falls, 
N.   Y. 

I.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Feb.  22,  1886. 
Pupil  of  Henry  McCarter.  Illustrations 
for  "Everybodys,"  "Scribner's,"  "Har- 
per's,"   "Red  Book." 

MIDDLETON,    Stanley    (Grant),    1    West 

67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  June  8,  1852. 
Pupil  of  Jacquesson  de  la  Chevreuse, 
Harpignies,  Constant  and  Dagnan- 
Bouveret  at  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  A.Fund  S.;  Lotos  C. 
Awards:  Hon.  mention,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  hon.  mention, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902.  Work:  Por- 
trait of  Hon.  Lynn  Boyd,  the  Capitol, 
Washington;  "Normandy  Fish  Wife," 
Hamilton  Club,  Brooklyn;  "Portrait  of 
George  H.  Daniels,  en  Costume  de 
Bal,"  Lotos  Club,  New  York;  portraits 
of  Dr.  Weisse,  Dr.  Starr  and  Dr.  Sat- 
terlee.  New  York  College  of  Dentistry; 
portrait  of  Gen.  Austin,  Bronx  Armory; 
Col.  William  S.  Gordon,  West  Point; 
Tneo.  B.  Connoly,  City  Hall,  N.  Y.; 
portrait  of  Charles  Ai  Moore,  Montauk 
Club,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.;  portrait  of  Al- 
bert S.  Bickmore,  Museum  of  Natural 
History,  New  York;  portrait  of  Hon. 
Andrew  D.  White,  Smithsonian  Inst., 
Washington,  D.  C;  portraits  of  Gens. 
Anthony  Wayne  and  Nathaniel  Greene, 
Frances'  Tavern,  Sons  of  the  Revolu- 
tion, New   York. 

MIELZINER, Joseph,  79  West  12th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

MIELZINER,  Leo.,  79  West  12th  St.,  New 
York,  N.   Y. 

P.,  S.,  I.— Born  New  York.  Pupil  of 
Cincinnati  Art  Academy;  G^rOme,  Bou- 
guereau  and  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts, 
under  Collin  and  Courtois  in  Paris; 
Kroyer  in  Copenhagen.  Member: 
Paris  AAA;  Boston  AC;  Cincinnati  AC; 
Alhed  AA;   Salma.C;   P-G. 

MIKKELSON,        Gwendolen         Hathorne, 

Route  2,  Danbury,  Conn. 
S. — M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 


504 


MILAM 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


MILLER 


MILAM,    Mrs.    Annie    Nelson,    2724    Grant 

Ave.,  El  Paso,  Texas. 

p.,  T.— Born  Homer,  La.,  Nov.  20,  18^0. 

Pupil  of  John  Carlson. 
MILBANK,    Mrs.    Alberta,    123    East    37th 

St.,   New  York,  N.  Y. 

P._M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

MILES,    Harold    W.,    544   North    Hill    St.; 

342  North  Main  St.,  Los  Angeles,  Calif. 

p      T. — Born   Des   Moines,    la.,    Sept.    2, 

1887.     Pupil  of  C.  S.  Cumming  and  J.  F. 

Smith.     Memb  er:  Calif.  AC.     Work: 

Mural   decorations  in  West  Des  Momes 

High  School. 
MILHAU,     Zella     de,     1022     Park     Aye., 

New    York,    N.    Y.;    summer,    Larialot, 

Southampton,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

Etcher,    I.— Born    New   York.      Pupil    of 

Arthur    Dow    and    E.    Nimmo    Moran; 

ASL  of  N.   Y.     Member:     NAC. 

MILIONE,  Louis,  121  South  24th  St.; 
h.  1426  South  9th  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
S.,  T.— Born  Padua,  Italy,  Feb.  22,  1884. 
Pupil  of  Charles  Grafly;  Herman  Deig- 
endesch;  Porter.  Member:  Fellow- 
ship PAFA.  Awards:  Cresson  schol- 
arship PAFA,  1907.  Work:  "Brig. 
Gen.  Kirby  Smith,"  Vicksburg,  Miss.; 
and  in  Church  of  the  Redeemer,  Bryn 
Mawr;  German  town  High  School,  Phil- 
adelphia. 

MILLER,  Anna  Hazzard  (Mrs.  Edward 
J.  Miller),  1515  West  16th  St.,  Okla- 
homa  City,    Okla. 

P.— Born  Minnesota,  June  4,  1863.  Pu- 
pil of  Maurice  Braun.  Member: 
Oklahoma  Art  League;  Oklahoma  State 
Artists  Assoc. 

MILLER,  Benjamin,  131  East  3rd  St.,  Cin- 
cinnati, O. 

P._Pupil  of  Duveneck.  Member: 
Cincinnati  AC. 

MILLER,  Charles  H(enry).  Died  January 
23    1922. 

Ldscp.P.,  W.,  L.— Born  New  York, 
March  20,  1842.  Pupil  of  NAD  In  New 
York;  Adolph  Lier  and  Bavarian  Acad- 
emy in  Munich.  Member:  ANA 
1873;  NA  1875;  Century  Assoc;  Lotos 
C;  Queensborough  Soc.of  Applied  Arts 
and  Crafts  (pres.).  Awards:  Gold 
medal,  Phila.Centennial,  1876;  gold 
medal,  Boston;  gold  medal.  New  Or- 
leans. Work:  "The  Bouquet  of 
Oaks,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  "Sunset  at  East  Hampton, 
L.  I.,"  Brooklyn  Institute  Museum; 
"New  York  City  from  Long  Island," 
Republican  Club;  "Highbridge  from 
Harlem  Lane,"  Democratic  Club,  New 
York;  "Landscape,"  R.  I.  School  of  De- 
sign,   Providence. 

MILLER,     (Miss)     Delle,    3448    East    62nd 
St.,   Kansas   City,   Mo.;   summer,   Rocky 
Neck,   East  Gloucester,   Mass. 
P.,     C,     T. — Born    Independence,     Kan. 
Pupil  of  H.  H.  Breckenridge. 

MILLER,   Emma  D.,  1952  North  Broad  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

MILLER,    Hester,    18   West   8th    St.,    New 
York,  N.  Y.,  and  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:      N.    A.    Women    PS. 


MILLER,  J(oseph)  Maxwell,  1335  Green- 
mount  Ave.;  h.  1508  Madison  Ave., 
Baltimore,   Md. 

S.— Born  Baltimore,  Dec.  23,  1877.  Pupil 
of  Maryland  Inst. School  of  Art  and  De- 
sign, Rinehart  School  of  Sculpture  and 
Charcoal  C.  in  Baltimore;  Julian  Acad- 
emy in  Paris  under  Verlet.  Member: 
NSS  1908;  Charcoal  C.  Awards:  Gold 
medal  of  honor,  Maryland  Inst.  School  of 
Art  and  Design,  1897;  Rinehart  scholar- 
ship to  Paris  1900-05;  hon.  mention, 
Paris  Salon,  1902;  silver  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Ofllcier  d'Academie 
1912;  hon.  mention  for  medals,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San.  F.,  1915.  Work:  "Cardinal 
Gibbons,"  Pennsylvania  Academy  of 
the  Fine  Arts  and  Metropolitan  Mu- 
seum, New  York;  "Ishmael,"  St.  Louis 
Museum;  "Separation  of  Orpheus  and 
Eurydice,"  Peabody  Institute,  Balti- 
more; "Bust  of  Lady,"  Walters  Gallery, 
Baltimore;  monuments  to  French  sol- 
diers, Annapolis,  Md.;  "School  Chil- 
dren," Baltimore,  Md. ;  monument  to 
the  Confederate  women  of  Maryland, 
Baltimore. 

MILLER,  Kate  Reno,  Art  Academy;  h. 
4919  Ash  St.,  East  Norwood,  Cincin- 
nati,  O. 

P. — Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy; 
Hawthorne.  Member:  Cincinnati 
Woman's  AC.  Instructor  Cincinnati 
Art  Academy. 

MILLER,  Kenneth  Hayes.  408  West  23d 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  T.,  W.— Born  Kenwood,  N.  Y.,  March 
11,  1876.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y,.  under 
Mowbray  and  Cox;  New  York  School  of 
Art  under  Chase.  Instructor  of  paint- 
ing and  composition.  Art  Students' 
League    of    New    York. 

MILLER,  Leslie  W(illiam),  Oak  Bluffs, 
Mass. 

P.,  T.,  W.,  L.— Born  Brattleboro,  Vt., 
Aug.  5,  1848.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal 
Art  School  and  School  of  Boston  Mu- 
seum. Member:  ACPhila. ;  Eastern 
Art  Teachers'  Assoc;  T  Sq.  C.  (hon.); 
Boston  AC;  Fairmount  Park  AA  (sec); 
AIA.  (hon.).  Principal  Emeritus  School 
of  Industrial  Art  of  the  Pennsylvania 
Museum    since    1880. 

MILLER,  Mrs.  Mildred  Bunting,  Penn- 
sylvania Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts, 
Chester  Springs,  Chester  Co.,  Pa. 
P.,  T. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  June 
21,  1892.  Pupil  of  Anshutz,  Vonnoh, 
Breckenridge  and  Violet  Oakley.  M  e  m- 
ber:  Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila.  Al- 
liance. Awards  :  Two  Cresson 
Scholarship  PAFA;  Mary  Smith  prize, 
PAFA,  1920.  Work:  "Reflections," 
Fellowship  Pennsylvania  Academy  of 
the  Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia;  "Belgian 
Refugees,"  Mississippi  Art  Assoc, 
Jackson,   Miss. 

MILLER,    Minnie    M.,    1521    West    Lehigh 
Ave.,  Philadelphia,   Pa. 
P.— Member:     Plastic  C;  Phila.  AC. 

MILLER,   Oscar,  Bristol  Ferry,   R.   I. 
P.— Born    New    York,     1867.       Pupil    of 
Constant  and  Laurens  in  Paris.    Mem- 
ber:     Salma.    C;   NYWCC. 


SOS 


MILLER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


MINOR 


MILLER,  Richard  E.,  16  Rue  Boissonade, 
Paris,  France;  3806  Arsenal  St.,  St. 
l^ouis,  Mo.;  care  of  Macbeth  Gallery,  450 
Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y,. 
P.,  I. — Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  March  22, 
1875.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine 
Arts;  Constant  and  Laurens  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1913,  NA  1915;  Port 
P.;  St.  L.  AG;  Salma.  C;  Inter.  Soc.  of 
Painters,  Sculptors  and  Gravers;  Paris 
AAA;  Paris  SAP.  Awards:  Third 
medal,  Paris  Salon,  1900;  bronze  medal, 
Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver 
medal,  St.LouisExp.,  1904;  second  medal 
Paris  Salon,  1904;  second  medal,  Li6ge 
Exp.,  1905;  Knight  of  the  Legion  of 
Honor,  France,  1908;  Temple  gold 
medal,  PAFA  1911;  Palmer  gold  medal, 
AIC  1914;  Clarke  prize,  NAD  1915;  medal 
of  honor,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work  :  "The  Old  Maidens"  and  "Por- 
trait of  an  Old  Woman,"  Luxembourg 
Gallery,  Paris;  "The  Chinese  Statuette." 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York;  "Lady 
with  Fan,"  Gallery  of  Modern  Art, 
Rome,  Italy;  "The  Boudoir,"  Corcoran 
Gallery  of  Art,  Washington;  "Reverie," 
City  Art  Museum.  St.  Louis;  "The  Toi- 
let," Albright  Gallery,  Buffalo;  "B. 
Frost,"  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the 
Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia;  "Sunlight," 
Art  Institute,  Chicago;  "Summer  Rev- 
eries," Detroit  Institute;  "Japanese 
Kimono,"  Cincinnati  Museum;  repre- 
sented in  Royal  Museum  of  Christiania; 
King  of  Italy's  private  collection;  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts,  Antwerp;  Modern 
Gallery  of  the  City  of  Venice;  Mus6e  du 
Petit  Palais,   Paris. 

MILLER,    Roy,    Wildnei    Rd.,    R.    F.    D., 
Chila.   N.    Y. 
P. — Member:   Rochester  AC. 

MILLER,     William,     1037     Jackson     Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Wood  Engr. — Born  New  York,  Dec.  3, 
1850.  Studied  engraving  on  wood  at 
Frank  Leslie's  publishing  house;  also  in 
Germany.  Awards:  Medal,  1887; 
medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893; 
bronze  medal,  Pan-Am.Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901.  Represented  in  United  States  Na- 
tional Museum,  Washington,  D.  C;  Bos- 
ton Museum  of  Art,  New  York  Public 
Library;  Springfield  (Mass.)  Museum; 
Carnegie  Institute,  Pittsburgh. 

MILLER,  William  Henry,  102  West  Mont- 
gomery Ave.,  Ardmore,  Pa. 
Port.P.,  T. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa., 
Nov.  25,  1854.  Pupil  of  PAFA  under 
Eakins.  Member:  Fellowship  PAPA; 
Phila.  Sketch  C.  Instructor  of  draw- 
ing.   Episcopal    Academy,    Philadelphia. 

MILLESON,    Royal    Hill,   2336   Osgood  St., 
Chicago,   111. 

Ldscp.P. — Born  Batavia,  C  Nov.  23. 
1849.  Member:  Chicago  SA;  Boston 
AC.  Work:  "Mt.  Hood,  Oregon," 
Herron  Art  Institute,  Indianapolis.  Au- 
thor, "The  Artist's  Point  of  View." 

MILLET,    Geraldine    B.    (Mme.    Frangois 
Millet),   Barbizon,    S.   et  M.,   France. 
P. — Born   in  America.     Pupil   of  Wyatt 
Eaton    in    New    York;     Carolus-Duran, 
Merson,    and   Alfred    Stevens    in    Paris. 


MILLET,   Louis  J.,  649  Wrightwood  Ave., 
Chicago,   111. 

Mural  P.,  C,  T.— Born  New  York.  Pu- 
pil of  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  in  Paris. 
Member:  Chicago  SA;  Chicago  Arch. 
C;  Municipal  A.Lg.  of  Chicago. 
Awards  :  Medals,  Paris,  1889;  Chica- 
go, 1893;  Paris,  19a0.  Specialty,  design- 
ing interior  decorations. 

MILLETT,    G.    Van,    520   Studio   Bldg.;   h. 
720  Indiana  Ave.,  Kansas  City,  Mo. 
P. — Born     Kansas     City,     Mo.,     Apr.     5, 

1864.  Pupil  of  Royal  Academy  of  Fine 
Arts  in  Munich,  under  Gysis  and 
Loefftz.  Award  :  Silver  medal, 
Munich  Academy.  Represented  in 
Kansas  City  Public  Gallery  and  City 
Hall,  Kansas  City. 

MILLET,  Thalia  W.     See  Malcom. 

MILLS,  Thomas  Henry,  Bass  Rocks,  Glou- 
cester, Mass. 

P.,  I.,  E.,  W.— Born  Hartford,  Conn., 
Oct.  19,  1877.  Pupil  of  Kenyon  Cox  and 
W.  M.  Chase. 

MILNE,    David    B.,   Boston   Corners,   Col- 
umbia County,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I. — Born  Paisley,  Ontario,  Canada, 
Jan.  8,  1882.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y., 
under  Du  Mond,  Reuterdahl  and  Bridg- 
man.  Member:  NYWCC;  Phila. 
WCC.  Award:  Silver  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Represented  in 
Canadian  War  Memorials  Collection, 
Ottawa. 

MILNE,    May    Frances,    Boston    Corners, 
Columbia  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  May  1,  1894. 

MILROY,    Harry  C,  Delphi,  Ind. 
S.—M  ember:  Ind.   SS. 

MILSOM,   E(va)    Grace,   60  Ashland  Ave., 
Buffalo,   N.   Y. 

P.,  C,  W.,  T.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Deo. 
8,  1868.  Studied  with  Bischoff  and  In 
Europe.  Member:  Buffalo  SA;  Buf- 
falo GA.  Represented  in  Albright  Art 
Gallery,    Buffalo. 

MINARD,    Florence    H.,    42    College    St., 
Providence,    R.    I. 
P.,  I. — M  ember:  Providence  AC. 

MINER,     Fred     R.,    2202    West    25th     St., 
Los   Angeles,    Calif. 

P.,  W. — Born  New  London,  Conn.,  Oct. 
28,  1876.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.;  Wil- 
liam Wendt.  Member:  Calif.  AC; 
Laguna  Beach  AA;  S.  Indp.  A. 
Award  :  Bronze  medal,  Panama- 
Calif.   Exp.,   San  Diego,   1915. 

MINER,  Georgia  Watson  (Mrs.  Lewis  H. 
Miner),  1717  South  6th  St.,  Springfield, 
111.;  summer.  Old  Mission,  Mich. 
P.,  C,  W..  L.,  T.— Born  Springfield,  111., 
April  4,  1876.  Pupil  of  C.  A.  Herbert 
and  Dawson-Watson.  Member:  Chi- 
cago AG;  Springfield  AA.  Awards": 
111.  State  Centennial  medals,  1918,  for 
best  painting  and  work  in  ceramics. 

MINOR,    Anne     (B.)     Rogers,    Waterfor(\ 

Conn. 

P. — Born    East    Lyme,    Conn.,    Apr.    7, 

1865.  Pupil  of  Robert  C.  Minor.  Mem- 
ber:    New  Haven  PCC. 


506 


MISERENDINO 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


MOLARSKY 


MISERENDINO  V(incenzo),  1947  Broad- 
way; h.  620  Van  Nest  Ave.,  Bronx,  New 
York.  N.  Y. 

S.— Born  Italy,  Jan.  29,  1876.  Pupil  of 
Loiacolo. 

MISH,  Charlotte  (Roberta),  962  Mount 
Adams  Dr.,  Portland,  Ore.;  summer, 
Seaside,    Ore. 

P.,  S.,  I. — Born  Lebanon,  Pa.,  Aug.  17, 
1900.     Pupil  of  W.  L.  Judson. 

MITCHELL,  (Al)fred,  1527  Granada  Ave., 
San  Diego,    Calif. 

P.,  T.— Born  York,  Pa.,  June  18,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Daniel  Garber,  Joseph  T.  Pear- 
son, and  Maurice  Braun.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA.  Awards  :  Silver 
Medal,  Panama-California  Exp.,  San 
Diego,  1915;  Cresson  Traveling  Scholar- 
ship, PAPA,  1920.  Work:  "Mission 
Valley,  San  Diego,"  Reading  Museum, 
Reading,   Pa. 

MITCHELL,  Arthur,  4211  Castleman  Ave., 
St.  Louis,  Mo. 

P.— Born  Gillespie,  111.,  Feb.  5,  1864. 
Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts. 
Member:    2x4    Soc;    St.    Louis   AG. 

MITCHELL,    Mrs.    Eleanor    B.,    San    An- 

selmo,  Marin  Co.,  Cal. 
P.,  T.— Born  Pittsburgh.  Pa.  'Sept.  19, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Arthur  Mathews  in  San 
Francisco;  Vitti  Academy  under  Collin 
and  Merson  and  of  Garrido  in  Paris. 
Member  :    San    Francisco    SA. 

MITCHELL,  Eva  B(lanche),  Harlan  Rd., 
Riverside,   111. 

S. — Born  Williamsport,  Pa.,  April  1, 
1872.     Pupil  of  Lorado   Taft. 

MITCHELL,     G.     Bertrand,     Rutherford, 
N.  J. 
I. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

MITCHELL,      Mrs.      Gladys     Vinson,     139 

South  Elmwood  Ave.,  Oak  Park,  111. 
P.,  S. — Born  Albuquerque,  N.  M.,  March 
1.  1894.  Pupil  of  Boyer  Gonzales  and 
E.  G.  Eisenlohr.  Member:  Chicago 
AG.  Award:  Silver  medal.  Woman's 
Forum,  Dallas  AA.  1916.  Work:  "Snow 
Composition."  Museum  of  Santa  Fe; 
represented  in  collection  of  Houston  AL. 

MITCHELL,    Harry   C,   318   South  Broad- 
way,  Yonkers,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

MITCHELL,  Laura  M.  D.,  307  South  4th 
St.,   Alhambra,    Cal. 

Min.  P. — Born  Halifax,  Nova  Scotia, 
Canada,  Jan.  12,  1883.  Pupil  of  George 
Bridgman,  Kenyon  Cox,  Alice  Becking- 
ton  at  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  Cal. 
S.  Min.  P.  (sec.-treas.);  Calif.  AC; 
Hollywood  AA.  Awards  :  First 
prize,  C.  W.  Wolfe  Art  Club,  1908; 
Gold  medal,  Panama-Pacific  Exp.,  San 
Francisco,  1915;  Panama-Calif.  Exp., 
■San  Diego,  1916. 

MITCHELL,  Thomas  John,  53^/^  South 
Ave.;  h.  47  Franklyn  St.,  Rochester, 
N.    Y. 

P. — Born  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  Feb.  22, 
1875.  Pupil  of  Mechanics'  Inst.,  Roch- 
ester.    Member:   Rochester  AC. 

MITCHILL,    Neil    R.,    Romford,    Conn. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 


507 


MITTELL,     Sybilla,    7    Landscape    Ave., 
Yonkers.    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:      N.   A.   Women  PS. 

MIZUNO,  S.,  881/2  Third  St.,  Portland, 
Ore.     (P.) 

MOCH,  G(ladys)  A(my),  156  Waverly  PI.; 
h.  348  Central  Park,  W.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.,  E.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Nov.  1, 
1891.     Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. 

MOCINE,    Ralph    F.,   616   Broadway   Cen- 
tral   BIdg.,    Los    Angeles,    Cal. 
P.— M  ember:    Cal.    AC. 

MODJESKA,  Marylka  H.,  University  Sta., 
Tucson,  Ariz. 

E.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Jan.  22,  1893. 
Pupil  of  AIC  and  George  Senseney. 
Member  :  Chicago  SE;  Alumni  AIC; 
Provincetown   AA. 

MODRA,  T(heodore)  B.,  West  A.,  On- 
tario,   Cal. 

P.— Born  in  Poland,  May  13,  1873.  Pu- 
pil of  Henri;  Colarossi  Academy,  Paris; 
Groeber  in  Munich.  Member:  NAC; 
MacD.  C;  Cal.  AC;  Allied  AA;  S.Indp.A. 

MOE,    George    Eugene,    1486    Fulton    St., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  e  m  b  e  r  :     S.Indp.A. 

MOELLER,  Gustave,  757  36th  St.,  Mil- 
waukee,   Wis. 

P.,  T.— Born  Wisconsin,  Apr.  22,  1581. 
Studied  in  Milwaukee,  New  York,  Pari;* 
and  Munich.  Member:  Wis.  PS. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Milwaukee, 
AI,  1917.  Instructor  at  Wisconsin  School 
of   Arts. 

MOELLER,  Louis  (Charles),  "Edenwald," 
Wakefield,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  New  York,  Aug.  5,  1855.  Pu- 
pil of  NAD  In  New  York;  Dlez  and 
Duveneck  in  Munich.  Member:  ANA 
1884,  NA  1894.  Work:  "Disagree- 
ment," Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington. 

MOELLER,  Selma  M.  D.,  823  West  End 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer.  Hick- 
ory Bluff,  South  Norwalk,  Conn. 
Min. P.— Born  New  York,  Aug.  3,  188a 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Cox,  Chase. 
Birge  Harrison.  F.  V.  Du  Mond;  Lucte 
Falrchild  Fuller  and  Alice  Beckington 
for  miniature  painting.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS.  Award  :  Silver 
medal,   P.-P.   Exp.,    San  F.,   1915. 

MOFFETT,  Roit  E.,  Provincetown,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Iowa,  Feb.  18,  1888.  Pupil 
ASL  of  N.  Y.;  AIC;  Charles  W.  Haw- 
thorne. Awards  :  Silver  medal,  AIC, 
1918;  first  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD,  1921; 
hon.  mention.  Carnegie  Inst.,  1921. 
Work:  "A  Street  in  Provincetown," 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine 
Arts,    Philadelphia. 

MOHLTE,  J(ohn)  A(lfred),  41  Shepard 
Ave.,  East  Orange,  N.  J. 
P. — Born  Gothenburg.  Sweden,  April  2. 
1865.  Pupil  of  NAD  in  New  York; 
Benjamin -Constant  and  Lauren.s  in 
Paris.  Member:  S.Indp.A.  Spe- 
cialty, portraits  and  mural  decorations. 

MOLARSKY,  Abraham,  62  High  St.,  Nut- 
ley,   N.   J. 

P.— Born  Kieff,  Russia,  Jan.  15,  1879, 
Pupil  of  Chase  in  Philadelphia.  Mem- 
ber: Fellowship  PAFA. 


MOLARSKY 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


MORAHAN 


MOLARSKY,  Maurice,  39  West  67th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Kieff,  Russia,  May  20,  1885. 
Studied  at  School  of  Industrial  Art 
and  PAFA,  Philadelphia;  and  in  France 
and  Kngiand.  Member:  P.-G. ; 
Phila.  Alliance;  Lg.  of  N.  Y.  A. 
Awards  :  Cresson  Scholarship  PAFA; 
hon.  mention,  Phila.  AC;  Fellowship 
prize  PAFA;  silver  medal,  P.-P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  gold  medal.  Art  Club  of 
Philadelphia.    1919. 

MOLARSKY,  Sarah  Shreve,  62  High  St., 
Nutley,  N.  J.    (P.) 

MOLIN,    C.    G.,    180    State    St.,    Brooklyn, 
N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A: 

MOLINA,    Valentino,    222    West    59th    St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

MOLINARY,  Marie  Seebold  (Mrs.  An- 
dres Molinary),  2322  Canal  St.,  New 
Orleans,  La. 

P. — Born  New  Orleans,  La.,  1876.  Pu- 
pil of  William  Chase  and  A.  Molinary. 
Member:  N.  O.  AA.  Work  in 
Delgado  Museum,  New  Orleans. 

MOLL,  Aage,  59  Lincoln  St.,  Hartford,  Ct. 
P. — M  ember:    Conn.    AFA. 

MONAGHAN,  Gertrude,  3309  Baring  St., 
Philadelphia.  Pa. 

Mural  P.— Born  West  Chester,  Pa. 
Pupil  of  School  of  Design  for  Women; 
PAFA.  Member:  Plastic  C. ;  Fel- 
lowship PAFA. 

MONAHAN,  P.  J.,  238  30th  St.,  Woodcliff- 
on-Hudson.  N.  Y. 
I.— M  ember:  SI  1912,. 

MONCURE,  Eiise  Vance,  Wide  Water, 
Va.    (P.) 

MONTAGUE,  Harriotte  Lee  Taliaferro 
(Mrs.  Jeffry  Montague),  1609  Hanover 
Ave.,  Richmond,  Va. 
P.,  T. — Pupil  of  George  de  Forest  Brush 
and  Twachtman  in  New  York;  Angelo 
Yank,  Fehr,  Hummel,  and  Knurr  in 
Munich;  Simon  in  Paris.  Member: 
Richmond  AC.  Work:  "Portrait  of 
Capt.  Sallie  Tompkins,"  Richmond  Art 
Club;  portraits  in  D.  A.  R.  Hall,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C;  in  Confederate  Museum 
and  the  State  Library  in  Richmond;  al- 
so in  Westmoreland  (Va.)  Court  House. 

MONTANA,  Pietro,  75  Wilson  Ave.;  h. 
651  Kosciosko  'St.,  Brooklyn,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P.,  S.— Born  Italy,  June  29,  1890.  Pupil 
of  Macdugal,  Brewster  and  Delbestin. 

MOON,  Anne  Douglas.  See  Mrs.  Philip 
B.   Peyton. 

MOORE,  Benson  B(ond),  The  Oneida,  147 
R  St.,  N.  E.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.,  I. — Born  Washington,  D.  C,  Aug. 
13,  1882.  Pupil  of  Corcoran  School  of 
Art,  Wash.  Member:  Wash.  SA. ; 
Wash.    WCC;    Wash.   Landscp.    C. 

MOORE,  Cecil  Gresham,  126  Plymouth 
Ave.,  Rochester,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Rideau 
River,  Kingston,  Ontario,  Canada. 
P.,  I.,  C,  W.,  T.— Born  Kingston,  On- 
tario, Canada,  June  12,  1880.  Pupil  of 
Rochester     Athenaeum      &      Mechanics 


Inst.  Member:  Rochester  AC.  Work: 
Mural     decorations     in     Powers     Hotel, 
Rochester. 
MOORE,    Edwin     A(ugustus),    901     West 

Lane,   Kensington,    Conn. 
P.,  E.,  W.— Born  Plartford,   Conn.,  Aug. 
24,    1858.      Pupil    of    NAD,    his    father, 
N.  A.  Moore,  and  in  Dresden. 
MOORE,   Ellen   Maria,  Kensington,  Conn.; 
Box  115,  Boothbay  Harbor,   Me. 
Min.     P.,     T. — Born    Kensington,     Conn. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Mary  Elmer  and 
I.  A.  Josephi.     Member:     Copley  S. 

MOORE,    Frank    M(ontague),    939    Eighth 

Ave.,   New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — Born  Taunton,  Somersetshire,  Eng- 
land,    Nov.     24,     1877.      Pupil    of    John 
Finnic,  Liverpool.  Member:  NYWCC; 
Salma.  C. 

MOORE,    Mrs.    Grace    Cook,    2814   Melrose 
Ave.,   Cincinnati,   O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

MOORE,    Guernsey,    Swarthmore,    Pa. 
I.— M  ember:      SI     1912;     Fellowship 
PAFA. 

MOORE    (Harry)     Humphrey,    75    Rue    de 

Courcelles,  Paris,  France. 
P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  1844.  Pupil 
of  Bail  in  New  Haven;  S.  Waugh  in 
Philadelphia;  Ecole  des  Beaux- Arts  in 
Paris,  under  G^rome,  Boulanger  and 
Yvon.     Member:   Rochester  AC. 

MOORE,   Mrs.   Lou   Wall,   5476  Ridgewood 

Court,  Chicago,  111. 

S. — M  ember:    Chicago  SA.   Award  : 

Bronze  medal,    St.   Louis   Exp.,    1904. 
MOOREPARK,     Carton,     63     Washington 

Sq.,    New   York,    N.   Y. 

P.,  I.— M  ember:    SI. 

MORA,   F(rancis)   Luis,  142  East  18th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Montevideo,  Uruguay, 
July  27,  1874.  Pupil  of  School  of  Boston 
Museum,  under  Benson  and  Tarbell; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Mowbray.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1904,  NA  1906;  ASL  of  N. 
Y.;  Salma.C.  1899;  SI  1901;  SAA  1905; 
N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1903;  AWCS;  NYWCC; 
AlliedAA;  P-G;  NAC.  Awards:  Gold 
medal,  AC  Phila.  1901;  gold  medal,  AAS 
1902;  two  bronze  medals,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  first  Hallgarten  prize.  NAD  1905; 
Beal  prize,  NYWCC  1907;  Evans  prize, 
Salma.C.  1908;  Shaw  prize,  Salma.C. 
1910;  gold  medal  for  oil  painting  and 
gold  medal  for  water  color  painting, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work: 
Decoration  for  Lynn  (Mass.)  Public 
Library;  "Spanish  Merrymakers,"  Mu- 
seum of  Art,  Oakland,  Cal. ;  "Jeanne 
Cartier,"  Toledo  Museum;  "Color  Har- 
mony," Newark  Museum  Association. 

MORAHAN,  Eugene,  1931  Broadway, 
Manhattan;  h.  305a  President  St., 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  29,  1869. 
Pupil  of  Augustus  Saint  Gaudens. 
Member:  xnSS.  Wo  r  k  :  Alfred 
Gwynne  Vanderbilt  memorial  fountain, 
Newport,  R.  I.;  Elks  Memorial,  BufCalo; 
Soldiers  and  Sailors  Memorial,  Carroll 
Park,   Brooklyn,   N.   Y. 


508 


MORAN 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


MORRISON 


MORAN,  Percy,  105  East  78th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  and  Easthampton,  Long 
Island,  N.  Y. 

P.,  Etcher.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa., 
July  29,  1862.  Pupil  of  his  father,  Ed- 
ward Moran;  PAFA  under  S.  J.  Ferris; 
NAD  in  New  York;  studied  four  years 
in  Paris  and  London.  Member: 
AWCS.  Awards:  First  Hallgarten 
prize,  NAD  1886;  first  gold  medal.  Am. 
Art  Assoc,  New  York,  1888.  Work: 
"Castle  Garden,  New  York."  Wilstach 
Gallery,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  "Washington 
and  Betsy  Ross,"  Masonic  Hall,  Chi- 
cago; "Signing  the  Compact  on  May- 
flower," Plymouth  Museum;  "The 
Woodcutter's  Daughter,"  Hamilton 
Club,   Brooklyn. 

MORAN,  (John)  Leon,  97  Mercer  Ave., 
Plaintield,  N.  J. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Oct.  4,  1864. 
Pupil  of  his  father,  Edward  Moran,  and 
of  NAD;  and  in  France  and  England. 
Member:  AWCS;  AAS.  Awards: 
Gold  medal,  ACPhila.  1893;  gold  medal, 
AAS.    1902. 

MORAN,  Thomas,  253  West  42nd  St.; 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Easthamp- 
ton, L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

Ldscp.P.,  Engr.,E. — Born  Bolton,  Lanca- 
shire, England,  Jan.  12,  1837;  brought  to 
America  in  1844.  Pupil  of  James  Ham- 
ilton in  Pliiladelphia;  studied  in  Lon- 
don, Paris  and  Italv.  Member:  ANA 
1881,  NA  1884;  AWCS;  PAFA;  Salma.C. 
1888;  Century  Assoc;  Lotos  C;  A.Fund 
S.  of  Phila.  Awards:  Medal  and  di- 
ploma. Centennial  Exp.,  Philadelphia, 
1876;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  gold  medal,  AAS  1902. 
Work:  "The  First  Ship  at  Salvador," 
"View  in  the  Susqueiianna  Valley," 
"Ruins  on  the  Nile"  and  two  studies 
after  Turner,  Wilstach  Gallery,  Phila- 
delphia; "Bringing  Home  the  Cattle," 
Fine  Arts  Academy,  Buffalo;  "Grand 
Cafion  of  the  Yellowstone"  and  "Chasm 
of  the  Colorado,"  the  Capitol.  Washing- 
ton; "The  Breaking  Wave,"  Carnegie 
Inst.,    Pittsburgh. 

MOREY,  Bertha  Graves,  327  West  Fourth 
St.,  Ottumwa,  Iowa;  summer.  Green 
Lake,  Wis. 

P.,  E.,  C,  W.,  T.— Born  Ottumwa, 
Iowa,  July  22,  1881.  Pupil  of  AIC, 
Cliicago  AG,  Alliance.  Award  :  prize 
($100)  for  silk  design.  Art  Alliance  of 
America,  1918. 

MORGAN,      Alexander      C(onverse),      134 

West  73d  St.,   New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born     Sandusky,   O.,     July    1,     1849. 
Member:    Artists'    Fund    S.    (pres.); 
Salma.C.  1876;  Century  Assoc. 

MORGAN,  F(ranklin)  Townsend,  Moylan, 
Rose   Valley,   Pa. 

P.,  I.,  E.,  C— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y., 
Dec.  27,  1883.  Pupil  of  Bridgman,  Carl- 
sen.  Member:  Phila.  Alliance; 
Phila.  Sketch  C. ;  Phila.  PC;  Fellowship 
PAFA;    The    Print    Society,    England. 

MORGAN,      Lynn     T(homas),     522     West 

112th   St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.,    I. — Born    Richmond,    Ind.,    April    24, 

1889.     Pupil   of  William   Forsyth,    Mea- 


kin,  James  Hopkins,  George  Bridgman. 
Member:    S.  Indp.  A.;  SI;  SPNY. 

MORGAN,  M.  De  Neale,  Box  67,  Carmel, 
Monterey   Co.,    Cal. 

P.,  T.— Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  1868. 
Pupil  of  San  Fi-ancisco  Art  Institute, 
and  Chase.  Member:  San  Fran- 
cisco Art  Assoc;  Carmel  Club  Arts  and 
Crafts;  N.  A.  Women  PS.  Work  in 
Memorial  Museum,  Los  Angeles;  Del 
Monte  Gallery;  San  Francisco  Art 
Assoc;  University  of  Texas;  Stanford 
Univ.;  Univ.  of  Southern  Calif.  Direc- 
tor Carmel  (Calif.)  Summer  School  of 
Art. 

MORGAN,   M.,  244  Arlington  Ave.,  Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

MORGAN,  Theo.  J.,  1814  16th  St.,  N.  W., 
Washington,  D.  C;  Provincetown, 
Mass. 

P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Nov.  1,  1872. 
Member:  Wash.  SA;  Wash.  AC; 
NAC;  NYWCC;  Beachcombers;  Wash. 
WCC. 

MORGAN,  Wallace,  312  West  93rd  St., 
New   York,   N.   Y. 

I.— Member:  SI,  1909.  Official  art- 
ist with  American  Expeditionary  Forces 
in  France  during  world  war. 

MORITZ,  T.  E.,  1513  Sherwin  Ave.,  Chi- 
cago, 111.    (P.) 

MORRELL,    Edith    Whitcomb,    660    Madi- 
son Ave.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.— Pupil    of    Richard    Miller,    ASL    of 
N.  Y.     Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS. 

MORRIS,    Adelaide,    904    West    52nd    St., 
Los  Angeles,   Calif. 
P.— M  ember:   Calif.  AC. 

MORRIS,    Catharine    Wharton,    Old    York 

Road  and  65th  Ave.;  h.  Oak  Lane 
P.  O.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer, 
Jamestown.    R.   I. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Jan.  26,  1899. 
Pupil  of  H.  B.  Snell  and  Leopold  Seyf- 
fert.  Member:  NYWCC;  Phila. 
Alliance;  Phila.  WCC;  Newport  AA. 

MORRIS,    George    Spencer,    Crozer    Bldg., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 
P.— Member:   Fellowship  PAFA. 

MORRIS,  Nathalie,  43  South  18th  St.;  h. 
323  West  Mermaid  Lane,  Chestnut  Hill, 
Philadelphia,   Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of  PAFA 
under  Anshutz.  Member:  Fellow- 
ship PAFA. 

MORRISON,  David  H(erron),  242  East 
105th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Rawalpindi,  Punjab,  British 
India,  Nov.  15,  1885.  Pupil  of  Kenneth 
Hayes  Miller  and  Geo.  B.  Bridgman. 
Member:   N.   Y.   ASL. 

MORRISON,  L.  G.,  5233,  12th  St.,  N.  E., 
Seattle,   W^ash.    (P.) 

MORRISON,  M.  M.,  2113  East  52nd  St., 
Seattle,   Wash.    (P.) 

MORRISON,    Zaidee    (Lincoln),    152    West 

57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Gloucester,    Mass. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Skowhegan,  Me.  Pupil 
of  J.  H.  Twachtman,  F.  V.  DuMond, 
Chase,     R.     H.    Nicholls.      Member: 


509 


MORROW 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


MOWBRAY 


ASL  of  N.Y. ;  Alliance;  NYWCC.  Work 
in  Mary  Lyon  Room,  Mount  Holyoke 
College,  Mass.;  Colby  University,  Water- 
ville.  Me.;  magazine  covers  for  "Life," 
"Judge";  posters,  etc. 

MORROW,  Julie  (Mathilde),  101  West 
85th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.  Pupil 
of  Jonas  Lie  and  C.  W.  Hawthorne. 
Member:  N,  A.  Women  PS;  Pro- 
vincetown  AA;  Lg.  of  N.  Y.  A. 

MORSE,  Anne  Goddard,  care  of  Dr.  C.  C. 
Simmons,    P.    O.    Box   235,   North   Scitu- 

P.,'L— Born  Providence,   R.  I.,  Jan.  17, 

1854.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art 
School;  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Wyatt  Eaton 
in  New  York;  John  La  Farge  for 
stained  glass.  Member:  Prov. 
WCC. 

MORSE,  Edward  L(ind),  164  Bartlett 
Ave.,   Pittsfield,  Mass. 

P.,  W.— Born  Poughkeepsie,  N.  Y., 
March  29,  1857;  son  of  S.  F.  B.  Morse. 
Pupil  of  Thumann,  Gussow,  Thedy  in 
Germany;  Bouguereau  and  Ferrier  In 
Paris. 

MORSE,  Jean  H.,  Englewood,  N.  J. 
S.— Member:   N.   H.   PCC. 

MORSE,  Mary  Minns,  211  Savin  Hill  Ave., 
Boston,   Mass. 

P. — Born  Dorchester,  Mass.,  June  30, 
1859.  Pupil  of  Ross  Turner  and  Louis 
Ritter  in  Boston ;  George  Hitchcock  In 
Holland.  Member:  Boston  WCC; 
Copley  S.  Specialty,  landscapes  and 
marines  in  water  colors. 

MORSE.  Sadie  May,  11  Hancock  Ave., 
Lexington,   Mass. 

P.,  C.  T. — Born  Lexington,  Mass.,  May 
5,  1873.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art 
School,  Boston;  one  year  in  Italy. 
Member:  Boston  SAC;  Hingham 
Arts  and  Crafts  Society.  Educational 
director  under  Federal  Board  for  Voca- 
tional Education. 

MORTON,  Christina  (Mrs.  Benjamin  A. 
Morton),  27  West  67th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P. — Born  Dardanelle,  Ark.  Member: 
Allied  AA;  N.  A.  Women  PS;   MacD.  C. 

MORTON,  Mrs.  Josephine  A(mes),  144 
Main  St.,  Williamstown,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Mar.  12,  1854. 
Pupil  of  Eakins;  Laurens  and  Constant 
in  Paris.  Member:  Newport  AA; 
S.Indp.A. 

MOSCHOWITZ,  Paul,  42  West  39th  St.; 
h.  2085  Lexington  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

Port.P.,  T. — Born  Giralt,  Hungary, 
March  4,  1876.  Pupil  of  ASL  in  New 
York;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: SAA  1901;  ANA  1906.  Awards: 
Silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  In- 
structor, Pratt  Inst.,  Brooklyn. 

MOSCON,     Arthur,     253     West     42nd     St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

MOSELEY.  Helen  E.,  206  Cherry  St., 
Grand  Rapids,   Mich. 

P.— Born  Grand  Rapids,  Mich.,  1883. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  and  Hawthorne. 
Member:   N.   A.  Women  PS. 


MOSER,    Carl,    80    Winfield    Ave.,    Jersey 

City,   N.   J. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

MOSES,  Thomas  G.,  417  South  Clinton 
St.,  Chicago,  111.;  h.  233  South  Euclid 
Ave.,    Oak   Park,    111. 

Ldscp.  P. — Born  Liverpool,  England,  in 
1856.  Pupil  of  AIC,  and  of  R.  M.  Shurt- 
leff .  Member:  Palette  and  Chisel 
C;  Chicago  SA;  Calif.  AC;  Laguna 
Beach  AA;    Salma.   C. 

MOTLEY,     Mrs.     Thomas,     22     Common- 
w^ealth   Ave.,   Boston,   Mass. 
P.— M  ember:  Boston  WCC. 

MOTTET,  Jeanle  Gallup  (Mrs.  Henry 
Mottet).  47  West  20th  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Providence,  R.  I.,  Nov.  14, 
1864.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Richard  E.  Miller, 
E.  Ambrose  Webster.  Member:  N. 
A.  Women  PS;  Provincetown  AA.  Cu- 
rator of  painting,  Museum  of  French 
Art,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

MOTT-SMITH,  May,  941a  West  Sixth  St., 
Los  Angeles,   Cal. 

P.,S.,Min.P.,C.— Born  Honolulu,  T.  H., 
Mar.  17,  1879.  Pupil  of  Colarossi  Acad- 
emy; Van  Der  Weyden;  Spicer  Simson. 
Member:  Calif.  AC;  S.  Indp.  A. 
Awards:  Bronze  medal  for  small  re- 
lief, Panama-Calif.  Exp.,  San  Diego, 
1915;  silver  medal  for  jewelry,  P.-P. 
Exp.,    San   F.,    1915. 

MOTZ,   Ray   E.,  Monessen,   Pa. 
P. — Member:  Pittsburgh  A  A.    Award: 
Water  color  pastel  prize,  Pittsburgh  AA, 

1913. 

MOTZ-LOWDON,  Elsie,  105  East  17th  St.; 
23  East  62nd  'St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.,  T.— Born  Waco,  Tex.     Pupil  of  ASL 
of  N.Y. ;  Am.    School  of  Min.   P.    Mem- 
ber:  N.   A.  Women  PS. 

MOULTON,  Claxton  B.,  172  Townsend 
St.,    Boston,   Mass.    (P.) 

MOUNTFORT,  Arnold,  Sherwood  Studios, 

58  West  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born    Eggbaston,    England,    Jan.    21, 
1873.      Pupil    of    Birmingham    Municipal 
School  of  Art,   England. 

MO  WAT,     H.    J.,    Westport,    Conn.;    315 
Tote   Rd.,    W.,    Montreal,    Quebec,    Can- 
ada. 
I.— Member:   SI  1912;   Salma.C. 

MOWBRAY,  H(enry)  SIddons,  Washing- 
ton,  Conn. 

P. — Born  Alexandria,  Egypt,  Aug.  5, 
1858,  of  English  parents;  brought  to 
U.  S.  in  1859.  Pupil  of  Bonnat  in  Paris. 
Member:  SAA  1886;  ANA  1888,  NA 
1891;  Conn.AFA;  A. Fund  S.;  Century 
Assoc;  Nat. Inst. AL.;  National  Commis- 
sion of  Fine  Arts.  Awards  :  Clarke 
prize,  NAD  1888;  medals  at  Atlanta, 
Boston.  Chicago;  gold  medal.  Pan- Am. 
Exp..  Buffalo,  1901.  Work:  "A  Lady 
in  Black,"  Fine  Arts  Academy.  Buffalo; 
"Idle  Hours,"  National  Gallery,  Wash- 
ington. Mural  decorations:  Appellate 
Court,  New  York:  University  Club  Li- 
brary, New  York;  Morgan  Library, 
New  York;  Gunn  Memorial  Library, 
and  St.  John's  Episcopal  Church,  Wash- 


510 


MOWBRAY-CLARKE 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


MUNROE 


Ington,  Conn.;  Federal  Court,  Cleveland. 
Director  American  Academy  in  Rome, 
1903-4. 

MOWBRAY-CLARKE,  John  Frederick, 
53  East  44th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
summer,  "The  Brocken,"  Pomona, 
Rockland  Co.,  N.  Y. 

S. — Born  Jamaica,  West  Indies,  Aug.  4, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Lambeth  School.  London. 
Member:  Am.P.S.  Represented  in 
Metropolitan  Museum,   New  York. 

MOWRIS.  Mrs.  C.  C,  South  Lima,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:  Rochester  AC. 

MRUK,  W(ladys!aw  E.),  38  Ashley  St., 
Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y..  June  12,  1895. 
Pupil   of   J.   E.   Thompson. 

MUEDEN,  Mathilda.  See  Mrs.  L.  M. 
Leisenring. 

MUELLER.  Alexander,  School  of  Fine 
and  Applied  Arts  of  State  Normal 
Pr-hool;  h.  405  Stratford  Ct.,  Milwaukee, 
Wis. 

P.,  L..  T.— Born  Milwaukee.  Wis.,  Feb. 
29.  1872.  Pupil  of  Richard  Lorenz  in 
Milwaukee;  Max  Thedy  in  Weimar; 
Carl  Marr  in  Munich.  Member: 
Wisconsin  PS;  Milwaukee  AS;  Milwau- 
kee Art  Commission;  Wisconsin  Soc. 
Applied  Arts;  Alliance.  Director  School 
of  Fine  and  Applied  Arts  of  State  Nor- 
mal School. 

MUELLER,    John    C,    4224   Ivanhoe    Ave., 
Norwood,  O. 
P. — M  ember:    Cincinnati  AC. 

MUENDEL,  George  F.,  Rowayton,  Conn. 
P. — Born  West  Hoboken,  N.  J.,  1871. 
Pupil  of  Ochtman  and  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
Member:  Conn.  AFA.  Award: 
Prize  ($100).  Conn.  AFA  1914. 

MUHLHOFER,  Elizabeth,  130  Eleventh 
St.,  S.  K.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.— Born  Maryland.  Pupil  of  Corcoran 
School  under  Moser,  Brooke  and  Messer, 
Member:  Wash.WCC;  S.  Wash.  A.; 
Chicago   WCC. 

MULFORD,  Stockton,  3004  Heath  Ave., 
New   York,    N.    Y.    (I.) 

MULHAUPT,  Frederick  J(ohn),  57  East 
59th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Rockport,  Mo.,  March  28, 
1871.  Pupil  of  Art  Academy  in  Kansas 
City;  AIC;  Paris  schools.  Member: 
Palette  and  Chisel  C.  Chicago; 
Salma.  C;  Paris  AAA.;  NAC.  (life); 
Allied  AA.  Awards  :  Evans  prize, 
Salma.  C;  Proctor  prize,  Salma.  C, 
1921. 

MULLER,  Mrs.  Olga  Popoff,  77  Frank- 
lin PL,  Flushing,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  New  York  City.  Dec.  1,  1883. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS. 
Awards  :  Cahn  hon.  mention  AIC. 
1911;  McMillin  prize,  N.  A.  Women  PS, 
1914;  medal  of  honor.  Paris  exhibition 
of  women's  works:  bronze  medals.  P. -P. 
Exp.,    San    F.,    1915. 

MULLER-URY,  Adolph,  33  West  67th  St., 
New  York.  N.  Y. 

Port. P. — Born  in  Switzerland,  March  28, 
1864.      Came    to    U.    S.    1886.      Pupil    of 


Royal    Academy    in    Munich;    Ecole    des 
Beaux-Arts     in     Paris     under     Cabanel. 
Member:   Lotos   C. 
MULLIKIN,  Mary  Augusta,  22  Elgin  Ter- 
race,   Tientsin,    China. 

P.,  L.— Born  in  Ohio.  Pupil  of  Walter 
Beck  in  Cincinnati;  Birge  Harrison  at 
Woodstock;  Whistler  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Copley  S.  W  o  r  k  in  Lasell 
Seminary,  Auburndale,  Mass. ;  Peking 
Inst,  of  Fine  Arts. 

MUMFORD,  Alice  Turner.  See  Mrs. 
Roberts. 

MUMFORD,   Jane.      See   Mrs.   Pearson. 

MUMMERT,  S(ailie)  B(iyth),  1308  South 
Adams  St.,  Fort  Worth,  Texas. 
P. — Born  Cisco,  Texas,  Oct.  12,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Chase  in  Florence;  Aunspaugh 
Art  School.  Dallas.  Member:  S.  Indp. 
A. ;  Forth  Worth  AA.  Award  :  Linz 
medal  for  best  figure.  Woman's  Forum 
Annual  Art  Exhibit,   Texas. 

MUNCY,  P.  W.,  152  West  55th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

MUNDY,      Ethel      Frances,      121      College 

Place,   Syracuse,   N.   Y. 
Wax     Port. — Born      Syracuse,      N.      Y. 
Pupil     of     Twachtman,     Beckwith     and 
Sacker.      Member:     A.R.M.S.,    Lon- 
don. 

MUNDY,  Louise  E.,  University  of  Ne- 
braska; h.  1507  R  St.,  Lincoln,  Neb. 
P.,  T.— Born  Nokomis,  111.  Pupil  of 
Univ.  of  Neb.;  AIC;  Stout  Inst.;  Chi- 
cago Academy  of  Fine  Arts.  Mem- 
ber:     Neb.    AA. 

MUNGER.  Anne  Weils  (Mrs.  W.  L.  C. 
Munger),  Sign  of  the  Pine,  South  Well- 
fleet,  Mass. 

Ldscp.P.,  C. — Born  Springfield,  Mass., 
July  17.  1862.  Pupil  of  Philip  Hale. 
Woodbury  and  De  Camp  in  Boston; 
Brush  in  New  York.  Member: 
Boston  SAC;  Worcester  AS;  Province- 
town  AS.  Specialty,  landscape  paint- 
ing. 

MUNN,  Marguerite  C,  1242  16th  St., 
N.   W.,   Washington,   D.    C.    (P.) 

MUNRO,    Albert    A.,     Springfield,     L.     I., 

N.  Y. 

P.,    E.,   T.— Born   Hoboken,    N.    J.,   Aug. 

17,   1868. 

MUNRO,     Ruth,     211     B     Iroquois     Apts., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

MUNROE,  Marjory,  12  East  30th  St.:  h. 
121  Madison  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ; 
summer,  East  Hampton.  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  in  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Sept.  21, 
1801.  Pupil  of  Frank  DuMond,  E.  Percy 
Moran,    Geo.    Elmer   Browne. 

MUNROE,  Sarah  Sewell,  1903  N.  St., 
Wasliington.  D.  C;  summer,  "Wind- 
over,"  Provincetown,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.  Member  : 
Wash.  SA.;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Wash. 
A.C.;  Wa.sh.  WCC.  Awards:  Sec- 
ond Corcoran  prize,  Wash.  WCC;  hon. 
mention,    S.    Wash.   A.,    1921. 


511 


MUNSELL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


MUSSER 


MUNSELL,  W(illiam)  A.  O.,  416  Stimson 
Bldg.,  Los  Angeles;  h.  1970  South  El 
Molino  Ave.,  Pasadena,  Calif. 
P.,  A.— Born  Cold  Water,  O.,  March  2. 
1866.  Member:  AIA;  S.  Indp.  A; 
Laguna  Beach  AA. 

MURA,  Frank,  12  Lafayette  Ave.,  Brook- 
lyn,  N.    Y.    (L) 

MURDOCH,    Ada    Oliphant,    1748    Broad- 
way,   New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — Born  Edinburgh,   Scotland.    Mem- 
ber:   Lg.  of  N.  Y.  A. 

MURDOCH,  Dora  Louise,  245  West  Biddle 
St.,  Baltimore,  Md. 

P.,  C. — Born  New  Haven,  Conn.,  Sept. 
14,  1857.  Pupil  of  Courtois,  Rixen  and 
Boutet  de  Monvel  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Baltimore  WCC;  NYWCC. 
Award  :  Purnell  prize,  Baltimore 
WCC   1903. 

MURDOCH,      Florence,     2448     Maplewood 
Ave.,   Mt.   Auburn,    O. 
P. — M  ember:      Cincinnati      Woman's 
AC. 

MURDOCH,     Frank     C,     5709     Woodmont 

St.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 
MURDOCK,   Mary   Frances,  F2  Alder  Ct., 

Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

MURPHY,  Ada  C(lifford)  (Mrs.  J.  Francis 
Murphy),  222  West  23d  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

P.,  I. — Pupil  of  Cooper  Union  and  Doug- 
las Volk  in  New  York.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS;  NAC.  Awards: 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD.  1894;  hon.  men- 
tion,  Pan. -Am.   Exp.,    Buffalo,    1901. 

MURPHY,  Christopher  P.  H.,  11  Perry 
St.,   Savannah,   Ga.     (P.) 

MURPHY,  Ella,  320  Sunset  Ave.,  Day- 
ton, O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

MURPHY,    Emma    J.,    630    Bedford    Ave., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 

MURPHY,  H.  Dudley,  East  Lexington, 
Mass. 

P.,  L,  C,  T. — Born  Marlboro,  Mass., 
Aug.  25,  1867.  Pupil  of  Boston 
Museum  School;  Laurens  in  Paris, 
Member:  Copley  S.  1886;  Boston 
WCC;  NYWCC;  Salma.C;  Boston  SAC; 
Boston  GA;  NAC;  Boston  AC;  Boston 
SWCC.  Awards:  Bronze  medal,  Pan.- 
Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver  medal 
for  portrait  and  bronze  medal  for  water 
color,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  silver  medal 
for  oil  painting  and  silver  medal  for 
water  colors,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  P.,  1915. 
Work:  "Mt.  Monadnock,"  Art  Insti- 
tute of  Chicago;  "The  Opal  Sunset," 
Art  Association,  Nashville,  Tenn. ; 
"Murano"  and  "Still  Life,"  Albright  Art 
Gallery,  Buffalo.  N.  Y. ;  "Moro  Castle, 
San  Juan,"  Dallas  (Tex.)  Museum  of 
Fine  Arts.  Noted  as  designer  of  frames. 

MURPHY,      Henry     C,     Jr.,     Greenwich, 
Conn. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 


MURPHY,  John  J.  A.,  21  Greenwich  Ave., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

MURPHY,    L.    M.,   1151/2    North  Main  St., 

Los  Angeles,   Cal. 

P.— M  ember:    Cal.    AC. 
MURPHY,     M(ichael),     Thomas,     4     East 

Ohio  St.;   h.   5739  Harper  Ave.,   Chicago, 

S. — Born  Cork,  Ireland,  Nov.  24,  1867. 
Studied  at  Royal  College  of  Art.  Lon- 
don. Member:  Western  Society  of 
Sculptors;  Chicago  SA.  Work:  Relief 
in  Fourth  Presbyterian  Church,  Chi- 
cago. 

MURPHY,  Mrs.   Minnie  B.   Hall,  805  Gay- 
lord   St.,   Denver,    Colo. 
P.— Born    Denver,    Colo.,    May    2,    1863. 
Pupil  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  AIC;   Henry  Read 
in  Denver.     Member:  Denver  AA. 

MURPHY,  Nelly  LIttlehale  (Mrs.  H.  Dud- 
ley Murphy),  East  Lexington,   Mass. 
P.,  I.— Born  Stockton,  Cal.,  May  7,  1867. 
Pupil  of  Museum  FA,  Boston.     Mem- 
ber:   Copley  S. 

MURPHY,  T.   Rowley,  235  South  11th  St.. 
Philadelphia,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:   Fellowship  PAFA. 

MURRAY,  Grace  H.  (Mrs.  Archibald  Gor- 
don Murray),  129  East  56th  St..  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  North  Hampton,  N.  H. 
P. — Born  New  York,  Nov.  9,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Bouguereau  and  Gabriel  Fer- 
rier.     Member:     N.  A.   Women  PS. 

MURRAY,  Samuel,  3326  Lancaster  Ave.; 
h.  3324  Lancaster  Ave.,  Philadelphia, 
Pa. 

S.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  June  12,  1870. 
Pupil  of  Thomas  Eaklns.  Award*: 
Diploma,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago, 
1893;  gold  medal,  ACPhila.  1894;  hon. 
mention,  ACPhila.  1897;  hon.  mention, 
Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work: 
"Prophets,"  WItherspoon  Bldg.,  Phila- 
delphia; "Com.  Barry"  and  "Joseph 
Leidy";  and  J.  H.  Windrim  portrait. 
Smith  Memorial,  Falrmount  Park,  Phil- 
adelphia; Pennsylvania  State  monu- 
ment, Gettysburg,  Pa.;  Corby  statue, 
Notre  Dame  Universitv.  Notre  Dame, 
Ind. ;  portrait.  Dr.  J.  C.  Wilson.  Jeffer- 
son  Medical   College,    Philadelphia. 

MUSGRAVE,  A(rthur)  F(ranklyn),  3241 
Thirty-Eighth  St.,  Santa  Pe,  N.  M. 
P. — Born  Brighton,  England,  July  24, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Stanhope  Forbes,  New- 
lyn  School  of  Art.  London.  Mem- 
ber:   Santa  Fe  AS. 

MUSSELMAN-CARR,  M(yra)  V.,  1  Stuy- 
vesant  Alley,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer, Zena,  Ulster  Co.,  N.  Y. 
g.— Born  Georgetown.  Ky.,  Nov.  27,  1880, 
Pupil  of  Bourdelle;  ASL  of  N.  Y..  Cin- 
cinnati Art  School.  Work:  Foun- 
tain, Kansas  City;   Roslyn,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

MUSSER,  B(yron)  J.,  392  Fifth  Ave.;  h. 
112  Twenty-Third  St.,  Elmhurst,  N.  Y. 
I.,  E.— Born  Chicago,  111.;  Feb.  15.  1885. 
PuDil  of  Robert  Henri.  Member: 
Art  Directors  Club.  Work:  "Inter- 
ior," Santa  Fe  Museum. 


512 


MUTTON 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


NEEDHAM 


MUTTON,     Hilda,     1946     Vista    Del     Mar. 
Hollywood.    Calif. 
E.— M  ember:     Calif.  P.M.;  Calif.  AC. 

MYERS,  Annie   M.,  Castile,  N.  T. 

P.,  T.— Born  Warsaw,  N.  Y.,  Apr.  19, 
1858.  Pupil  of  Perkins  and  Rondel  in 
New  York;  Bourgoyne  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber:   Rochester    AC. 

MYERS,  Datus  E.,  1549  East  57th  St., 
Chicago,    111. 

P.— Born  Jefferson,  Ore.,  Sept.  29,  1879. 
Pupil  of  Los  Angeles  School  of  Art  and 
Design;  AIC.  Member:  Chicago 
ASL;  Chicago  SA;  Oregon  SA. 
Award  :  Englewood  Women's  Club 
prize,  AIC,   1913. 

MYERS,  E.  E.,  Willowby-on-the-Ohio, 
Chesapeake,  O.    (E.,  P.) 

MYERS,  Ethel  (Mrs.  Jerome  Myers). 
143  East  58th  'St..  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
Carmel,   N.   Y.      (P.,   I.,    S.) 

MYERS,  Frank  H.,  5011  Stewart  Piirk. 
Norwood,    Cincinnati,    O.    (P.) 

MYERS,  Jennie  C(hace),  Castile,  N.  Y. 
P.,  Min.  P.,  T. — Born  Avon,  N.  Y.,  Aug. 
7,  1861.  Pupil  of  Granville  Perkins  and 
W.  J.  Whittemore  in  New  York;  Ertz 
in  Paris.     Member:     Rochester  AC. 

MYERS,  Jerome,  143  East  58th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Carmel.  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Petersburg,  Va.,  March  20, 
1867.  Pupil  of  Cooper  Union  and  ASL 
in  New  York.  Member:  ANA;  P.-G. 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  Clarke  prize,  NAD,  1919. 
Specialty,  New  York  street  scenes. 
W  o  rk  :  "The  Night  Mission,"  Metro- 
politan Museum,  JSiew  York. 

MYERS,    Mary    S.    Lukens,    445    Ivanhoe 
PL,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 
P.— M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

MYERS,  O.  Irwin,  Studio  Bldg.,  4  East 
Ohio  St.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  I. — Born  Bananza,  Neb.,  Nov.  12, 
1888.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Chicago  Academy  of 
Fine  Arts.  Member:  Chicago  SA; 
Chicago  AG;  Chicago  AC;  Chicago  S. 
Indp.   A.;  Alumni  AIC. 

MYRICK,    Katherine  S.    (Mrs.   H.  M.  My- 
rick),    Pelham   Manor,   N.   Y. 
MIn.P.— M  e  m  b  e  r  :    Am.    S.    Min.    P.; 
N.   A.  Women  PS. 

NADELMAN,    Eli,    6   East    46th    St.,    New 
York,   N.   Y. 
S. — M  ember:   Contemporary. 

NAEGELE,  Charles  Frederick,  R.  F.  D., 
Marietta,  Ga. 

Port  P. — Born  Knoxville,  Tenn.,  May  8, 
1857.  Pupil  of  William  Sartain,  Chase 
and  C.  Myles  CoUier.  Member:  A. 
Fund  'S.;  Salma  C.  1893;  Lotos  C;  At- 
lanta Art  Assoc;  NAC.  Awards: 
Gold  medal.  Mechanics  Fair,  Boston, 
1900;  silver  medal,  Charleston  Exp., 
1902.  W  o  r  k  :  "Mother  Love."  Na- 
tional  Gallery.   Washington. 

NAGEL,  Eva  M.  See  Mrs.  Addison 
Wolf. 

NAGLE,  Fred,  Spuyten  Duyvil,  New 
York,   N.    Y.    (P.) 


NAGEL,  Herman  F.,  23  Pennington  St., 
Newark,  N.  J. 

P.— Born  Newark,  N.  J.,  Dec.  1.  1876. 
Pupil  of  NAD.     Me  m  b  e  r  :      S.Indp.A. 

NAHL,  Perham  W.,  6043  Harwood  Ave., 
Oakland,   Calif. 

P.,  T. — Born  San  Francisco,  Jan.  11, 
18G9.  Studied  at  San  Francisco,  Paris, 
and  Munich.  Member:  Calif.  SE; 
FAA  of  the  University  of  Calif.;  San  F. 
AA.  Represented  in  the  Palace  of  Fine 
Arts,  San  Francisco;  Municipal  Art  Gal- 
lery, Oakland;  University  of  California. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Fine  Art,  Uni- 
versity  of   California. 

NANKIVELL,    Frank   A(rthur),   219  West 

14th   St.,   New   York,   N.   Y. 
P.,    I.,    E. — Born   Maldon   Victoria,    Aus- 
tralia,   Nov.    16,    1869.      Studied   in   New 
York   and   London. 

NASH,  Edgar  S>,  care  of  The  Beck  En- 
graving Co.,  620  'Sansom  St.,  Philadel- 
phia, Pa.   (I.) 

NASH,  Willard,  Museum  of  New  Mexico, 
Santa  Fe,   N.  M.    (P.) 

NASON.  Gertrude,  Fenway  Studios,  Ips- 
wich St.,    Boston,   Mass.    (P.) 

NAVE,  Royston,  146  West  55th  St.,  New 
York.  N.  Y.;  h.  Victoria,  Tex. 
P.— Born  La  Grange,  Tex.,  Nov,  5.  1878. 
Pupil  of  Robert  Henri.  Member: 
Salma.  C.  Work:  "Mrs.  Rebecker 
Fisher,"   State  of  Texas. 

NEAL,  Grace  Pruden,  715  West  170th  St., 
New   York,   N.    Y. 

S.— Born  St.  Paul,  Minn.,  May  11,  1876. 
Studied  in  Munich  and  Paris.  First 
prize,  Minnesota  Art  Soc,  1906;  hon. 
mention,    AIC,    1917. 

NEALE,     Marguerite    B.,    The    Woodlty, 
Columbia   Rd.,    Washington,    D.    C. 
P.— M  ember:  Wash.   WCC. 

NEAN DROSS,  Lief,  Ridgefleld,  N.  J. 
P.— M  ember:      NYWCC. 

NEANDROSS,  Sigurd,  Ridgefleld,  N.  J. 
S. — Born  Stavanger,  Norway,  Sept.  18, 
1871;  came  to  America  at  age  of  10; 
U.  S.  citizen.  1894.  Pupil  of  Cooper 
Union  evening  classes  in  New  York; 
P.  S.  Kroyer  and  Stefan  Shiding  in  Co- 
penhagen. Member:  NSS.  Award: 
Mention,  collaborative  competition,  N. 
Y.    Arch.    Lg..    1915. 

NEBEL,  Berthold,  American  Academy  In 
Rome,  Porta  San  Pancrazio,  Rome,  Italy. 
S. — A  ward:  Fellow^ship,  American 
Academy  at  Rome,  1914-17. 

NEEBE,  Minnie  Harms,  1320  Clybourn 
Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 

P.,  ^..  L.,  T.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Dec. 
25,  1873.  Pupil  of  Hawthorne,  Browne. 
Webster,  Reynolds,  Ufer.  Member: 
Chicago    SA. 

NEEDHAM,  Charles  Austin,  145  East  23d 
St.;  h.  218  East  19th  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

Ldscp.P.,  S..  I.,  C— Born  Buffalo,  N.  T.. 
Oct.  30,  1844.  Pupil  of  August  Will 
and  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
NYWCC:  AWCS;  Salma. C.  1903. 
Awards:    Medal    and    hon.    mention, 


513 


NEEL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


NEW  HALL 


Atlanta  Exp.,  1895;  hon.  mention,  New 
York  State  Fair,  Syracuse,  1898;  bronze 
medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  bronze  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,   1904. 

NEEL,  Birdie  M.,  Stanley  St.,  Pittsburgh, 
Pa 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

NEILL,   Frances   Isabel,  939  Eighth  Ave., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  E.,  T.— Born  Warren,  Pa.  Studied 
in  New  York,  Boston  and  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: N.  A.  Women  PS;  Balto.  WCC; 
MacD.C. 

NEILL,    John    R.,    36    East    28th    St.;    593 
Riverside    Drive,    New    York,    N.    Y. 
I. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

NEILSON,     Raymond     P(erry),    Rodgers, 

Westbury,  Long  Island,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  Chase 
in  New  York,  Laurens  and  Lucien 
Simon  and  of  Richard  Miller  in  Paris. 
Awards  :  Silver  medal,  Paris  Salon, 
1914;  silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F., 
1915.  Work:  "Le  Chapeau  Noir," 
owned  by  French  Government. 

NELL,  (IVliss)  Tony,  2  Riverview  Terrace, 
New   York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  L,  T.— Born  Washington,  D.  C. 
Pupil  of  Chase;  DuMond;  Denver  Stu- 
dents' School  of  Art.  Member: 
NYWCC;  Chicago  WCC.  Awards: 
Beal  prize,  NYWCC,  1910;  Harriet 
Brooks  Jones  prize,  Baltimore  WCC, 
1921. 

NELL,    William,    106    South    Troy    Ave.,        N 
Ventnor,  N.   J.    (P.) 

NELSON,   Clara   K.,  617  Hope  St.,  Provi- 
dence.  R.   I.  N 
P. — Member:   Providence  WCC. 

NELSON,     G.    "Lawrence,    15    West    67th 

St.,    New   York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  T.— Born  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y.,  Sept.  , 
26,  1887.  Pupil  of  NAD;  Laurens  in 
Paris.  Member:  Allied  AA;  Salma. 
C;  AWCS,  1917;  Conn.  AFA;  NYWCC. 
Award  :  Dunham  portrait  prize, 
Conn.  AFA,  1918.  Work:  Portraits 
in  New  York  Hospital  and  Mt.  Sinai 
Hospital,  New  York;  Reed  Memorial 
Library,  Carmel,  N.  Y.  Instructor, 
National  Academy  of  Design  and 
Cooper  Union. 

NELSON,     G.     Patrick,     140     Wadsworth 
Ave.,    New    York,    N.    Y. 
I.— M  ember:  SI  1911.  N 

NEMOEDE,    Eda.     See  Mrs.   Casterton. 

NESBERT,    Vincent,    258    Oakland    Ave., 
Pittsburgh.   Pa. 
P. — M  e  rn  b  e  r  :     Pitts.  AA. 

NESEMANj      Enno,      1635      Euclid      Ave., 
Berkeley,   Calif.  m 

P._Born  Maysville,  Calif.,  April  25,  1861. 
Pupil  of  Alfred  Hart.  Member:  S. 
Indp.  A.  AV  o  r  k  :  'The  First  Dis- 
covery of  Gold  in  California  at  Sutter's 
Mill,"  De  Young  Memorial  Museum,  San  N 
Francisco,  Calif. 

514 


NETTLETON,  Walter,  Stockbrldge,  Mass. 
Ldscp.P.  —  Born  New  Haven,  Conn., 
June  19,  1861.  Pupil  of  Yale  School  of 
Fine  Arts;  Boulanger  and  Lefebvre  in 
Paris.  Member:  SAA  1901;  ANA 
1905;  Conn.  AFA.;  New  Haven  PCC. 
Awards:  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1892;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
gold  medal,  AAS,  1907;  bronze  medal, 
Buenos  Aires  and  Santiago  Exp.,  1910. 
Work:  "December  Sunshine,"  Yale 
Art  Museum,  New  Haven;  "A  January 
Morning,"  Museum  of  Art,  New  Britain, 
Conn.;  "The  Beloved  Physician,"  Jack- 
son Library,  Stockbridge,  Mass.;  "Wal- 
desdjimmerung,"  Vassar  College  Art 
Gallery. 

NEUBAUER,  Frederick  August,  22  Hul- 
bert  Block,  Sixth  and  Vine  Sts.;  h. 
3227  Vine  St.,  Cincinnati,  O. 
Ldscp.P.,  I. — Born  Cincinnati,  1855.  Pu- 
pil of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy.  Mem- 
ber:   Cincinnati   AC. 

NEUHAUS,  Eugen,  2922  Derby  St.,  Berk- 
ley,   Cal. 

P.,  W.,  L.,  T. — Born  Barmen,  Germany, 
Aug.     18,     1879.      Pupil    of    Royal    Art 

School,  Kassel;  Institute  of  Applied 
Art,  Berlin.  Member:  San  Fran- 
cisco AA. 

NEUHAUSER,  Marguerite  Phillips  (Mrs. 
Roy  L.  Neuhauser),  1707  21st  St.,  N.  W., 
Washington,  D.  C. 

P. — Born  North  Arlington.  Va.,  Aug.  31, 
1888.  Pupil  of  Bertha  Perrie,  George 
Noyes,  Corcoran  School  of  Art.  Mem- 
ber:   S.  Wash.  A.;  Wash.  AC. 

EWCOMER.    Florence    E.,    323    Wallace 

Bldg.,  Pittsburgh.   Pa. 

P. — M  ember:   Pittsburgh   AA. 

EWELL,  G(eorge)  Glenn,  Carnegie  Hall, 

57th  St.  and  Seventh  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Berrian  Co.,  Mich.,  1870. 
Pupil  of  NAD  under  Ward;  Teachers 
College,  New  York,  under  Will  S.  Robin- 
son, and  W.  H.  Howe.  Member: 
ANA;  Salma.  C.  1898;  AWCS;  NAG; 
AlHed  AA.  Award  :  Prize,  ($500) 
Salma.  C.  1906.  Work:  "Mists 
of  the  Morning,"  National  Gallery, 
Washington;  "Twilight,"  Detroit  Insti- 
tute; "My  Pets"  and  "The  Old  Red 
Mill,"  Art  Assoc,  Dallas,  Tex.;  "The 
Unconquered"  and  "Monarch  of  All  He 
Surveys,"  "The  Drovers'  Inn,"  Butler 
Museum,  Youngstown,  O.  Specialty, 
Cattle  and  sheep. 

EWELL,  Hugh,  51  Warren  St.,  Bloom- 
field,    N.    J. 

P. — Born  Belfast,  Ireland,  Oct.  4,  1830. 
Pupil  of  Antwerp  Academy;  Couture  in 
Paris;  South  Kensington  Museum  in 
London.  Member:  AWCS.  Wate 
principal,  four  years,  of  Maryland  Inst., 
Baltimore. 

EWELL,  Peter  (Sheaf),  Leonia,  N.  J. 

L,  P.— Born    in    Illinois,  March    5.    1862. 

Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  M  e  m  b  e  r  :  SI 
1912;  Salma.C. 

EWHALL.  D.  W.,  140  W.  57th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 


NEW  HALL 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


NICHOLS 


NEWHALL,   Harriot  B.,  Studio  Bldg.,  82 

Chestnut   St.,   Boston,   Mass. 
P.,    E.,    T. — Born    Topeka,    Kan..^  June 
23,    1874.     Pupil   of   Benson,    Wooubury, 
Denman  Ross  and  Hawthorne.     M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :     Copley  S. 

NEWLIN,  Sara  Julia.  See  Mrs.  Donald 
MacGregor. 

NEWMAN,  Allen  G.,  1947  Broadway;  h, 
263  West  71st  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
summer,  Marbletown,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  New  York,  Aug.  28,  1875.  Pu- 
pil of  J.  Q.  A.  Ward.  Member:  NSS 
1907;  Beaux- Arts  Inst.;  NAC.  Award: 
NAC  prize  ($500)  for  design  for  "Valor 
Medal."  Work:  Marble  figures; 
"Day  and  Night,"  Harriman  Bank, 
New  York;  Henry  Hudson  Monument, 
New  York;  "The  Hiker,"  Providence, 
R.  I.;  "Gate  City  Guard  Peace  Monu- 
ment" and  portrait  on  "Joel  Chand- 
ler Harris  Monument,"  Atlanta,  Ga.; 
statue  of  "Governor  Gates,"  Montgom- 
ery, Ala.;  "Gen.  Philip  Sheridan  Monu- 
ment," Scranton,  Pa.;  "Doughboy  Mon- 
ument,"   Pittsburgh,    Pa. 

NEWMAN,  Anna  Mary,  25  North  16th 
St.,    Richmond,   Ind. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Richmond,  Ind.  Pupil 
of  AIC;  School  of  Applied  and  Nor- 
mal Art,  Chicago;  Overbeck  School  of 
Design  and  Pottery,  Cambridge  City, 
Ind.  Member:  Alumni  AIC;  Chicago 
ASL;  Richmond  AA.  Work:  "Old 
Irish  Chain  Quilt,"  Vanderpoel  Memo- 
rial, Chicago;  "William  Mossman,"  Y. 
M.  C.  A.,  Fort  Wayne;  "Chester  T. 
Lane,"  High  School,  Fort  Wayne,  Ind.; 
"Judge  Erwin,"  Supreme  Court,  Indi- 
anapolis. Instructor  in  Art  at  Fort 
Wavne  High  and  Manual  Training 
School. 

NEWMAN,    Carl,    R.    F.    D.,    Huntington 
Valley,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

NEWMAN,  Willie  Betty  (Mrs.  J.  W 
Newman),  Hotel  Tulane,  Nashville, 
Tenn. 

P. — Born  Murfreesboro,  Tenn.  Pupil  of 
Cincinnati  Art  School  under  T.  S. 
Noble;  Constant,  Bouguereau,  Bachet, 
Robert  Fleury  and  Laurens  in  Paris, 
and  in  Holland  and  Italy.  Awards  : 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon  1900;  gold 
medal,  Nashville  AA;  first  prize,  Tenn. 
State  Fair.  1914,  1915.  1916  and  1917. 
Work:  "Fisherman's  Daughter," 
Cincinnati  Museum;  "En  Penitence," 
Nashville  Art  Association;  "Le  Pain 
B6nite."  Centennial  Club,  Nashville; 
"Reverie,"  Philadelphia  Art  Club; 
"Fisherman's  Daughter,"  Cincinnati 
Art  Museum;  "Mrs.  E.  W.  Cole,"  and 
"Bishop  Galloway."  Vanderbilt  Uni- 
versity; "Bishop  Galloway,"  University 
of  Mississippi;  "Hon.  John  Bell,"  U.  S. 
Capitol,   Washington, 

NEWTON,    Clara    C,    care    of    Cincinnati 
Woman's  Club.   Cincinnati,   O,. 
P. — M  ember:      Cincinnati      Woman's 
AC. 

NEWTON,  E(dith)  W(hittlesey),  New 
Milford,  Conn. 

P. — Born  Saginaw,  Mich.,  June  7,  1878. 
Member:     N.A.   Women   PS. 


NEWTON,  Francis,  130  West  57th  St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 

P. — Born  Lake  George,  N.  Y.,  June  30, 
1873.  Pupil  of  Howard  Pyle  in  Wil- 
mington, Del.;  ASL  and  Chase  School, 
New  York;  Drexel  Inst.,  Philadelphia; 
Colarossi  Academy  in  Paris.  M  e  m- 
b  er  :  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1911;  Mural  P.;  N.Y. 
Municipal  AS;  Lg.  of  N.  Y.  A. 

NEWTON,    Josephine    (Mrs.    R.    C.    New- 
ton),   Scarsdale,    N.    Y. 
P.— M  ember:  N.  A.  Women  PS. 

NEWTON,     Parker,     507     Madison     Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  Norfolk,  Conn. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

NEWTON,  Richard,  Jr.,  270  Park  Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

NEY,  Lloyd  R.,  care  of  Pennsylvania 
Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts,  Philadel- 
phia,  Pa.    (P.) 

NEYLAND,  Harry,  391  County  St.,  New 
Bedford,  Mass. 

P.— Born  Erie,  Pa.,  1877.  Pupil  of 
Zanerian  Art  College,  Columbus;  Pratt 
Inst.,  Brooklyn;  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Col- 
arossi, Julian,  and  Grande  Chaumi6re 
Academies  in  Paris  under  Baschet, 
Gervais  and  Laurens;  Henry  Snell. 
Member:  Boston  AC;  Copley  S.; 
Providence  AC;  New  Bedford  AC.  Di- 
rector of  Swain  Galleries  and  Swain 
Free  School  of  Design,  New  Bedford, 
Mass. 

NICHOLLS,        Josephine        (Lewis),       188 

Franklin  St.,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 
P.,  C,  W.,  L.— Born  Hamilton,  Ontario, 
Sept.  26,  1865.  Pupil  of  Siddons  Mow- 
bray, G.  Bridgman,  Lucius  Hitchcock. 
Member:  Alliance;  Buffalo  SA; 
Guild  of  Allied  Arts;  Mineral  Painters 
of  Buffalo. 
NICHOLLS,  Mrs.  Rhoda  Holmes,  39  West 
67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer, 
Rowayton,    Conn. 

P.,  I.,  W.,  T.— Born  Coventry,  England; 
came  to  America  in  1884.  Pupil  of 
Bloomsbury  School  of  Art  in  London; 
Cammerano  and  Vertunni  in  Rome. 
Member:  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  AWCS  (as- 
soc):  NYWCC;  NAC;  Pen  and  Brush 
C. ;  MacD.C;  Woman's  Art  Assoc.  Can- 
ada (hon.);  SPNY;  N.A.  Women  PS. 
Awards  :  Gold  medal,  Competitive 
Prize  Fund  Exh.,  New  York;  medal,  Co- 
lumbian Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  medal.  At- 
lanta Exp.,  1895;  medal,  Nashville  Exp., 
1897;  medal.  Boston;  medal.  Char- 
lotte. N.  C;  bronze  medal,  Pan- 
Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  bronze  medal. 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  bronze  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work:  "The 
Scarlet  Letter,"  "Those  Evening  Bells," 
"Indian  After  the  Chase,"  and  "Search- 
ing the  Scriptures."  Boston  Art  Club; 
"Prima  Vera,  Venezia,"  and  "Water 
Lilies,"  Boston  Museum  of  Fine  Arts. 

NICHOLS,  H(arley)  D(e  Witt),  189  Mon- 
tague St.;  h.  258  Clinton  Ave.,  Brooklyn, 
N.    Y. 

Ldscp.P.,  I. — Born  Barton.  Washington 
Co..  Wis.,  Feb.  3,  1859.  Pupil  of  Hakel 
in  Munich.  Member:  NYWCC.  Il- 
lustrated "French  and  English  Furni- 
ture"    and     "Loves     of     Great     Poets"; 


515 


NICHOLS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


NIVEN 


architectural  illustrations  for  books  and 
magazines,  chiefly  for  "Harper's"  and 
"Century." 

NICHOLS,  (Henry)  Hobart,  Lawrence 
Park,  West,  Bronxville,  N.  Y. 
Ldscp.P.,  I. — Born  Washington,  D.  C, 
May  1,  1869.  Pupil  of  Howard  Hel- 
mick  and  ASL  in  Washington;  Julian 
Academy  and  Castellucho  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1912;  NA  1920;  S. 
Wash.  A.;  Fellowship  PAFA;  Wash. 
WCC;  NYWCC;  Salma.  C. ;  Cosmos  C; 
NAC;  Allied  AA.  Awards:  Second 
Corcoran  prize,  Wash.  WCC;  1901;  Par- 
sons prize,  S.  Wash.  A.,  1902;  Parsons 
prize,  Wash.  WCC,  1904;  first  Corcoran 
prize,  Wash.  WCC,  1906;  Turnbull  prize 
($100),  Salma.  C,  1913;  Evans  prize 
($100),  Salma.  C,  1915;  bronze  medal 
NAC,  1915;  silver  medal  ($300),  NAC, 
1920.  Assist,  to  Dir.  of  Fine  Arts, 
U.  S.  Commission.  Paris  Exp,.,  1900. 
Work:  "Moonrise  at  Ogunquit,"  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Washington;  represented 
In  Museum  of  Natural  History,  New 
York. 

NICHOLS,       Hildegarde       (Mrs.       Hobart 
Nichols),  Lawrence  Park,  West,  Bronx- 
ville,  N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     N.A.    Women   PS. 

NICHOLS,  John  W.,  819  Carnegie  Hall, 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Vassar  College, 
Poughkeepsie,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Univ.  of 
Vt.,   Burlington,   Vt. 

E.— Born  Keokuk,  Iowa,  Aug,  1,  1881. 
Pupil  Charles  A.   Cumming. 

NICHOLS,     Peggy     (Martin),    517     South 
Coronado   St.,  Los  Angeles,   Cal. 
P.,   S.,  Arch.,   C— Born  Atchison,   Kan., 
Mar.    22,    1884.     Pupil   of   Cecilia  Beaux 
and  Chase.     Member:     Calif.  AC. 

NICHOLS,  Spencer  B(a!rd),  Bronxville, 
N.  Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Washington,  D.  C,  1875. 
Pupil  of  ASL  in  Washington  under 
Howard  Helmick;  Corcoran  Art  School, 
Member:  Wash.WCC;  S.  Wash.  A.; 
Salma.  C;  NYWCC;  AWCS;  Lg.  of 
N.  Y  A.  Award:  Third  Corcoran 
prize,   S.   Wash.   A.,   1901. 

NICHOLSON,    Frank    S.,    116    West    39th 
St.,   New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

NICHT,   Edward  W(illiam),  105  Cook  St., 
East  Onondaga,  Syracuse,  N.  Y.;  Onon- 
daga Valley,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Auburn,   N.  Y.,  March  7,  1872,. 

NICKLES,  Martha,  1406  John  St..  Cin- 
cinnati, O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman  s 
AC. 

N I  CO  LAY,   Helen,  2301  Connecticut  Ave., 
N.  W.,  Washington,   D.   C. 
P.— M  ember:   Wash.WCC. 

NICOLOSI,  Joseph,  1079  Lexington  Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  S.,  A..  L.,  T. — Born  in  Italy,  Aug. 
4,  1893.  Pupil  of  Beaux  Arts  Inst,  of 
Design. 

NICOLSON,  Edith  Reynaud  (Mrs.  H.  W. 
Nicolson),  4  Parmley  PL,  Summit,  N.  J. 
I, — Born  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y.,  Sept. 
24,  1896.  Pupil  of  New  York  School  of 
Applied   Design  for  Women. 


NIEDECKEN,  George  Mann,  436  Milwau- 
kee St.;  h.  523  Prospect  Ave.,  Mil- 
waukee, Wis. 

Mural  P.,  Arch.,  C. — Born  Milwaukee, 
Wis.,  Aug.  16,  1878.  Pupil  of  Mucha, 
Robert-Fleury,  Lefebvre  and  Laurens 
in  Paris.    Member:  S.Milwaukee  A. 

NIEHAUS,  Charles  H(enry),  Eagle  Crest 
Studio,  Grantwood,  N.  J. 
S. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Jan,  24,  1855. 
Pupil  of  McMicken  School  in  Cincin- 
nati; Royal  Academy  in  Munich.  M  e  m- 
ber:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1895;  NSS  1893; 
ANA.  1902;  NA,  1906;  Salma.  C,  1908; 
Nat.  Inst.  AL.  Awards:  Gold  medal, 
Pan- Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  gold  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  gold  medal,  'St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work:  "Dr. 
Hahnemann,  Washington,  D.  C;  "Gar- 
field," Cincinnati,  O.;  Aster  Memorial 
doors.  Trinity  Church,  New  York; 
"Caestus"  and  "The  Scraper,"  Metropol- 
itan Museum,  New  York. 

NIELSON,  Harry  A.,  701  California  Ter- 
race; h.  346  Lincoln  Ave.,  Pasadena, 
Calif. 

P. — Born  Slagelse,  Denmark,  Sept.  25, 
1881.  Pupil  of  AIC,  Jean  Manheim. 
Member:     Calif.   AC. 

NIEMEYER,  John  H(enry),  251  Lawrence 
St..  New  Haven,  Conn. 
P.,  T.,  L. — Born  Bremen,  Germany.  June 
25,  1839;  came  to  U.  S.  in  1843.  Pupil 
of  G^rome  and  Yvon  at  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts,  and  of  Jacquesson  de  la 
Chevreuse  and  Cornu  in  Paris.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :  SAA  1882;  ANA  1906;  Paris  AAA; 
Conn.  AFA;  New  Haven  PCC.  Award: 
Hon.  mention.  Pan- Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901.  Prof.  Yale  School  of  Fine  Arts 
1871-1908;    emeritus   since   1908. 

NIEPOLD,  Frank,  913  F  St.,  S.  W., 
Washington,  D.  C;  h.  Thrifton,  Va. 
P.,  C. — Born  Frederick,  Md.,  Jan.  1, 
1890.  Pupil  of  Corcoran  School  of  Art, 
Washington.  Member:  Wash  AC; 
S.  Wash.  A. 

NIKOLAKI,  Z.  P.,  33  West  67th  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (E.,  L) 

NISBET,  Robert  H.,  South  Kent,  Conn. 
P.— Born  Providence,  R.L,  Aug.  25,  1879. 
Pupil  of  R.  I.  School  of  Design;  ASL  of 
N.Y.  Member:  ANA,  1920;  N.Y.Arch. 
Lg.  1912:  Providence  AC;  Conn.  AFA; 
NAC  (life);  Salma.  C;  Allied  AA. 
Awards  :  Dunham  prize,  Conn.  AFA, 
1913;  third  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD,  1915; 
silver  medal,  P.-P,  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work:  "Eve  of  St.  John,"  National 
Arts  Club,  New  York;  "Earliest  Spring," 
R.  I.  School  of  Design,  Providence;  "The 
Emerald  Robe,"  Mahoning  Institute  of 
Art,   Youngstown,   O. 

NITZSCHE,  Eisa  Koenig,  Westview  St., 
Germantown,    Pa. 

P.,  L. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
Elliot  Daingerfield,  Dagnan  Bouveret, 
Work:  "Boy  Blowing  Bubbles,"  Art 
Club,  Philadelphia;  Portrait  in  National 
Museum,    Washington,    D.    C. 

NIVEN.  Frank  R.,  402  Municipal  Bldg  : 
h.  424  Electric  Ave.,  Rochester,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  C. — Born  Rochester.  N.  Y.,  March 
2,  1888.  Pupil  of  S.  C.  Jones.  M  e  m- 
ber:  Rochester  AC. 


516 


NOBLE 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


NOSWORTHY 


NOBLE,  Mrs.  Ida  C(handler),  care  of 
David  Lipscomb  College;  h.  Scott  and 
Straightway  Ave.,  Nashville,  Tenn. 
P.,  T.— Born  Beech  Grove,  Tenn.,  Feb. 
25,  1865.  Pupil  of  Bryson.  Represented 
by  portraits  in  David  Lipscomb  College. 

NOBLE,  John,  Provincetown,  Mass.;  9 
Rue  Falguiere,  Paris,  Prance. 
P.— Born  Wichita,  Kan.,  March  15,  1874. 
Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Academy  of  Fine 
Arts;  Jean  Paul  Laurens;  Julian;  Acad- 
emy des  Beaux  Arts,  Brussels.  Mem- 
ber: Paris  American  Art  Associa- 
tion; Society  of  Artists  of  Picardy;  In- 
dependents of  Paris;  Allied  Artists,  Lon- 
don; Salma.  C;  Provincetown  Art  As- 
sociation. 

NOBLE,  W.  Clark,  739  Boylston  St.,  Bos- 
ton, Mass. 

P.,  S.— Born  Gardiner,  Me.,  Feb.  10, 
1858.  Pupil  of  Pierce  and  Greenough, 
and  studied  in  London.  Member: 
NSS.  Work:  Walters'  Memorial,  W. 
E.  Channing  and  Soldiers  and  Sailors 
Monument,  Newport,  R.  I. ;  memorial 
to  Bishop  Phillips  Brooks  in  Church  of 
the  Incarnation,  New  York;  portrait 
bust  of  Gen.  Potter,  Chamber  of  Com- 
merce, New  York;  Challenge  statue  and 
Gen.  Christ  statue,  Antietam,  Md. ;  Gov. 
Curtin,  Bellefonte,  Pa.;  jewelled  cruci- 
fix  in   Church    of    St.    Mary   the    Virgin. 

NOLL,  Arthur  Howard,  608  Woodlawn 
St.,   Memphis,   Tenn. 

Engr.,  C,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Caldwell, 
N.  J.,  Feb.  4,  1855.  Award  :  Hon. 
mention,   Am.    Bookplate   Soc,    1919. 

NORDELL,  Carl  J.,  Fenway  Studios,  30 
Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Copenhagen,  Denmark.  Pupil 
of  Boston  Museum  School  under  Tar- 
bell;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Bridgman 
and  Du  Mond;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris 
under  Laurens;  R.I. School  of  Design. 
Member:  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Boston  AC; 
Boston  WCC;  Providence  AC;  Provi- 
dence WCC;  Salma.  C.  Award: 
Fourth  W.  A.  Clark  prize  ($500)  and 
hon.  mention,  Corcoran  Gallery,  Wash- 
ington, 1912;  silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  Y.,  1915;  first  prize,  Swedish- Amer- 
ican Exhibition,  Chicago,  1917. 

NORDELL,  Emma  A.  (Mrs.  Carl  J.  Nor- 
dell),  409  Huntington  Ave.,  Boston, Mass. 
P. — M  ember:  Providence  AC;  Provi- 
dence WCC. 

NORDFELDT,  B(ror)  J(u!ius)  (Olsson), 
'Santa  Fe,  N.  M. 

P.,  E.,  Engr.,  T. — Born  Tulstorg, 
Scania,  Sweden,  Apr.  13,  1878.  Pupil 
of  AIC;  Albert  Herter  in  New  York; 
Laurens  in  Paris;  Frank  M.  Fletcher  in 
Reading,  England.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SE;  P-G:  Calif.  SE.  A  av  a  r  d  s  : 
Silver  medal,  Milan,  Italy,  1906.  for 
wood  block  prints;  silver  medal  for 
etching,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F..  1915. 
Work  in  Sidney  (Australia)  Museum 
of  Fine  Arts;  Chicago  Art  Institute; 
New  York  Public  Library;  Toledo  Art 
Museum:  Biblioteque  des  Arts  et  Arch- 
eologie,  Paris;  National  Museum,  Chris- 
tiania,  Norway;  Detroit  Inst,  of  Arts; 
Toronto  Art  Museum ;  Museum  of  New 
Mexico. 


NORDMARK,  A.,  1116  East  Thomas  St., 
Seattle,   Wash.    (P.) 

NORMAN,  Mrs.  Da  Loria,  Crags  Studio, 
Lyme,    Conn. 

P.,  C. — Born  Leavenworth,  Kan.,  Nov. 
18,  1872.  Studied  abroad.  Represented 
in  New  York  Public  Library. 

NORRIS,   Marie  deJarnet,  1947  Broadway, 
New   York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

NORRIS,  S.  Walter,  1716  Chestnut  St.; 
h.  Biyn  Mawr,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Ldscp.  P.,  W. — Born  Philadelphia,  Jan. 
12,  1868.  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member: 
Phila.  Sketch  C;  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Phila.    Alliance. 

NORRIS,  W.  J.,  60  East  8th  Ave.,  Co- 
lumbus,  O. 

1.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Aug.  20,  1869. 
Member:  Pen  and  Pencil  C,  Colum- 
bus; Art  Lg.  Instructor  in  art,  Ohio 
State    University,    Columbus,    O. 

NORSTAD,  Magnus,  Valhalla,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Norway,  June  24,  1884.  Pupil 
of  NAD.  Member:  St.  Paul  SA. 
Awards:  Hon.  mention,  Minnesota 
State  Art  Exh.,  1914;  silver  medal,  St. 
Paul  Inst.,  1917;  prize  for  group  of  four 
pictures  at  Minnesota  State  Art  Exh., 
1917.  Work:  "The  City  on  the  Hill," 
St.   Paul  Institute. 

NORTHCOTE,      Stafford      M(ant!e),      283 

Carlton  Ave.,  Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Wood  Engr. — Born  Brooklyn,  July  7, 
1869.  Studied  engraving  with  E.  Heine- 
man;  drawing  and  painting  at  Art  Inst., 
Brooklyn,  under  Boyle.  Awards  : 
Hon.  mention,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904. 

NORTON,  Clara  Mamre,  49  Woodland  St., 
Bristol.    Conn. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Burlington,  Conn.  Pu- 
pil of  School  of  Boston  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts;  under  Tarbell  and  Benson.  M  e  m- 
ber:  Conn.  AFA;  S.  Conn.  A.;  S. 
Indp.  A. ;  Alliance.  Award  :  Paige 
traveling  scholarship,  'School  of  Boston 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts. 

NORTON,  Elizabeth,  353  Lowell  Ave., 
Palo  Alto,  Calif. 

P.,  S.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Dec.  16,  1887. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
Alliance.  Work:  Wall  fountain  in 
Detroit  Athletic   Club. 

NORTON,  Helen  G(aylord),  Laguna 
Beach,  Calif.;  h.  189  Magnolia  Ave., 
Riverside,   Calif. 

P. — Born  Portsmouth,  Ohio,  April  12, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Mills  College;  Jean  Man- 
heim.  Member:  Laguna  Beach  AA; 
Calif.  AC.  Awards  :  Second  prize. 
Riverside  Co.  Fair,  1914;  First  prize, 
Southern  Calif.   Fair,   1920. 

NORTON.  John   Warner,  Lockport,   111. 
P.— Born  Lockport,   1876.     Pupil  of  AIC. 
Member:     Chicago     SA.       Instructor 
Chicago   Academy  of  Fine  Arts. 

NOSWORTHY.  Florence  (Pearl).  England 
(Mrs.  William  A.  Nosworthy),  Hampton, 
Conn. 

P.,  I.,  D.— Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.  Pupil 
of  Boston  Museum  School  under  Tarbell 


517 


NOTMAN 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


NYE 


and  Benson;  Cowles  Art  School  in  Bos- 
ton; ASL.  of  N.  Y.  under  Cox  and  Barse. 
Illustrated  "Betty  of  Wye,"  "The 
Cardinal's  Snuff  Box."  "Land  of  Play," 
"Diary  of  a  Birthday  Doll,"  "Tommy 
Tucker's  Book,"  "Bunny  Brown,"  etc. 
Designs   calendars  and  postal   cards. 

NOTMAN,  Howard,  136  Joralemon  St., 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Keene  Valley,  Essex  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Brooklyn,  April  20,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Constantin  Herzberg,  Brook- 
lyn Polytechnic  Insti.tute.  Member: 
Brooklyn  SA;  S.  Indp.  A. 

NOURSE,      Elizabeth,     80     Rue     d'Assas, 
Paris,   France. 

P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  1860.  Pupil  of 
Art  Academy  in  Cincinnati;  Lefebvre, 
Henner  and  Carolus-Duran  in  Paris. 
Member:  Soc.Nat.des  Beaux-Arts 
1901:  Paris  Woman's  AAA;  N.  A.  Wom- 
en PS  (hon.).  Awards:  Medal.  Colum- 
bian Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  third  class 
medal,  Inst.de  Carthage,  Tunis,  1897; 
first  class  gold  medal,  Nashville  Exp., 
1897;  silver  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900; 
silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
gold  medal.  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F,.,  1915. 
Work:  "Closed  Shutters,"  Luxem- 
bourg Museum,  Paris;  "Peasant  Wo- 
man of  Borst,"  Cincinnati  Museum; 
"Twilight,"  Toledo  Museum;  "Happy 
Days."  Detroit  Institute;  "Mother  and 
Children,"  Art  Institute,  Chicago; 
"Fisher  Girl  of  Picardy,"  National  Gal- 
lery, Washington. 

NOVANI,  Cossado,  126  East  75th  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (S.) 

NOVANI,    Guilio,   126  East   75th   St.,    New 
York,  N.  Y. 

S. — Born  Massa-Carrara,  Italy,  June  11, 
1889.  Pupil  of  Academy  of  Massa-Car- 
rara and  Beaux-Arts  Institute  in  New 
York. 

NOWELL,    Effie  Alexander,   14   St.   James 
Ave.,   Boston,   Mass. 

P. — Born  Boston.  Pupil  of  Juglaris, 
Henry  R.  Rice  and  Louis  Kronberg. 
Member:    Copley   S.    1892. 

NOXON,  Grace  P.  710  Carnegie  Hall,  56th 
'St.  and  7th  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Ossining,  N.  Y. 
Pupil  of  Laurens;  Ecole  des  Beaux- 
Arts;  Chase  at  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  N.  Y. 
School  of  Applied  Design.  Mem- 
ber:    S.   Indp.   A. ;   Lg.   of  N.   Y.   A. 

NOYES,    Bertha,    614    19th    St.,    N.    W., 
Washington,  D.   C. 

P.— M  ember:  S.WashA.;  Wash.WCC; 
Wash.  AC;  N.  A.   Women  PS, 

NOYES,   George   L.,  100  Revere  'St.,   Bos- 
ton,   Mass. 

P. — Born  in  Canada.  Pupil  of  Courtois. 
Rixen.  Le  Blanc  and  Delance  in  Paris. 
Member:  Boston  AC.  Award  : 
Silver  medal,  P.P.Exp.,  San  F,,  1915. 
Work:  "Gloucester  Wharves,"  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts,  Boston;  "New 
Hampshire  Hills,"  Des  Moines  Art  Mu- 
seum; "Road  to  Lisbon,"  Utah  State 
Museum. 


NUDERSCHER,  Frank,  119  North  7th 
St.;  h.  3130  South  Compton  Ave.,  St. 
Louis,  Mo. ;  summer,  Provincetown, 
Mass. 

P.,  I.,  E.,  T.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo., 
July  19,  1880.  Self-taught.  Mem- 
ber: Artists  Guild;  2x4  Soc. 
Award  :  Chamber  of  Commerce, 
($350)  prize,  1919.  Works:  Missis- 
sippi River  scenes,  in  Chamber  of  Com- 
merce, St.  Louis,  Mo. 

NUNN,  Evylena,  802  North  Ross  St.. 
Santa   Ana,    Calif. 

P.,  L.,  T. — Born  Mayfield,  Kan.,  July  4. 
1888.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Berkshire 
Summer  School  of  Art  and  A.  A.  Hills; 
School  of  Art  and  Design  of  Pomona 
College;  studied  in  Japan.  Mem- 
ber: Calif.  AC;  Laguna  AA;  Santa 
Ana  AG;   West   Coast  Arts. 

NUNN,  Frederic,  320  Harmony  St.,  Phila- 
delphia,  Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Aug.  18,  1879. 
Pupil  of  PAPA  under  Anshutz,  Breck- 
enridge.  Chase  and  Cecih"a  Beaux. 
Member:  Fellowship  PAFA;  Sketch 
C;  Phila.  Alliance;  Phila.  WCC.  Rep- 
resented in  the  collection  of  the  Fel- 
lowship of  the  Pennsylvania  Academy 
of  the   Fine  Arts,   Philadelphia. 

NUSE,  R(oy)  C(leveland),  Beechwood 
School  of  Fine  Arts,  Jenkintown,  Pa. ; 
h.   Pipersville,   Pa. 

P.,  T.— Born  Springfield,  O.,  Feb.  23, 
1885.  Pupil  of  Duveneck,  Cincinnati  Art 
Academy,  PAFA.  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A.;  Phila. 
Alliance.  Awards  :  Cresson  Euro- 
pean Scholarship,  PAFA,  1918;  second 
Cresson,  first  Toppan  and  first  Thouron 
prizes,  PAFA,  1918;  medal.  Phila. 
Sketch  C,  1921.  Director  of  Beech- 
wood  School  of  Fine  Arts,  Jenkintown, 
Pa. 

NUYTTENS,  J(osef)  P(ierre),  19  East 
Pearson  St.,  Chicago,  111.;  summer, 
Antwerp,  Belgium. 

P.,  E.— Born  Antwerp,  Aug.  7,  1880. 
Studied  at  Antwerp  Royal  Academy, 
Ecolo  des  Beaux-Arts  in  Paris  and  in 
Brussels.  Awards  :  Bronze  medal 
from  Queen  of  Belgium,  1918;  Chevalier 
of  the  Order  of  Leopold,  11.  Member: 
Cliff  Dwellers,  Chicago;  Alumni  AIC. 
Work  in  Chicago  Art  Institute;  White 
House.  Washington;  Royal  Palace,  Brus- 
sels, Belgium;  State  House,  Springfield 
111. 

NYE,  Edgar,  75  Bryant  St.,  N.  W.,  Wash- 
ington, D.   C. 

P. — Born  Richmond,  Va.,  Apr.  30,  1879 
Pupil  of  Corcoran  Gallery  of  Art,  Wash- 
ington, and  John  Noble  Barlow,  Eng- 
land. Member:  Wash.  SA:  Wash. 
WCC.  Work:  Picture  in  Plymouth 
Gallery,  England. 

NYE,  Elmer  L(esly),  Grand  Fords,  N.  D.; 
summer,  Santa  Fe,  N.  M. 
E.,  C— Born  St.  Paul.  Minn.,  June  29. 
1888.  Member:  Minneapolis  Attic 
C.  Award:  First  prize,  poster,  Minn. 
SA. 


518 


NYHOLM 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


OCHTMAN 


NYHOLM,  Arvid  F.,  4  East  Ohio  St.; 
h.  4829  Warner  Ave.,  Chicago,  III. 
P.— Born  Stockholm,  Sweden,  1866.  Pu- 
pil of  Royal  Acadenny,  Stockholm,  and 
of  Anders  Zorn;  Colarossi  Academy  in 
Paris.  Member:  Chicago  SA;  Chi- 
cago WCC.  Awards  :  Municipal  Art 
Lg.  prize,  also  popular  prize,  AIC,  1915. 
Work:  "Captain  John  Ericson,"  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C;  "Gen. 
Whipple,"   West   Point  Academy. 

NYS,  O.  A.,  431  West  47th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

OAKEY,  Maria.     See  Mrs.  T.  W.  Dewing. 

OAKLEY,  Thornton,  10  South  18th  St.; 
h.  905  Clinton  St..  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
I.,  P.,  W.,  Arch.,  T. — Born  Pittsburgh, 
Pa..  1881.  Studied  architecture  at  Univ. 
of  Pa.  (B.S.  and  M.S.  in  Arch.);  pupil 
of  Howai'd  Pyle  at  Wilmington.  Mem- 
ber: T.  Sq.C;  Phila.WCC  (sect.); 
Phila.Sketch  C;  SI  1913;  Fellowship 
PAFA;  Phila.  Alliance;  Wilmington  So- 
ciety Fine  Arts.  Awards:  Beck  Prize 
($100),  Phila.  WCC,  1914;  silver  medal, 
P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Instructor  in 
drawing,  Univ.  of  Pa.,  1914-15;  in 
charge,  Dept.  of  Illustration,  School  of 
Industrial  Art  of  the  Pa.  Museum; 
1914*-21.  Drawings  of  Hog  Island  adopt- 
ed 1918  by  U.  S.  Government  for  For- 
eign News  Service;  Lithographs  in  Li- 
brary of  Congress,  National  Gallery, 
Washington;  Boston  Public  Library; 
New  York  Public  Library;  Phila.  Free 
Library;  Newark  Free  Library;  State 
Library  of  Calif.;  Seattle  Public  Li- 
brary; St.  Louis  Public  Library;  Musee 
de  la  Guerre,  Paris;  British  Museum, 
Jjondon. 

OAKLEY,    Violet,    Cogslea.    Allen    Lane, 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

Mural  P.,  i.,  C— Born  New  York,  1874. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  PAFA  under 
Howard  Pyle  and  Cecilia  Beaux;  Aman- 
Jean,  Collin  and  Lazar  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: ANA;  Phila.  WCC;  Fellowship 
PAFA;  NYWCC;  Plastic  C;  SI  (Assoc.) 
1904;  Mural  P;  AIA  (iion.);  Phila.  Alli- 
ance. Awards:  Gold  medal  for  il- 
lustration and  silver  medal  for  mural 
decoration.  St.  Louis  Exo..  1904;  gold 
medal  of  honor,  PAFA  1905;  medal  of 
honor,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  medal 
of  honor  for  painting,  N.Y.Arch.Lg. 
1916.  Work:  Decorations  in  All 
Angels'  Church,  New  York;  frieze, 
"Founding  of  the  State  of  Liberty 
Spiritual,"  18  panels,  State  Capitol,  Har- 
risburg;  panel,  "The  Constitutional  Con- 
vention," Cuyahoga  Co.,  C.  H.,  Cleve- 
land; 9  panels,  ','The  Creation  and 
Preservation  of  the  Union,"  Senate 
Chamber,  Harrisburg. 

OBERHARDT,  William,  11  East  14th  St.; 
h.  920  Bryant  Ave.,  New  York.  N.  Y. ; 
summer,  Quonocontang  Beach,  R.  I. 
P.,  I..  E. — Born  Guttenburg.  N.  J.,  Sept. 
22,  1882.  Pupil  of  NAD;  Munich  Acad- 
emy of  Fine  Arts.  Member:  SI; 
Guild  of  Free  Lance  Artists;  Art  Di- 
rectors' Club.  Illustrated  "The  Sci- 
ence   of    Poetry"     and     "Philosophy    of 


Language,"  by  Hudson  Maxim;  "God's 
Country  and  the  Woman,"  by  Oliver 
Curwood,   etc. 

OBERTAUFFER,  Helen,  139  West  55th 
St.,    New   York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

OBERTEUFFER,  George,  care  of  Wis- 
consin School  of  Art,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 
P. — Born  Philadelphia,  1878.  Pupil  of 
Chase,  Anshutz.  Member:  Salon 
d'Automne;  Salon  des  Independents. 
Works:  "Stevenson's  Moret,"  and 
"Eglise  St.  Roch,"  Brooklyn  Museum; 
"Springtime,  Paris,"'  National  Gallery 
of  New  South  Wales;  "Winter,"  owned 
by   French   Government. 

OBERTEUFFER,  Henrietta  Amiard,  care 
of  State  Normal  School,  Milwaukee, 
Wis. 

P. — Born  Havre,  France,  1878.  Pupil 
of  Laurens,  Constant.  Member: 
Salon  d'Automne,  Salon  des  Independ- 
ents. Work:  Still  life  owned  by 
French    Government. 

O'BRIEN,    Catherine    C,    437   West    117th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

O'CALLAHAN,  C(linton)  C(lement), 
American  Art  Association,  4  Rue  Jos- 
eph-Bara,  Paris,  France. 
P.— Born  Hartford,  Conn.,  Feb.  19,  1890. 
Pupil  of  Charles  Noel  Flagg,  Charles 
Hawthorne,  Charles  Guerin.  Mem- 
ber:    Soc.    Conn.   Artists;    Paris  AAA. 

OCHTMAN,    Dorothy^  Cos   Cob,   Conn. 
P.— Born  Riverside,   Conn.,   May  8,   1892. 

•     Pupil  of  NAD  and  Ochtman. 

OCHTMAN,  Leonard,  "Grayledge,"  Cos 
Cob,  Conn. 

Ldscp.P. — Born  Zonnemaire,  Holland, 
Oct.  21,  1854;  settled  at  Albany,  N.  Y.. 
1866.  Self-taught.  Member:  SAA 
1891;  ANA  1898;  NA  1904;  AWCS;  NY. 
WCC;  Brooklyn  AC;  A.Fund  S;  A. Aid  S.; 
Salma.C.  1901;  Lotos  C;  NAC;  Nat. 
Inst.  A.L.;  Greenwich  Society  of  Art- 
ists. Awards  :  Prize,  Brooklyn  AC 
1891;  medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago 
1893;  gold  medal,  ACPhila.  1894;  silver 
medal.  Pan- Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver 
medal,  Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  Morgaii 
prize,  Salma.C.  1902;  Shaw  fund  prize, 
SAA  1902;  Inness  gold  medal,  NAD  1903; 
Evans  prize,  Salma.C.  1903;  Webb 
prize,  SAA  1904;  two  gold  medals  (oil 
and  water  color),  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
second  Corcoran  prize,  S.Washington  A. 
1905;  Rhead  purchase,  Richmond  (Ind.) 
AC  1905;  Inness  prize,  Salma.C.  1906; 
Evans  prize,  Salma.C.  1907;  medal  of 
second  class,  Knoxville  Exp.,  1911; 
silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F..  1915. 
Work:  "Winter  Light,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  "November  Morn- 
ing," Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington; 
"Frosty  Acres,"  City  Art  Museum,  St. 
Louis;  "Silent  Morning,"  Columbus  (O.) 
Gallery  of  Art;  "Morning  Haze."  Evans 
Collection,  National  Gallery,  Washing- 
ton; "A  Gray  Morning,"  Brooklyn  In- 
stitute Museum;  "December,"  Museum 
of  Art,  Fort  Worth.  Tex.;  "Winter 
Morning,"  Art  Association,  Dallas.  Tex.; 
"Landscape."  Hackley  Art  Gallery. 
Muskegon,  Mich:  "Autumn  Morning," 
Bruce  Museum,  Greenwich,  Conn. 


519 


OCHTMAN 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  At^T 


OPERTI 


OCHTMAN,  Mina  Fonda  (Mrs.  Leonard 
Ochtman),  "Grayledge,"  Cos  Cob,  Conn. 
F.— Born  Laconia,  N.  H.,  March  28,  1862. 
Pupil  of  ASL,  in  New  York  and  of 
Leonard  Ochtman.  Member:  ASL,  of 
N.  Y.;  AWCS;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Chi- 
cago WCC;   Greenwich  SA. 

O'CONNOR,  Andrew,  Jr.,  Worcester, 
Mass. 

S. — Born  Worcester,  Mass.,  June  7, 
1874.  Pupil  of  his  father;  of  D.  C. 
French  in  New  York.  Member: 
ANA,  1919.  Awards  :  Bronze  medal, 
Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  second 
class  medal,  Paris  Salon,  1906.  Work: 
"Meditation,"  Art  Association,  Indian- 
apolis; work  purchased  by  French  Gov- 
ernment; "Adam  and  Eve,"  marble, 
Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C; 
Lincoln  statue.  State  House  Grounds, 
Springfield,  111.;  Santa  Fortunata, 
Springfield    (111.)    Art  Association. 

O'CONNOR,  Henry  M.,  58  Putnam  Ave., 
Cambridge,    Mass. 

P.,  E. — Born  Brookline,  Mass.,  Mar.  5, 
1891.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art  School 
and  Boston  Museum  School.  Mem- 
ber: Boston  SE;  Copley  S.;  Chicago 
SE. 

OF,  George  F(erdinand),  2794  Morris  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P._Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  16, 
1876.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Weinhold 
in  Munich;  Delecluse  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  S.  Indp.  A.;  Modern 
Artists  of  America. 

OFFUTT,    Lucy   Lee,  Friendship  Heights, 
Md. 
P.— M  ember:   Wash.WCC. 

OGDEN,  Helen  Eastman.  See  Mrs.  Camp- 
bell. 

OGDEN,  Henry  A.,  709  Times  Bldg.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Englewood,  N.  J. 
I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  July  17,  1856. 
Pupil  of  NAD;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber: SI,  1911.  Work:  Collection  of 
uniforms  of  the  United  States  Army, 
1775-1906,  made  by  order  of  Quarter- 
Master  General's  Department.  Author 
and  illustrator  of  "The  Boy's  Book  of 
Famous  Regiments,"  etc.  Specialty, 
military   and   historical   subjects. 

OGDEN,   Lyman    Garfield,  East  St.;  h.   66 
North  St.,   Walton,   N.   Y. 
P.,  I.,  C,  Landscp.  Arch. — Born  Walton, 
N.  Y.,  March  23,  1882.     Pupil  of  Thomas 
Anshutz,  Robert  Henri. 

O'KELLY,  Aloysius,  402  Clermont  Ave., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Dublin,  Ireland,  1853.  Pupil 
of  Bonnat  and  Gerome  at  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts  in  Paris.  Member: 
NYWCC. 

OLINSKY.  Ivan  G.,  27  West  67th  St., 
New  York.   N.  Y. 

P. — Born  in  Russia  1878.  Studied  at 
NAD  and  in  France  and  Italy.  Mem- 
ber: ANA,  1914;  NA,  1919;  Mural  P.; 
N.  Y.  Arch  Lg.,  1912;  Salma.  C;  Phila. 
AC;  AAS;  NAC;  Allied  AA.  Awards: 
Clarke  prize  ($300).  NAD.  1914:  Shaw 
purchase  prize,  Salma.  C,  1919.  Work: 
"Ada,"  Omaha  Society  of  Fine  Arts; 
"Young    Girl,"     Detroit    AC;     "Gossip," 


Dallas  (Tex.)  Ai't  Asso.;  "Old  Fash- 
ioned Gown"  and  "Two  Girls,"  Detroit 
Institute;  "Maytime";  "Fairy  Stories"; 
portraits  of  Mr.  Stambaugh  and  Mr. 
J.  G.  Butler,  Butler  Art  Institute, 
Youngstown,   O. 

OLIVE,  Myron  A.,  131  Waverly  PL,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

OLIVER,  Ellis  A..  3311  Walnut  St.,  Phil- 
adelphia,   Pa.    (P.) 

OLIVER,   Frederick  W.,   Fenway   Studios, 
30  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P. — M  ember  :   Boston  AC. 

OLIVER,  Jean  Nutting,  Fenway  Studios, 
SO  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  summer, 
East  Gloucester,  Mass. 
Min.  P.,  T.,  W. — Born  Lynn,  Mass.  Pu- 
pil of  Boston  Museum  School,  C.  H. 
Woodbury,  Philip  Hale.  Member: 
Copley  S,  1883;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Bos- 
ton GA;  Conn.  AFA;  Concord  AA;  Prov- 
incetown  AA.  Awards  :  Hudson  prize, 
PAPA,  1916;  "People's  Prize,"  Boston 
Women  Painters  Exhibition,   1917. 

OLIVER,  Myron  A(ngelo),  106  Main  St., 
Monterey,  Calif. ;  summer,  care  of 
American  Express  Co.,  11  Rue  Scribe, 
Paris,   France. 

P.— Born  Fulton,  Kansas,  June  16,  1891. 
Pupil  of  Chase,  DuMond.  Member: 
ASL  of  N.Y.;   Lg.   of  N.Y.A.;   Salma.   C. 

OLMSTEAD,  Vincent  H.,  264  Asylum  St., 
Hartford,  Conn. 
P. — M  ember  :     Conn.    AFA. 

OLSON,  Albert  Byron,  25  East  18th  St.; 
817  Pearl  St.,  Denver,  Colo. 
P.,  C— Born  Montrose,  Colo.,  May  3, 
1885.  Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Chase, 
Anshutz  and  McCarter.  Member: 
Denver  AA.  Represented  in  collection 
of  Denver  Art  Asso.,  St.  Mark's  Church, 
Denver. 

OLSON,  J.  Olaf,  104  Columbia  Heights, 
Brooklyn,    N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Buffalo,  Minn.,  Jan.  28,  1894. 
Pupil  of  H.  Tadama.  Member: 
AWCS. 

ONDERDONK,  Julian,  128  West  French 
Place,  San  Antonio,  Tex. 
P. — Born  San  Antonio,  Tex.,  July  30, 
1882.  Pupil  of  his  father,  R.  J.  Onder- 
donk:  Chase.  Henri  and  Du  Mond  in 
New  York.  Member:  Salma.  C,  1913; 
Allied  AA.  Work:  "Springtime," 
Dallas  (Tex.)  Art  Association;  "Morning 
Sunlight,"  San  Antonio  (Tex.)  Art 
League. 

O'NEILL,   George   Kerr,  1515  Arch   St.;   h. 
1411  Reed  'St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— Born    Philadelphia,    March    1,    1879. 
Pupil   of  PAFA. 

O'NEILL,  R(aymond)  E(dgar),  331  Johns- 
ton Ave.,  "Trenton,  N.  J. 
P.,  C,  T.— Born  Trenton,  N.  J.,  July 
8,  1893.  Pupil  of  A.  W.  Dow,  Lachman, 
Angel  Zarrago  and  C.  H.  Martin. 
Member:     S.   Indp.   A. 

O'IMEILL,    Rose  Cecil.     See  Mrs.  Wilson. 

OPERTI,  Albert  (Jasper  Ludwig  Rocca- 
bigllera),  American  Museum  of  Natural 
History,  West  77th  St.,  New  York,  N.Y. 
I.,  P.,  S.— Born    Turin,    Italy,    March    17, 


520 


OPPER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


OTIS 


1852.  Studied  abroad.  Member: 
Palette  Club;  Tile  Club.  Scenic  artist 
in  New  York  theatres;  illustrator  of 
books  on  arctic  subjects,  having  made 
two  voyages  to  the  arctic  regions  with 
Rear  Admiral  Peary.  Awards  : 
Medals  and  diplomas  as  official  artist, 
U.  S.  Government  exhibits,  Chicago  and 
San  Francisco  Expositions.  Work: 
"Rescue  of  the  Greeley  Party"  and 
"Farthest  North";  paintings  for  Army 
and  Navy  Dept.,  Washington;  mural 
decorations  in  Museum  of  Natural  His- 
tory, New  York;  "The  Last  Franklin 
Search,"  American  Geographic  Society, 
New  York,  etc. 
OPPER,  Frederick  Burr,  care  of  "New 
York  American,"  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h. 
62  Circuit  Road,  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 
Cartoonist. — Born  Madison,  Lake  Co., 
O.,  Jan.  2,  1857.  Member:  SI  1910. 
On  staff  of  "Journal"  since  1899.  Il- 
lustrated "Mark  Twain,"   "Mr.  Dooley/' 

ORDWAY,   Mrs.  S.   H.,  123  East  71st  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     N.  A.  Women  PS. 

ORGAN,  Marjorie  (Mrs.  Robert  Henri), 
10  Gramercy  Park,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Caricaturist. — Born  New  York,  N.  Y., 
Dec.  3,  1886.  Pupil  of  Dan  McCarthy 
and  Robert  Henri.  Member:  S.  Indp. 
A.  Work  :  "Reggie  and  the  Heavenly 
Twins,"  "The  Man  Haters'  Club," 
"Strange  What  a  Difference  a  Mere  Man 
Makes,"  in  New  York  "Journal";  cari- 
catures of  stage,  etc.,  for  New  York 
"World." 

ORMOND,     M.     Georgia,     1861     Parkwood 
Ave..   Toledo,    Q. 
S.— M  ember:    N.    A.    Women   PS, 

ORR,  Alfred  Everitt,  14  West  72nd  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  San  Gabriel,  Calif. 
P.,  I.— Born  New  York.  N.  Y.,  Jan.  6, 
1886.  Pupil  of  N.  Y.  ASL;  Royal  Acad- 
emy in  London;  W.  M.  Chase  and  Haw- 
thorne. Author  of  poster,  "For  Home 
and  Country,"   for   5th  Liberty  Loan. 

ORR,  Frances  (Morris),  Woodland  Road, 
Sewickley,  Pa.;  summer.  Amos  Chese- 
bro  Farm,  Stonington,  Conn. 
P.— Born  Springfield.  Mo.,  Sept.  26,  1880, 
Pupil  of  G.  A.  Thompson.  Member: 
New   Haven   PCC;    Pittsburgh   AA. 

ORR,    Mrs.    J.    B,,    Woodland    Rd.,    Pitts- 
burgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts  AA. 

ORR,  J.  Edward.  1421  Franklin  Ave.,  Co- 
lumbus, O. 

P. — M  ember:    Pen    and    Pencil    Club, 
Columbus 

ORR,  Louis,  5  Rue  Mazarine,  Paris, France. 
P.,  E. — Born  Hartford,  Conn.,  May  19, 
1879.  Pupil  of  Laurens  in  Paris; 
Knight  of  the  Legion  of  Honor. 
Work:  Mural  decorations  in  State 
Bank,  Hartford.  Conn.;  22  original  pen- 
cil drawings  "Rheims  Cathedral,  1917," 
and  11  etchings  in  the  Luxembourg, 
Paris;  one  etched  copper  plate  in  the 
Louvre,  Paris;  one  plate  in  New  York 
Public  Library;  two  etchings  in  Oak- 
land (Calif.)  Museum;  etching  in  Stras- 


bourg Museum;  3  etchings  of  Rheims 
Cathedral,  National  American  Red 
Cross;  2  plates  in  French  Government 
collection. 

ORWIG,  Louise,  City  Library,  Des  Moines, 
Iowa. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Mifflinburg,  Pa.  Pupil 
of  William  M.  Chase,  Henry  McCarter 
and  Daniel  Garber,  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA;  Des  Moines  AFA. 
Awards  :  Cresson  scholarship,  PAFA, 
1911;  Women's  Club  prize  ($100),  1911, 
1921, 

OSBORN,  Frank,  Box  236,  Dobbs  Ferry, 
N.     Y. 

P.,  E, — Born  Altamont,  Albany  Co., 
N.  Y.,  June  13,  1887.  Member:  S. 
Indp.A. 

OSBORN,  Mrs.  Robie,  Dobbs  Ferry.  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp.A. 

OSGOOD,  Harry  Haviland,  1538  East  57th 
St.;  h.  5647  Blackstone  Ave.,  Chicago, 
111. 

P.,  E.— Born  in  Illinois,  'Sept.  1875.  Pu- 
pil of  AIC;  Julian  and  Colarossi  Acad- 
emies in  Paris.  Member:  Chicagro 
SA. 

OSGOOD,  Mrs.  Nellie  Thorne,  1538  East 
57th  St.;  h.  5647  Blackstone  Ave.,  Chi- 
cago,  111. 

P.,  T. — Born  in  Michigan,  June,  1879. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  Julian  and  Oolarossl 
Academies,    Paris. 

OSGOOD,  Ruth,  1713  P  St.,  N.  W.,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C. 
P.— M  ember:   Wash.WCC, 

O'SHEA,   John,   Carmel,    Calif.      (P.) 

OSNIS,   Benedict  A.,  1611  Chestnut  St.;  h. 
2129  North  Ninth  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.,  T.— Born    in    Russia,    1872.      Pupil   or 
PAFA.      Member:    ACPhila. 

OSNIS,  D.  Hartman,  southwest  corner 
15th  and  Walnut  Sts.,  Philadelphia.  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:   Fellow.ship  PAFA. 

OSTHAUS,  Edmund  H(enry),  27  Bed- 
ford Rd,,  Summit,  N.  J. 
P. — Born  Hildesheim,  Germany,  Aug.  5, 
1858.  Pupil  of  Royal  Academy  in  Diis- 
seldorf.  Came  to  U.  S.  1883.  Mem- 
ber: Toledo  Tile  C,  Specialty,  dogs. 
Work:  "Afield,"  "A  Good  One,"  Mu- 
seum  of  Art,   Toledo,  O. 

OSTRANDER,  William   C(hesebrough),  48 

West  Housatonic  St,,  Pittsfield,  Mass. 
P.— Born    New    York.    N,    Y.,    March    5, 
1858.     Pupil  of  Carl  Hecker  and  Venino. 
Member:  Salma.C.  1897;  A.Fund  S. 

OSTROWSKY,  Sam,  1868  South  Central 
Park  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  L.,  T.— Born  Russia,  May  5,  1885. 
Pupil  of  Harry  Wolcott  and  AIC,  Lau- 
rens and  Academic  Julian  in  Paris. 
Member:  S.  Indp.  A.  Award: 
Hon.   mention,   AIC. 

OSWALD,     Kalman,    520    East    82nd     St., 
New  York,  N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 

OTIS,  Amy,  Wheaton  College,  Norton, 
Mass. 

Min.  P..  T. — Born  Sherwood,  N.  Y,  Pu- 
pil of  Philadelphia  School  of  Design  and 
PAFA:     Colarossi     Academy,     Courtola 


521 


OTIS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


PALL 


and  Garrido  in  Paris.  Member: 
Plastic  C;  Phila.WCC;  Pa.S.Min.P.; 
Fellowship  PAFA.  In  charge,  Art 
Dept.,  Wheaton  College. 
OTIS,  Sam(uel)  D(avis),  112  Waverly  P1-. 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Westport, 
Conn. 

I.,  E. — Born  Sherwood,  N.  Y.,  July  24, 
1889.     Pupil    of   H.    MeCarter. 

OTT,  Ralph  C,  645  Belmont  St.,  Spring- 
field,   Mo.       (P.). 

OUREN,  Karl,  1536  North  Kedzie  Ave., 
Chicago,    111. 

P. — Born  in  Norway  in  1882.  Studied  in 
Copenhagen  and  at  AIC.  Member: 
Palette  and  Chisel  C.  Award:  Gold 
medal,   Palette  and  Chisel  C,   1919. 

OUTCAULT,  Richard  F(elton),  245  Madi- 
son Ave...  Flushing,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
Comic  I. — Born  Lancaster,  O.,  Jan.  14, 
1863.  On  staff  of  the  "New  York  Jour- 
nal" since  1905.  Created  the  "Yellow 
Kid"  and  "Buster  Brown."  Mem- 
ber: Salma.C. 

OVERBECK,  Hannah,  Cambridge  City, 
Ind. 

P.,  C. — M  ember:  Cincin.  Woman's 
AC. 

OVERBECK,  Mary  Frances,  Cambridge 
City,  Ind. 

P.,  C. — Born  Cambridge  City,  Ind.,  Jan. 
28,  1878.  Pupil  of  Arthur  Dow  at  Co- 
lumbia University,  New  York.  Mem- 
ber: Cincinnati  Woman's  AC;  Indi- 
ana Artists'   Club. 

OVERLAND,  Mrs.  Cora  L.,  Scituate, 
Mass.    (S.) 

OWEN,  Mrs.  Esther  S.  D.,  40  Willard 
St.,  Hartford,  Conn. 

P.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Sept.  19,  1843. 
Pupil  of  Votin,  Geary  and  Tuckerman. 
Member:  Conn.AFA.  Represented 
in  Worcester  Art  Museum. 

OWEN,   R.   Emmett,  Springdale,   Conn. 
P. — M  ember:   Conn.AFA. 

PACH,  Walter,  13  East  14th  Street,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

P._Born  New  York,  July  11,  1883.  Pu- 
pil of  Leigh  Hunt,  Chase  and  Henri  in 
New  York.  Member:  Society  des 
Artistes  Independants,   Paris;   S.Indp.A. 

PACKARD,  Mabel,  2031  Berkshire  Ave., 
South  Pasadena,  Calif. 
Min.P. — Born  in  Iowa.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
Colarossi  Academy  in  Paris.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :  Chicago  SA.  Award:  Bronze 
medal,    St.   Louis  Exp.,   1904. 

PACKER,    Francis     H(erman),    53    Lake- 
side Drive,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— M  ember:  NSS  1905. 

PADDOCK,  Ethel  Louise,  12  East  15th 
St.;  h.  149  West  72nd  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.— Born  New  York  City,  Apr.  19,  1887. 
Pupil  of  New  York  School  of  Art,  and 
Henri.  Member:  S.  Indp.  A.;  N.  A. 
Women  PS. 

PADDOCK,  Josephine,  141  West  70th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — M  ember:  N.  A.  Women  PS; 
Conn.   AFA. 


PADDOCK,  Willard  D(ryden),  care  of 
Glenn  Hall  Gallery,  6  West  56th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  South  Kent, 
Conn. 

S.,  P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  23, 
1873.  Pupil  of  Herbert  Adams  in  New 
York;  Pratt  Inst,  in  Brooklyn;  Courtois 
and  Girardot  in  Paris.  Member: 
Salma.C.  1904;  MacD.C;  NSS  1915  (as- 
soc);  A. Aid  S. ;  Allied  AA;  Wash.  AC; 
Century  Asso.;  Guild  of  N.  Y.  A. 

PAEFF,  Bashka,  6  Pinckney  St.,  Boston, 
Mass. 

S..  T.— Born  Minsk,  Russia,  Aug.  12, 
1893.  Pupil  of  Bela  Pratt.  Member': 
Boston  GA;  Detroit  SAC;  BSAC;  Bos- 
ton SA. 

PAGE,  Josephine,  1863  Kalorama  Road, 
Washington,   D.    C.    (P.) 

PAGE,  Marie  D(anforth)  (Mrs.  Calvin  Q. 
Page),  128  Marlborough  St.,  Boston, 
Mass. 

Port.P. — Born  Boston.  Pupil  of  School 
of  the  Boston  Museum  of  Fine  Arts.  . 
Member:  Copley  S.  1890;  Inter.  Soc; 
AL;  Newport  AA.  Awards:  Boston 
GA;  bronze  medal,  P-P.  Exp.,  San.  F., 
1915;  Bok  prize,  PAFA  1916;  Shaw 
Memorial  prize,  NAD  1916;  First  prize 
and  hon.   men.,   Duxbury  AA,    1920. 

PAGE,  Walter  Oilman,  310  Fenway 
Studios,  30  Ipswich  St.,  Boston.  Mass, 
P.,  W.,  T.— Born  Boston.  Pupil  of 
Boston  Museum  School;  Boulanger  and 
Lef ebvre  in  Paris.  Member:  Cop- 
ley S.;  Mass.  State  Art  Commission. 
Work:  "A  Head,"  Toledo  Museum 
of  Art;  portraits  in:  Massachusetts 
'State  House;  Portland  (Me.)  City  Hall; 
Bowdoin  Collee-e;  Maine  Historical  So- 
ciety; Colby  College,  Maine;  Vermont 
State  House;  Worcester  Public  Library, 
etc.  Chairman,  State  Art  Commission, 
Mass. 

PAGES,  Jules,  42  Rue  Fontaine,  Paris, 
France. 

P.,  T.— Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  1867. 
Pupil  of  Constant,  Lefebvre  and  Robert- 
Fleury  in  Paris.  Awards:  Hon. 
mention,  Paris  Salon,  1895;  third  medal, 
Paris  Salon,  1899;  second  medal,  Paris 
Salon,  1905.  Knight  of  the  Legion  of 
Honor,  1910.  Instructor  at  the  Julian 
Academy  night  class  since  1902;  life 
class  since  1907.  Member:  Int.  Soc. 
Paris  SP.  Represented  in  Museum  of 
Pau,  France;  Museum  of  Toulouse, 
France;  the  Luxembourg,  Paris;  Golden 
Gate  Park  Museum  and  Art  Inst.,  San 
Francisco;  Municipal  Art  Gallery,  Oak- 
land, Calif. 

PAGON,    Katherine  W.   Dunn    (Mrs.  Wil- 
liam  W.    Pagon),    114   St.    John's   Road, 
Roland  Park,   Md. 
P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

PAINE,  Richard  G.,  East  Falls  Church, 
Va. 

S. — Born  Charleston,  S.  C,  Feb.  15, 
1875.     Pupil  of  Amateis  and  Kemeys. 

PALL,  Augustin   G.,  19  East  Pearson  St., 
Chicago,    111. 
P. — M  ember:      Chicago   SA. 


522 


PALMER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


PARAMIX: 


PALMER,  Adelaide,  739  Boylston  St.,  Bos- 
ton, Mass.;  summer,  Piermont,  N.  H. 
P.,  T.— Born    Orford,     N.     H.       Pupil    of 
John  J.  Enneking  in  Boston  and  G.   H. 
Bartlett.    Member:     Copley  S.  1893. 

PALMER,     Elizabeth.      See    Mrs.     Brad- 
field. 

PALMER,  Mrs.  Fredrikke  S(chjbth),  221 
Everit  St.,  New  Haven.  Conn. 
P. — Born  Drammen,  Norway,  May  26, 
1860.  Pupil  of  Knut  Bergslien  in  Chris- 
tiania;  Carl  Gussow  in  Berlin.  Mem- 
ber: New  Haven  Paint  and  Clay  C. 
Staff  artist  for   "Woman's  Journal." 

PALMER,     Herman,    73    West    55th    St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.   (I.) 

PALMER,   Mrs.    Minette   D.,  3539  Reading 
Road,    Avondale.    Cincinnati,    O. 
P. — Member:     Cincinnati   Woman's  AC. 

PALMER,  Pauline  (Mrs.  Albert  E.  Pal- 
mer). 4  East  Ohio  St.,  Chicago,  111. 
P. — Born  McHenry,  111.  Pupil  of 
AIC,  Chase,  Miller  and  Hawthorne; 
Collin,  Prinet,  Courtois  and  Simon  in 
Paris.  Member:  Chicago  SA;  Chi- 
cago WCC;  Chicago  Municipal  AL; 
Chicago  Art  Guild;  Chicago  AC;  Cor- 
don C. ;  Chicago  Alliance;  Alumnae  AIC. 
Awards:  Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  Young  Fortnightly  prize. 
AIC  1907;  Marshall  Field  prize,  AIC 
1907;  Thompson  portraiture  prize,  AIC 
1914;  participant  in  Fine  Arts  prize. 
SWA  1915;  hon.  mention  Chicago  AG 
1915;  Cahn  hon.  mention  AIC  1916; 
Rosenwald  purchase  prize  AIC,  1916; 
hon.  mention,  AIC,  1916;  Carr  prize,  AIC' 
1917;  Butler  Purchase  Prize,  AIC.  1920; 
silver  medal,  Chicago  SA,  1920.  Repre- 
sented in  permanent  collections  of  West 
End  Woman's  Club;  Municipal  Art 
League  collection  at  Art  Institute  of 
Chicago;  Nike  Club;  Klio  Association 
and  Arche  Club,  all  of  Chicago;  public 
school  collection  of  Decatur,  111.;  Muncie 
(Ind.)  Art  Association;  "Village  by  the 
Sea,"  Chicago  Municipal  Commission 
purchase;  represented  in  collection  of 
Aurora,   III.,   Art  Association. 

PALMER,   Samuel    M.,   1020   Chestnut   St., 
Philadelphia,   Pa.      (P.) 

PALMER,    Walter    L(aunt),    5    Lafayette 
St.,    Albany,    N.   Y. 

I>dscp.P. — Born  Albany,  Aug.  1,  1854; 
son  of  the  sculptor,  Erastus  Dow  Pal- 
mer. Pupil  of  F.  E.  Church  at  Hudson, 
N.  Y. ;  Carolus-Duran  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1887,  NA  1897;  SAA  1881; 
NYWCC;  AWCS;  Salma.C.  1901;  Pastel; 
Century  Assoc;  Union  Inter.des  Beaux- 
Arts  et  des  Lettres.  Awards:  Sec- 
end  Hallgarten  prize.  NAD  1887;  medal. 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago.  1893;  gold 
medal.  ACPhila.  1894;  Evans  prize, 
AWCS  1895;  first  prize,  Boston  1895; 
second  prize.  Tennessee  Centennial 
Exp.,  Nashville,  1897;  hon.  mention, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal  for  water 
color,  Pan-Am. Exp..  Buffalo.  1901;  silver 
medal  for  water  color,  Charleston  Exp.. 
1902;  silver  medal  for  water  color  and 
bronze  medal  for  oil.  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  silver  medal,  Philadelphia,  1907; 
bronze  medal,  Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910; 
Butler     prize,     AIC,      1919.        Specialty, 


winter  landscapes.  Work:  "Sundown 
at  Walpole,  N.  H.,"  Buffalo  Fine  Arts 
Academy,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. ;  "The  Pasture 
Fence,"  Public  Gallery,  Richmond, 
Ind.;  "Lingering  Oak  Leaves,"  Omaha 
(Neb.)  Art  Society;  "Under  the  Pines," 
Memorial  Art  Gallery,  Rochester,  N.  Y. ; 
"Silent  Dawn,"  Metropolitan  Museum 
of  Art;  "The  Dell,"  Ai't  Museum, 
Youngstown,    O. 

PALMGREEN,   Charles  J.,  615  Bayne  St., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

PALUMBO,  Alphonse,  778  Prospect  Ave., 
New  York,   N.  Y.      (P.) 

PANCOAST,  Morris  Hall,  12  East  8th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  1.— Born  Salem,  N.  J.,  April  27, 
1877.  Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Anshutz; 
Julian  Academy  under  Laurens  in  Paris. 
Member:  Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila. 
Sketch  C;  Salma.  C.  Work  :  "Pennsy 
Train  Shed,"  Pennsylvania  Academy  of 
the  Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia;  "Easter 
Storm,"  Municipal  Art  League,  Wil- 
liamsport,  Pa, 

PAOLO,  C(artaino)  S(ciarrino),  80  Wash- 
ington Square,  East,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
739  Boylston  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
S. — Born  Palermo,  Italy.  June  29,  1882. 
Pupil  of  American  Academy  in  Rome; 
Pine  Arts  Institute  of  Palermo. 
Work:  Bust  of  ex-Gov.  MacCall  of 
Mass.,  in  'State  House,  Boston;  Cardinal 
O'Connell  in  Boston  Cathedral;  marble 
memorial  in  Cathedral  of  St.  John  the 
Divine,  New  York;  "Cardinal  Mercier 
of  Belgium,"  New  York  University; 
bronze  female  figure,  Toledo  Museum 
of  Art;  bronze  tablet  for  John  Bur- 
roughs memorial  field. 

RAPE,  Eric,  "The  Plains,"  Manchester- 
by-the-Sea,  Mass.;  and  The  Players, 
Gramercy  Park,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal..  Oct. 
17,  1870.  Pupil  of  Emil  Carlsen  in  New 
York;  Ecole  des  Beaux- Arts  in  Paris 
under  Gerome,  Constant,  Lefebvre, 
Doucet  and  Delance.  Member: 
United  Arts  C,  London;  Royal  Soc.of 
Arts,  London;  Atlantic  Union,  London; 
North  British  Academy;  Players  C., 
New  York.  Director,  Eric  Pape  School 
of  Art-  1898  to  1913.  Awards:  Five 
medals  and  diplomas  at  various  exhibi- 
tions. Illustrations  for  "The  Fair  God." 
"The  Scarlet  Letter."  "The  Life  of  Na- 
poleon Bonaparte";  "Life  of  Mahomet"; 
"Poetical  Works  of  Madison  Cawein"; 
portraits  for  "The  Memoirs  of  Ellen 
Terry,"  etc.  Designed  monument  at 
Stage  Fort  Park,  Gloucester,  commem- 
orating founding  of  Massachusetts  Bay 
Colony,  1623.  Director  and  master  of 
pageants,  "The  Canterbury  Pilgrims," 
Gloucester,  Mass.,  1908.  and  "The  Flow- 
ers of  the  Sea."  Lookout  Hill,  Mass.. 
1912. 

PARAMINO,     John     F.,     295     Huntington 

Ave.,  Boston,  Mass.;  28  Everett  St., 
Arlington,    Mass. 

S..  T.— Born  Boston.  1889.  Pupil  of 
Augustus  Saint  Gaudens  and  Bela  L. 
Pratt.     Member:     Boston  GA. 


523 


PARCELL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


PARRISH 


PARCELL,    Malcolm,    Washington,    Pa. 
P. — M   ember:      Pittsburgh      AA. 
Award:     Saltus  gold  medal,   NAD, 
1919. 

PARIS,  WiSliam   Francklyn,  53  West  39th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Mural  P..  Arch.,  W,.,  L. — Born  in  New 
York.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris;  Salvi  in  Rome. 
Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1898;  NSS 
(lay);  Century  Assoc;  Museum  of 
French  Art  (bd.  trustees) ;  A. 
Aid  S.;  Alliance.  Author:  "Rodin 
as  a  Symbolist";  "Biography  of  Al- 
bert Besnard";  "The  French  Institute 
and  American  Art";  "Modern  Gobelin 
Tapestries,";  "Decorative  Elements  in 
Architecture,"  etc.  Lecturer,  Univ.  of 
Pa.,  Vassar  College,  St.  John's  College, 
Univ.  of  Md.,  Cornell  Univ.  U.  S.  Com- 
missioner of  Decorative  Art,  Paris  Exp., 
1900. 

PARKER,  A(nna)    B(enedict)    (Mrs.   Neil- 
son  T.  Parker),  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:        N.    A.    Women    PS; 
NAC. 

PARKER,  Cora,  Greenwich,  Conn. 
P.,  I. — Born  in  Kentucky.  Pupil  of  Cin- 
cinnati Art  School;  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris.  Work:  "Blue  Waters  of 
Gloucester,"  Kansas  City  (Mo.)  Art 
Club;  "Prune  Orchard,  California," 
Nebraska  Art  Association,  Lincoln, 
Custodian  Art  Gallery,  Bruce  Museum, 
Greenwich,   Conn. 

PARKER,  Cushman,  Woodstock,  Ulster 
Co.,  N.  Y.;  Onset,  Mass. 
I. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Apr.  28,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Carl  Marr.  Mem- 
ber: SI.  Designer  of  covers  for  "Sat- 
urday Evening  Post",  "McCall's",  "Col- 
lier's",   etc. 

PARKER,    Emma    Alice,    42    College    St., 
Providence,   R.   I. 

P.,  I. — Born  Gardner,  Mass.,  Feb.  15, 
1876.  Pupil  of  Sydney  R.  Burleigh. 
Robert  Henri,  F.  V.  Du  Mond  and  H.  R. 
Poore.     Member:   Providence  WCC. 

PARKER,    John     E.,    3413    Hamilton    St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

PARKER,    John     F.,    401    Convent    Ave., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  S.— Born  New  York  City,  May  10, 
1884.  Pupil  of  Henri  in  New  York; 
studied  in  England  and  with  Laurens 
and  Steinlen  in  Paris.  Member: 
AG  of  Am.;  Alliance;  'Salma.  C. 
Award  :  Whitney  prize.  Labor  Com- 
petition. Directed  pageant  of  the  City 
History  Club,  New  York,  1916;  West- 
field  200th  Anniversary  pageant,  etc. 
Represented  in  National  Gallery,  Wash. 

PARKER,   Lawton   S.,  2  Rue  Brea,   Paris, 
Frcinc©. 

Port. p.,  T.— Born  Fairfield,  Mich,  Aug. 
7,  1868.  Pupil  of  Gerome,  Laurens,  Con- 
stant, Besnard  and  Whistler  in  Paris; 
Chase  in  New  York.  Instructor,  St. 
Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts.  1892;  direc- 
tor of  fine  arts.  Beloit  College,  1893; 
president.  New  York  School  of  Art. 
1898-9;  director  of  Parker  Academy, 
Paris,  1900;  non-resident  professor.  Art 
Institute    of    Chicago,     1902;     president. 


Chicago  Academy  of  Fine  Arts,  1903 
Member:  ANA  1916;  Chicago  SA; 
Paris  AAA.  Awards  :  John  Arm- 
strong Chandler  five-year  European 
Scholarship,  1896;  hon.  mention,  Paris 
Salon,  1900;  third  medal,  Paris  Salon, 
1902;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
gold  medal.  Inter.  Exp.,  Munich,  1906; 
hon.  mention,  CI  Pittsburgh,  1907;  first 
medal,  Chicago  SA,  1908;  Cahn  prize, 
AIC  1909;  gold  medal,  Paris  Salon  1913; 
medal  of  honor,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F., 
1915;  Altman  prize,  NAD,  1916. 
Work:  President  Harry  Pratt  Judsou 
and  Martin  A.  Ryerson,  Chicago  Uni- 
versity; Judge  Peter  S.  Grosscup  and 
Judge  James  G.  Jenkins,  U.  S.  Court 
of  Appeals,  Washington;  "Portrait  of  a 
Lady,"  Art  Institute  of  Chicago. 

PARKER,   Mrs.  W.  L.,  312  Dartmouth  St.. 

Boston,  Mass. 

P. — M  ember:  Boston  WCC. 
PARKHURST,  Anita  (Mrs.  Willcox),  412 
West  20th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  L— Born  Chicago,  Nov.  11,  1892. 
Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  Guild  of 
Free  Lance  Artists;  SI.  Illustrations 
for  Saturday  Evening  Post,  Collier's, 
etc. 

PARKHURST,      C(lifford)      E(ugene),     63 

East  59th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  sum- 
mer. Vails  Gate,  Orange  Co.,  N.  Y. 
I. — Born  Toledo  O.,  Dec.  5,  1885.  Pupil 
of  Vanderpoel,  Freer  and  Armstrong. 
M  e  m  b  e  r  :  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  Awards  : 
Three  hon.  mentions,  AIC,  1906. 
PARKHURST,  Thomas  Shrewsbury, 
Highlands  Studio,  Carmel-by-the-'Sea, 
Calif. 

Ldscp.P.,  I. — Born  Manchester,  England, 
Aug.  1,  1853.  Self-taught.  Member: 
Toledo  Tile  C;  Salma.  C;  NAC. 
Work:  "October  Skies"  and  "The 
Spirit  of  the  Maumee,"  Toledo  Museum 
of  Art;  "Landscape,"  Grand  Rapids  Art 
Association;  "Chariot  of  the  Sky,"  Oak- 
land (Calif.)  Art  Museum;  represented 
in  Lima  (O.)  Art  League;  Des  Moines 
(la.)    Art   Club;    Oklahoma  Art  League. 

PARRISH,  Clara  Weaver  (Mrs.  Wm.  P. 
Parrish).  39  West  67th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.,  E.,  W.— Born  Selma,  Ala.  Pupil  of 
ASL  of  N.Y.  under  Chase,  Mowbray, 
Cox  and  J.  Alden  Weir;  Collin  In  Paris. 
Member:  NYWCC;  AWCS  (assoc); 
N.  A.  Women  PS;  NAC;  Pen  and  Brush 
C;  SPNY;  MacD.C.  Awards:  Watrous 
prize,  N.  Y.  Women's  AC,  1902  and  1913; 
silver  medal.  Appalachian  Exp.,  Knox- 
ville,  1910;  silver  medal,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915. 

PARRISH,  Maxfield,  Windsor,  Vt. 
I.,  P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  July  25, 
1870;  son  of  Stephen  Parrish.  Pupil  of 
PAFA  and  Howard  Pyle.  Member: 
SAA  1897;  ANA  1905.  NA  1906;  Fellow- 
ship PAFA;  Nat. Inst.  A. L.;  Union  In- 
ter, des  Beaux-Arts  et  des  Lettres. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp., 
1900:  silver  medal  for  drawings,  Pan- 
Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  Beck  prize, 
Phila.  WCC  1908;  gold  medal,  N.  Y. 
Arch.   Lg.,   1917. 


524 


PARRISH 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


PATTERSON 


PARRISH,  Stephen,  Windsor,  Vt. 
Etcher.P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  July 
y,  1846.  Member:  R.  Soc.  Painter- 
Etchers,  London;  N.  Y.  Etching  C. 
Work:  "The  Break-up  of  Winter, 
Cornish,  N.  H.,"  painting,  Toledo  Mu- 
seum of  Art;  "Winter  at  Trenton, 
N.    J.,"    Carnegie   Institute,    Pittsburgh. 

PARSHALL,     De    Witt,     Santa    Barbara, 
Calif. 

Ldscp.,  P.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  2, 
1864.  Pupil  of  Cormon  and  Alexander 
Harrison  and  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1910;  NA  1917;  Al- 
lied AA;  SMPF  West;  Inter.  Soc.  AL; 
Lotus  C.  (life);  Century  Assoc;  NAC. 
MacD.C;  Calif.  AC;  S.  Indp.  A.; 
NAC.  Work:  "Catskills,"  Metro- 
politan Museum,  New  York;  "Granite 
Gorge,"  Toledo  (O.)  Museum  of  Art; 
"Isis  Peak,"  Syracuse  (N.  Y.)  Museum 
of  Art;  "Hermit  Creek  Canyon,"  Wor- 
cester Art  Museum;  "Great  Abyss," 
Metropolitan   Museum   of  Art. 

PARSHALL.    Douglass   Ewell,   Santa  Bar- 
bara,   Calif. 

P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Nov.  19, 
1899.  Pupil       of       DeWitt       Parshall. 

Work:      "Marine",  'Syracuse  Museum. 

PARSONS,    Mrs.    Edith    Barretto    Stevens, 

204  West  13th  St.,  New  York,   N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Houston,  Va.,  July  4,  1878.     Pu- 
pil of  ASL  of  N.   Y.   under  French   and 
Barnard.      Member:      N.    A.    Women 
PS. 
PARSONS.    Margaret,    122    East   76th    St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P.— M  ember:       N.    A.    Women    PS. 

PARSONS,   Maude   B.,  618  West  Highland 

Drive,  Seattle,  Wash.  (P.) 
PARSONS,     Philip     N.,     5735     Dorchester 

Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 

P. — M  ember:  S. Indp. A. 
PARSONS,  Sheldon,  Santa  Fe,  N.  M. 

P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

PARTINGTON,      Richard      Langtry,     1713 
Sansom   St.,   Philadelphia,   Pa. 
P.— Born   Stockport,   Eng.,    Dec.   7,    1868. 
Member:    Bohemian  Club,  Athenean 
Club,  and   San  F.   AA. 

PARTON,   Ernest,  The  Chelsea,  222  West 

2'Vd  St.;  119  East  19th  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

Ldscp.  P.— Born  Hudson,  N.  Y.,  March 
17,  1845.  Member:  AFund  S.;  Royal 
Inst. of  Painters,  London.  Awards  : 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp.,  1889;  hon. 
mention,  Paris  Exp.,  1900.  Has  resided 
in  England  since  1873. 

PARTON,    Henry   W.,    119   East   19th    St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— M  e  m  b  e  r  :  Salma.  C,  1889;  Cen- 
tury Assoc;   NAC. 

PARTRIDGE,   Roi,   4540  Evelyn   St.,   Oak- 
land,  Calif. 

Etcher.— Born  Centralia,  Wash.,  Oct.  14, 
1888.  Pupil  of  NAD  in  New  York. 
Member:  Chicago  SE;  Cal.  SE. 
Awards:  Two  silver  medals,  Alaska- 
Yukon-Pacific  Exp.,  Seattle,  1909; 
Logan  medal,  AIC,  1921.  Work  in: 
New     York     Public     Library;     Newark 


(N.  J.)  Public  Library;  Library  of 
Congress,  Washington,  D.  C. ;  Park 
Museum,  San  Francisco,  Calif.;  Worces- 
ter (Mass.)  Art  Museum;  Art  Institute 
of  Cliicago;  Walker  Art  Gallery,  Liver- 
pool, England;  Toledo  Museum  of  Art; 
Carnegie   Institute,    Pittsburgh. 

William 


Ordway,      Bar 


M.     L.,    Box    151, 


PARTRIDGE, 

Harbor,  Me. 
S.,  W.— Born  Paris,  France,  Apl  11,  186L 
Studied  in  New  York,  Paris,  Florence 
and  Rome.  Member:  Lotos  C;  N. 
Y.  Arch.  Lg.  Work:  Equestrian 
statue  of  Gen.  Grant,  Union  Lg.  Club, 
Brooklyn;  statue  of  Alexander  Hamilton, 
Brooklvn;  "Shakespeare",  Lincoln  Park, 
Chicago;  "Pocahontas",  Jamestown, 
Va,;  "Nathan  Hale",  St.  Paul,  Minn.* 
font,  Cathedral  of  St.  Peter  and  St. 
Paul,  Washington,  D.  C. ;  S'chermerhorn 
Memorial  Columbia  Univ.,  New  York. 
Author:  "Art  for  America",  "The 
Song  of  Life  of  a  Sculptor",  "The  Tech- 
nique of  Sculpture". 

PASQUELLE,    Frances 
Glenbrook,   Conn. 
P.— M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 

PATIGIAN,  Haig,  923  Polk  St.;  h.  898 
Francisco  St.,  San  Francisco,  Cal.;  and 
Bohemian  Club,  San  Francisco. 
S. — Born  in  Armenia,  Jan.  22,  1878. 
Pupil  of  Marquet  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: NSS;  Societe  des  Artistes  Fran- 
cais:  Member:  Jury  of  Awards, 
Panama-Pacific  Inernational  Exp.,  San 
Francisco,  1915.  Work:  "Ancient  His- 
tory," Bohemian  C,  and  "Gen.  Funs- 
ton,"  City  Hall,  San  Francisco;  monu- 
ment to  Dr.  Rowell,  Fresno,  Calif.;  bust 
of  John  Keith,  Memorial  Museum,  San 
Francisco;  pediment  for  Metropolitan 
Life  Bldg.,  San  Francisco;  allegoric  fig- 
ures and  tympanum  for  Memoria.l 
Museum,    San    Francisco,    etc. 

PATRICOLA,  Philip,  247  Cherry  St.,  Buf- 
falo,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:    Buffalo    SA. 

PATTEE,     Elsie     Dodge,     154    West    57tb 

St..  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  L,  L.,  T.— Born  Chelsea,  Mass.,  Sept. 

4,    1876.       Pupil    of    Julian    Academy    in 

Paris.       Member:       AS    Min.    P.;    N. 

A.     Women      PS.         Award:        Silver 

medal,     Panama-Pacific     Exp.,     San     f 

1915. 

PATTERSON,    Ambrose,    917    Seneca    St.. 
■Seattle,    Wash. 

P.,  T. — Born  Daylesford,  Victoria,  Aus- 
tralia. Member:  Salon  d'Automne, 
Paris.  Award  :  Hon.  mention,  Seat- 
tle Fine  Arts  Society,  1920.  Works: 
"Boulevard  Waterloo,  Brussels,"  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Adelaide,  Australia,  and 
"Collens  St.,  Melbourne,"  National  Gal- 
lery, Sydney,  Australia;  portrait  C.  C. 
Kingston,  Australian  Commonwealth 
Government. 

PATTERSON,    C.    R.,    119    East    19th    St., 
New  York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

PATTERSON,    Charles    W.,    4403    Stanton 
Ave.,    Pittsburgh,    Pa. 
P.    —   Member:       AA,       Pittsburgh. 
Award  :  Second  prize  AA  Pittsburgh, 

1914. 


525 


PATTERSON 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  AHT 


PAYNE 


PATTERSON,      Howard      A(shinan),      514 

Walnut  St.;  h.  4032  Green  St.,  West 
Philadelphia.   Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Sept.  13, 
1891.  Pupil  of  Phila.  Ind.  Art  School; 
PAFA.  Member:  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Phila.  Sketch  C;  S.  Indp.  A.  Work: 
"Lines  and  Patches".  Fellowship  of 
the  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine 
Arts,    Philadelphia. 

PATTERSON,  Margaret  (Jordan),  Trin- 
ity Court,  Boston,  Mass. 
P.,  I. — Born  Soerabaija,  Java.  Pupil 
of  Pratt  Inst,  under  Arthur  Dow 
in  Brooklyn;  Charles  H.  Woodbury  in 
Boston;  Castellucho  in  Pans.  Mem- 
ber: Boston  SE;  Boston  WCC;  Copley 
S:  1900;  Phila. WCC;  N.  A.  Women  PS; 
Calif.  P.M.  Award  :  Hon.  mention 
for  etching,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work:  "Basque  Fishing  Boats," 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Boston;  repre- 
sented in  Oakland  (Cal.)  Art  Museum. 
Director,  art  department,  Dana  Hall 
School,    Wellsley,    Mass. 

PATTERSON,  Rebecca  Burd  Peale,  5522 
Morris  St.,  Germantown,  Philadelphia, 
Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
Pa.  Museum  and  School  of  Ind.  Art, 
Phila.;  Rebecca  Van  Trump  and  W.  J. 
Whittemore.  New  York.  Member: 
Pa.  Soc.  Min.  P. 

PATTON,  Katharine,  1522  Chestnut  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P. — Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of  Cox, 
Hawthorne  and  Snell  in  New  York; 
Frank  Brangwyn  in  London.  Mem- 
ber: N.  A.  Women  PS;  Phila.  WCC; 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Plastic  C;  Phila. 
Alliance.  Awards  :  Silver  medal, 
Knoxville,  Tenn.,  Exp.,  1913;  prize  for 
landscape,  N.  A.  Women  PS,  1918. 
Work:  "The  Maple  Woods,"  Penn- 
sylvania Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts; 
"Wood  Interior,"  Fellowship,  Penn- 
sylvania Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts, 
Philadelphia;  "Through  the  Old  Win- 
dow Screen,"  Southern  High  School, 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

PATTON,    Katherine    Maxey,    718    South- 
west St.,  Wheaton,  111. 
P. — A  ward:        Mary       Smith       prize, 
PAFA,   1921. 

PATTY,  W(illiam)  A(rthur),  1454  Sev- 
enty-Eighth St.,  Brooklyn,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P. — Born  New  Hartford,  Conn.,  Mar.  17, 
1884.  Pupil  of  Charles  Noel  Flagg,  Robt. 
B.  Brandegee.  Edgar  M.  Ward.  Mem- 
ber: Brooklyn  SA;  S.  Indp.  A; 
Brooklyn  WCC;  Lg.  of  N.  Y.  A. 

PAUL,  Charles  R.,  17th  and  the  Parkway, 
Philadelphia,    Pa.;   h.    Wynwood,    Pa. 
I._Born  Indiana,  Pa.,  Dec.  29,  1888.  Pu- 
pil   of    Anshutz.     Chase    and    McCarter. 
Member:     Phila.  Sketch  C. 

PAULDING,    John,    1200    Steinway    Hall, 
Chicago,   111. ;   h.    Park   Ridge,   111. 
S.— Born  Dark  County,  C,  Apr.  5,  1873. 
Pupil     of     AIC.       Member:     Alumni 
AIC;  Chicago  SA;  Cliff  Dwellers. 

PAULI,  Corinne,  524  Walnut  St.,  Phila- 
delphia,   Pa.    (I.) 


PAULLIN,  Telford,  61  Poplar  St.,  Brook- 
lyn,  New  York.   N.   Y.      (I.) 

PAULUS,  Francis  Petrus,  Bruges,  Bel- 
gium. 

P.,  Etcher.— Born  Detroit,  Mich.,  March 
13.  1862.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Royal  Acad- 
emy In  Munich  under  Loefftz;  Ecole  de« 
Beaux-Arts  in  Paris  under  Bonnat. 
Member:  Chicago  SE;  NAC;  La 
Gravure  Originale  en  Nolr;  Soci4t6 
Inter,  des  Beaux-Arts  et  des  Lettres. 
Work:  "Alley  in  Bruges,"  Herron 
Art  Institute,  Indianapolis;  "Low  Tide," 
"Fish  Market,"  "Shimmering  Sea," 
"Old  Bridge,  Bruges,"  and  set  of  etch- 
ings, Detroit  Institute.  Etchings  in: 
New  York  Public  Library;  Library  of 
Congress,  Washington,  D.  C;  Oakland 
(Cal.)    Museum. 

PAXON,  Edgar  Samuel,  611  Stephens 
Ave..  Missoula,  Mont. 

I.,  P. — Born  East  Hamburg,  N.  Y..  April 
25,  1852.  Specialty.  Indians  and  Ameri- 
can pioneers.  Work  :  Eight  murals  in 
Missoula  County  Court  House;  six  mu- 
rals in  Montana  Capitol;  "Custer's  Last 
Fight,"  exhibited  in  many  cities. 

PAXSON.  Ethel,   (Mrs.  Clement  Esmond), 
Kew   Gardens.    L.    I.,    N.    Y. 
P.,    I..    W..      T. — Born    Meriden,      Conn.. 
Mar    23,  1SS5.     Pupil  of  Chase,  Poore  and 
PAFA. 

PAXTON,   Mrs.   Elizabeth   Okie,  19  Mont- 
vale  Rd.,  Newton  Centre,   Mass. 
P. — Born    Providence,     R.    I.        Pupil    of 
W.  M.  Paxton.    Award  :     Silver  medal, 
Panama-Pacific    Exp.,    San    F.,    1915. 

PAXTON,    W.    A.,    955    Edgeware    Road, 
Los    Angeles,    Calif. 
P.— M  ember:    Calif.  AC. 

PAXTON,  William  M(cGregor),  River- 
way  Studios,  120  Riverway,  Boston, 
Mass. 

P..  T.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  June  22, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  In 
Paris  under  Gerome;  Dennis  M.  Bunker 
in  Boston.  Member:  ANA  1917; 
Copley  S.  1894;  Boston  GA;  St.  Botolph 
C,  Boston;  Phila.  AC.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention.  Pan. -Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  Lippincott  prize,  PAFA  1915;  hors 
concours  (jury  of  awards),  P. -P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  popular  prize.  Corcoran 
Gallery,  Washington,  1919;  Philadelphia 
prize  and  Stotesbury  prize,  PAFA.  1921. 
Work  :  "A  Girl  Sweeping."  Pennsyl- 
vania Academy,  Philadelphia;  "Tea 
Leaves,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  mural  decoration.  Army  and 
Navy  Club,  Washington,  D.  C;  "Nude," 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Boston:  "Inter- 
ior," Cincinnati  Museum;  "Girl  Comb- 
ing Her  Hair,"  Detroit  Inst,  of  Arts: 
"The  Housemaid,"  Corcoran  Gallery  of 
Art. 

PAYNE,  Edgar,  867  North  Dearborn  St., 
Chicago,    111. 

P.__Born  T^^ashburn.  Mo..  March  1.  1882. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  chiefly  self-taught.  Mem- 
ber: Palette  and  Chisel  C. ;  Chicago 
SA;     Int.    Soc.     A.   L.;     Calif.   AC;     10 


526 


PAYNE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


PEIRCE 


Painters  of  Los  A.;  Alumni  AIC. 
Chisel  Club,  1913;  gold  medal,  Sacra- 
mento State  Fair,  1918.  Works:  Mural 
decorations  American  and  Empress 
Theatres,  Chicago;  Northern  Hotel, 
Billings,  Mont.;  Clay  County  Court 
House.  Brazil,  Ind. ;  Hendricks  County 
Court  House,  Danville,  Ind.;  Queen 
Theatre,  Houston,  Tex.;  "Hills  of  El 
Toro,"  Nebraska  Art  Assoc,  Lincoln; 
"The  Hills  of  Marin,"  Peoria  (111.)  So- 
ciety of  Allied  Arts;  "Pleasant  Valley," 
Chicago  Muncipal  Art  Commission  pur- 
chase; "The  Restless  Sea,"  Herron 
Art  Institute,  Indianapolis. 

PAYNE,  Jeanne.    See  Mrs.  Louis  C.  John- 
son. 

PEABODY,    Grace    Allen,    830   Park  Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

PEABODY,    Mrs.    R.    S.,    940    Park    Ave., 
New   York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

PEACEY,    Jess.      See   Lawson. 

PEARCE,  Edgar  L(ewis),  3620  Washing- 
ton Blvd.,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 
P.,  E.,  T.—  Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Apl. 
26,  1885.  Pupil  of  Chase  and  Weir. 
Member:  Union  Internationale  des 
Arts  et  des  Lettres.  Represented  in 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine 
Arts  collection,  Philadelohia;  National 
Academy  of  Design  collection,  New 
York;    Carnegie    Institute,    Pittsburgh. 

PEARSALL,    Mrs.    A.    B.,    92    Fifth    Ave., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

PEARSON,    Mrs.   Jane    Mumford,   Feather 
Farm,  High  Falls.  Ulster  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born    Baltimore. 

PEARSON,  Joseph  T.,  Jr.,  5139  Wayne 
Ave.,  Germantown,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.,  T.— Born  Germantown,  Feb.  6.  1876. 
Pupil  of  J.  Alden  Weir  and  Wm.  M. 
Chase.  Member:  ANA;  NA  1919; 
Fellowship  PAFA.  Awards:  Second 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD,  1911;  hon.  men- 
tion. C.  I.  Pittsburgh,  1911;  Sesnan 
medal,  PAFA.  1911;  Inness  medal, 
NAD,  1915;  gold  medal,  P. -P..  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  Harris  silver  medal 
and  prize  ($500),  AIC  1915;  Temple  gold 
medal,  PAFA  1916;  Stotesbury  prize, 
PAFA  1916;  Beck  gold  medal,  PAFA 
1917;  Saltus  gold  medal,  NAD,  1918. 
Instructor,  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the 
Fine  Arts. 

PEARSON,      (Nils)      Anton,      226      South 
Washington    St..    Lindsborg,    Kan. 
P.— Born    Sweden.    Mav   23.    1892.      Punil 
of  BIrger  'Sandzen.     Member:  Smoky 
Hill  AC. 

PEARSON,    Ralph    M.,   Ranches   of   Taos, 
New   Mexico. 

E.— Born  Angus,  la..  May  27.  1883.  Pu- 
pil of  AIC  under  C.  F.  Browne  and  Van- 
derpoel.  Member:  ASL  of  Chi- 
cago; Chicago  SE:  N.Y.SE.:  Cal.AC; 
Calif. P.M. ;.  Calif. SE:  Brooklvn  SE. 
Awards:  Prize,  Chicago  SE,  1914; 
silver  medal  for  etching,  P. -P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.;  first  prize  for  book- 
plate, American  Bookplate  Soc,  1917. 
W  o  r  k  in:  New  York  Public  Library; 
Library    of    Congress,    Washington,    D. 


C;  Mechanics'  Institute,  Rochester, 
N.  Y. ;  Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  Muse- 
um of  Fine  Arts,  Los  Angeles;  Chicago 
University  Library;  Avery  Library, 
Columbia  University,   New  York. 

See     Mrs.     Christian 


PEART,     Caroline 

Brinton. 


M. 


1160     Bay     St.. 


PEBBLES,      Frank 

Alameda,  Calif. 
P.— Born  Wyoming.  N.  Y.,  Oct.  16,  1839. 
Pupil  of  NAD  and  Edwin  White  in  New 
York;  G.  P.  A.  Healy  in  Chicago. 
Member:  Chicago  SA;  Chicago  Ar- 
tists' G. ;  Chicago  AD  (ex-pres.). 
Award:  Medal,  San  Francisco,  1877. 
PECK,  Anne  Merriman  (Mrs.  Frank  E. 
Fite),  164  Waverly  PL,  New  York.  N.  Y. 
P.,  1.— Born  Piermont,  N.  Y.,  July  21, 
1884.  Pupil  of  Robert  Henri  and  Irving 
R.  Wiles.  Member:  Guild  of  Free 
Lance  Artists;  Whitney  Club;  S.  Indp. 
A.  Specialty,  children's  portraits.  Illus- 
trated "Mother  Goose  Primer,"  "Every 
Child's  Fairy  Book,"  etc. 

PECK,  Clara   Elsene.     See  Mrs.  Williams. 
PECK,     Henry    J(arvis),    121    East    23rd 

St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Warren, 

R.   I. 

I.,  P. — Born  Galesburg,  111..  June  10,  1880. 

Pupil   of  Eric  Pape  and   Howard   Pyle. 

Member:   Alliance, 

PECK,     Julia,     80     West     40th     St.,     New 
York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

PECK,   Julia    E.,   3201   Conger   St.,   Edison 
Beach,   Port  Huron,  Mich. 
P.— M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

PECK,     Natalie,    50    Sixth     Ave.;     h.     12 
West  92d  St.,  New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — Born    Jersey    City,    N.    J.,    Feb.    27, 
1886.      Pupil    of    Kenneth    Hayes    Miller. 
Member:  N.      A.      Women      PS; 

S.Indp.A.  Work:  "Storm  Clouds,"  in 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts. 

PEDDLE,  Caroline.     See  Mrs.   Ball. 

PEETS,     Orville     Houghton,     Woodstock, 

N.   Y. 

P.,  E.— Born  Cleveland,  O.  Pupil  of 
Baschet.  Royer  and  Laparra  in  Paris. 
Member:  Salma.  C.  Award: 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1914..  Paint- 
ing  owned   by   French   Government. 

PEGRAM,  Fred(erick),  11  Avenue  Stu- 
dios, Fulham  Road;  h.  67  Earls  Court 
Square,  London,  S.  W. ;  summer,  Worl- 
ington,  Mildenham,  Suffolk,  England. 
P.,  I.,  E.— Born  London,  Dec.  19,  1870. 
Pupil  of  Frederick  Brown.  Member: 
Graphic  SA;  Imperial  Arts  League. 
Contributor    to    "Punch." 

PEIRCE,    H.    Winthrop,   39   Pinckney   St., 
Boston,   Mass. 

P.,  I. — Born  Boston,  Nov.  25,  1850.  Pu- 
pil of  Boston  Museum  School  under 
Grundmann  and  RImmer;  Bouguereau 
and  Robert-Fleury  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Copley  S.  1879  (v.-pres.);  Boston 
SWCP;  S.  Indp.  A.;  Chicago  AG. 
Work:  in:  John-Esther  Gallery, 
Andover:  Phillips  Academy,  Andover, 
Mass.;  Bowdoin  College,  Brunswick, 
Me.;   Public  Library,  Maiden,   Mass. 


527 


P  EI  X  OTTO 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


PERARD 


PEIXOTTO,  Ernest  C(lifford),  137  East 
66th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  and  Credit 
Lyonnais,  Paris,  France. 
I.,  P.,  W.— Born  San  Francisco,  Cal., 
Oct.  15,  1869.  Pupil  of  Constant,  Le- 
febvre  and  Doucet  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1909;  Mural  P.;  N.Y.Arch. 
Lg.  1911;  SI  1906;  Salma.C;  MacD.C. 
(pres.);  Allied  AA;  Societe  des  Artistes 
Prangais.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention, 
Paris  Salon,  1895;  chevalier  of  theLegion 
of  Honor,  1921.  Work  :  Scenes  from 
"Le  Morte  d'Arthur"  in  Library  of 
Henry  A.  Everett,  near  Cleveland,  O. ; 
illustrations  for  Roosevelt's  "Life  of 
Cromwell."  Author:  "By  Italian  'Seas," 
"Romantic  California";  "Our  Hispanic 
Southwest,"  "The  American  Front,"  etc. 
Official  artist,  American  Expeditionary 
Forces,  1918.  Director,  Atelier  of  Paint- 
ing', A.  E.  F.  Art  Training  Center,  Belle- 
vue,  France,  1919.  Director,  Dept.  of 
Mural  Painting,  Beaux  Arts  Inst.,  New 
York. 

PEIXOTTO,    Mrs.    Ernest,   137   East   66th 

St.,    New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — Born    in    San    Francisco.      Pupil    of 
San    F.    A.A.,    and    Delecluse.      Mem- 
ber:       N.   A.   Women   PS. 

PEIXOTTO,  George  Da  Maduro,  Waldorf- 
Astoria  Hotel,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  sum- 
mer, 21  Fairview  Ave.,  Tuckahoe,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Cleveland,  O.  Pupil  of 
Meissonier  and  Munkacsy.  Member: 
Socl$t6  des  Artistes  Frangais. 

Awards  :    Silver  medal,   Royal  Acad- 
emy, Dresden. 

PELL,  Ella  Ferris,  Beacon,  N.  Y. 
P.,  S.,  I.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  Jan.  18. 
1846.  Pupil  of  Cooper  Union  in  New 
York  under  Rimmer;  Laurens,  Ferdi- 
nand Humbert  and  Gaston  St.  Pierre  in 
Paris.  Work:  "Salome"  painting 
owned  by  Boston  Art  Club;  "Androme- 
da" heroic  statue. 

PELTON,  Agnes,  160  West  13th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer.  Culver  Hill, 
Southampton,  L.  L,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Stuttgart,  Germany,  of  Amer- 
ican parents,  Aug.  22,  1881.  Pupil  of 
Pratt  Inst,  under  Dow;  W.  L.  Lathrop, 
Hamilton  E.  Field;  and  in  Rome. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Inter. 
Soc.  AL. 

PEMBER,  Ada  Humphrey,  103  Jackson 
St.,  .Janesville.  Wis.;  summer,  Tepee- 
washta.  Lake  Kegonsa.  Stoughton,  Wis. 
P.— Born  Shopiere,  Wis.,  Oct.  3,  1859. 
Pupil  of  W.  M.  Clute  and  F.  Fursman. 
Member  :       Janesville    AL;    Wis.    PS. 

PEN  FIELD,  Edward,  Pelham  Manor, 
N.  Y. 

T..  P. — Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  June  2 
1866.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber: AWCS;  SI  1901;  Salma.  C.  1905; 
Specialty,  posters  and  cover  designs. 
Author  and  illustrator  of  "Holland 
Sketches"  and  "Spanish  Sketches"; 
decorations  for  Rochester  Country  Club. 

PENMAN.  Edith,  Van  Dyck  Studios.  939 
Eighth  Ave..  New  York.  N.  Y. :  summer, 
Byrdcliffe.  TVoodstock,  Ulster  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P.,    C. — Born    London,    England.      Pupil 


of  R.  Swain  Gifford,  Henry  B.  Snell. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  'SPNY; 
NYWCC;    Boston    SAC;    Alliance. 

PENNELL,  Joseph,  Hotel  Margaret, 
Columbia  Heights,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
I.,  Etcher,  W.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa., 
July  4,  1860.  Pupil  of  PAFA  and  Pa. 
School  of  Industrial  Art.  Member: 
ANA  1907,  NA  1909;  Nat.Inst.A.L.; 
Phila.  WCC  (hon.);  N.Y.  Arch.  Lg,  1894; 
Salma.  C;  Phila.  SE;  New  York  SE; 
SI;  Inter.  Soc.  of  Painters,  Sculptors  and 
Gravers,  London;  Soc.  of  .Illustrators, 
London;  Royal  Belgian  Academy,  assoc. 
1914,  member,  1917:  Paris  SAP;  T  Square 
C;  Societe  des  Peintres-Graveures 
Francais;  Paris  Art  Workers  Guild,  Lon- 
don; Pa.  Chapter  AIA  (hon.);  Royal  Inst. 
British  Architects  (hon.);  Fellowship 
PAFA.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention, 
Paris  Exp.,  1889;  medal,  AC  Phila,  1892; 
medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893; 
gold  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  190O;  hon.  men- 
tion, Paris  Salon,  1901;  silver  medal, 
Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  gold  medal, 
Dresden,  1903;  Grand  Prize,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  gold  medal,  LlSge,  1905; 
Grand  Prix,  Milan,  1906;  Barcelona,  1907; 
Brussels.  1910;  gold  medal,  Amsterdam, 
1912;  grand  prize,  London,  1913;  grand 
prize,  Florence,  1915;  medal,  P.-P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Represented  In  Luxem- 
bourg and  Cabinet  aux  Estampes,  Paris; 
Uffizi  Gallery,  Florence;  Modern  Gallery, 
Venice;  Modern  Gallery,  Rome;  British 
and  South  Kensington  Museums,  Lon- 
don; Library  of  Congress,  Washington; 
Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  Brooklyn 
Museum;  Berlin,  Dresden,  and  Munich 
Galleries.  Author:  "Modern  Illustra- 
tion," "Life  of  J.  McN.  Whistler"  (with 
Mrs.  Pennell);  "The  Graphic  Art  Ser- 
ies," etc. 

PENNIMAN,  H(elen)  A.  F.,  609  Cathe- 
dral St.,  Baltimore,  Md.;  summer.  Elk- 
ridge,    Md. 

P.,  W.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Mar.  26, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Twachtman,  Berkwith; 
S.  E.  Whiteman.  Everett  L.  Bryant, 
and  Anshutz,  and  'Studied  in  Germany. 
Member:     S.  Indn.  A. 

PENNOYER,  A(Ibert)  Sheldon,  152  West 
55th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer, 
Litchfield,  Conn. 

P. — Born  Oakland,  Cal.,  Apr.  5,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts,  Acad- 
emies Julian  and  Grande  Chaumifere, 
R^ne  Menard  and  Lucien  Simon  Irt 
Paris;  Giuseppe  Casciaro  and  Carlandl 
in  Italy;  PAFA.  Member:  NAC. 
San  F.  AA. 

PEPPER,  Charles  Hovey,  Fenway  Stu- 
dios, 30  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h. 
Concord,    Mass. 

P. — Born  Waterville,  Me..  Aug.  27,  1884. 
Pupil  of  Chase  in  New  York;  Constant, 
Laurens  and  Aman-Jean  in  Paris. 
Member:  NYWCC;  Boston  Vt^CC: 
Coplev  S.  1900;  Boston  AC;  St.  Botolph 
C;   New  Haven  PCC. 

PERARD,  Victor  S(emon),  55  Charles 
St.,  New  York.  N.  Y. 

Etcher.  I. — Born  Paris,  France,  Jan.  16, 
1870.  Pupil  of  NAD  and  ASL  of  New 
York;    Ecole    des   Beaux- Arts    in    Paris, 


528 


PERCY 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


PERRY 


under  Gerome.  Member:  SI;  Salma. 
C.  Instructor  at  Cooper  Union.  Spe- 
cialty,  character  slcetches, 

PERCY,     Isabelle     Clark     (Mrs.     George 

Parsons  West),  17  East  11th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  9  Montague  Terrace, 
Brooklyn,    N.    Y. 

I.— Born  Alameda,  Cal.,  Nov.,  1882. 
Pupil  of  Mark  Hopkins  Inst.,  San 
Francisco;  Dow  and  Snell  in  New 
York;  Brangwyn  in  England.  Mem- 
ber: Cal.SE;  SanF.AA.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  California  bookplate  and 
poster  competitions;  bronze  medal  for 
etching,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 

PERERA,  Gino,  382  Commonweath  Ave., 
Boston,  Mass. 

S..  P.— Born  Siena,  Italy,  Aug.  2,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Royal  Academy,  Rome;  School 
of  Boston  Museum;  H.  D-  Murphy,  Birge 
Harrison  and  Ochtman.  Member  : 
Boston  AC;  St.  Botolph  C;  Copley  S.; 
Salma.    C. 

PERKINS,  John  U(re),  815  A  St.,  N.  E., 
Washington,  D.  C. 

P.— Born  Washington,  D.  C.  Nov.  22. 
1875.  Pupil  of  Chase  and  Richard  N. 
Brooke.     Member:    S.Wash.A. 

PERKINS,  Lucy  Fitch  (Mrs.  Dwight  H. 
Perkins),  2319  Lincoln  St.,  Evanston.  111. 
I.,  T.— Born  Maples,  Ind.,  July  12.  1865. 
Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School. 
Member:  Chicago  SA.  Author  and 
illustrator  of  "A  Book  of  Joys,"  "The 
Goose  Girl."  "The  Dutch  Twins."  "Dan- 
delion Classics,"  "Cornelia,"  etc. 

PERKINS,  Mary  Smyth   (Mrs.  William  F. 
Taylor ">,  Lumberville,  Pa. 
P. — Born        Philadelphia.  Pupil        of 

PAFA;  Robert  Henri;  Philadelphia 
School  of  Design  under  William  Sartain; 
Lawton  Parker  School,  Cottet  and  Simon 
in  Paris.  Member:  Plastic  C. ;  Fel- 
lowship PAFA;  N.  A.  Women  PS. 
Award:  Mary  Smith  prize,  PAFA, 
1907.  Work:  "Portrait  of  James  L. 
Miles,"  City  Hall,   Philadelphia,  Pa. 

PERLE,  Henry,  5  Maspeth  Ave.,  Brook- 
lyn,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Germany,  Feb.  24.  1872.  Self- 
taught.      Member:      S.Indp.A. 

PEROT.  Annie  Levering.  1305  locust  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer,  Ft.  Wash- 
ington,  Pa. 

P.— Born  Oct.  20,  1854.  Pupil  of  An- 
shutz,  Breckenridge,  Chase.  Mem- 
ber: Phila  Alliance;  Plastic  C;  Fel- 
lowship  PAFA. 

PERRAULT,  Mme.  IVIarie,  292  Woodward 
Ave.,    Detroit,    Mich.    (P.) 

PERRETT,  A.  Louise,  316  South  Grove 
Ave.,  Oak  Park,  111. 

P.,  I.— Born  Chicago,  111.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
Howard    Pyle. 

PERRETT,  Galen  Joseph,  51  West  10th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  492  Mt.  Pleas- 
ant Ave.,  Newark,  N.  J. 
I.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Sept,  14,  1875, 
Pupil  of  AIC;  Munich  Art  Academy, 
Germany;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:   Salma.C;   NYWCC. 


PERRINE,  Van  Dearing,  The  Palisades, 
Englewood,  N.  J, 

P.— Born  Garnett,  Kan.,  Sept.  10,  1869. 
Self-taught.  Member:  S.Indp.A.;  P-G. 
Awards  :  Silver  medal,  Charleston 
Exp.,  1902;  hon.  mention,  CI  Pitts- 
burgh, 1903;  silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Work:  "The  Rob- 
bers," Carnegie  Institute,  Pittsburgh. 
Experiments  with  color  music. 

PERRY,  Clara  Fairfield  (Mrs,  Walter 
Scott  Perry).  56  Cambridge  PL,  Brook- 
lyn, New  York,  N.  Y, ;  summer,  Elm- 
croft.    Stoneham,   Mass. 

P. — Born     Brooklyn,     N.     Y.       Pupil     of     ^ 
Walter    Scott    Perry,    Henry    B.    Snell, 
Ettore    Caser.      Member:      Pen   and 
Brush    C;    Brooklyn    SA. 

PERRY,    Clara    G(reenleaf),   344   Boylston 
St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P.,   S.— M  ember:     N.  A.  Women  PS. 

PERRY,  Edith  Dean  Weir  (Mrs.  James 
DeWolf  Perry),  Bishopes  House,  Provi- 
dence, R.  I. 

Min.P. — Born  New  Haven,  Conn.,  Aug. 
17,  1875.  Pupil  of  Yale  School  of  Fine 
Arts  under  her  father,  John  F.  Weir;  of 
Lucia  Fairchild  Fuller  and  of  Adele 
Herter.  Member:  Copley  S. ;  Provi- 
dence AC.  Award  :  Hon.  mention, 
Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901.  Work: 
"Virgin  and  Child,"  St.  Paul's  Church, 
New  Haven,  Conn.;  Tabernacle  door, 
Christ  Church,  West  Haven,  Conn. 
Specialty,   portraits,   miniatures. 

PERRY,  Lilla  Cabot  (Mrs.  Thomas  S. 
Perry),  Fenway  Studios,  30  Ipswich  St.; 
h.  312  Marlborough  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P.,  W. — Born  Boston.  Mass.  Pupil  of 
Cowles  Art  School  under  Dennis  M. 
Bunker  and  Robert  W.  Vonnoh  in  Bos- 
ton; Julian  and  Colarossl  academies  and 
at  Alfred  Stevens'  studio  in  Paris. 
Member:  Boston  GA  (sec);  Allied 
A.Assoc..  London;  Society  des  Artistes 
Independants,  Paris;  Inter.  Soc.  AL; 
Women's  Inter, AC,  Paris  and  London; 
Nippon  Bijitsu-in,  Tokyo,  Awards: 
Silver  medal.  Boston,  1892;  bronze  medal, 
St.  T  ouis  Exp.,  1904;  bronze  medal, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915,  Work:  "The 
Young  'Cellist."  Boston  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts,  Author:  "The  Heart  of  the 
Weed,"  "From  the  Garden  of  Hellas," 
"Impressions,"  etc. 

PERRY.  Raymond,  144  East  34th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Sterling,  111.,  1876.  Pupil 
of  AIC,  Member:  SI,  1912;  Salma. 
C,  1908.  Work  in  St,  Andrews' 
Church,  Pittsburgh;  Memorial  Library, 
Hanover,  Pa,  Teacher  in  Illustrators' 
School  for  Disabled  Soldiers,  New 
York, 

PERRY,  R(oland)  Hinton,  51  West  10th 
St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 

S.,  P.— Born  New  York,  Jan.  25,  1870. 
Pupil  of  Gerome,  Delance,  Callot,  Chapu 
and  Puech  in  Paris,  Member  :  NSS. 
Work:  "Fountain  of  Neptune,"  Library 
of  Congress,  Washington;  "Death  of  Si- 
gurd," painting,  Detroit  Institute,  Lang- 
don  doors,  Buffalo  Historical  Society; 
frieze.  New  Amsterdam  Theatre.  New 
York;   "Pennsylvania"  on  dome  of  Cap- 


529 


PERRY 


WHO'S  WHO  !N  ART 


PEYTON 


itol,  Harrisburg;  "Gen.  Greene"  and 
"Gen.  Wadsworth"  at  Gettysburg;  "New 
Tork  State  Memorial,"  Andersonville; 
"Gen.  Curtis,"  Ogdensburg;  "Gen.  Cas- 
tleman,"  Louisville;  "New  York  Monu- 
ment." Chattanooga;  "Benjamin  Rush 
Monument,"  Washington;  monument  to 
38th   Infantry,    Syracuse,    N.    Y. 

PERRY,  Walter  Scott.  56  Cambridge  PL, 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Blmcroft,  Stoneham,  Mass. 
P.,  S.,  T..  W.,  L.— Born  Stoneham,  Mass. 
Pupil  of  Langerfeldt,  Higgins  and  Pierre 
Millet;  Mass.  Normal  Art  School. 
Member:  NAC;  Alliance;  East- 
ern AA. ;  WD  and  MT  Teachers. 
Supervisor  of  drawing  and  art  educa- 
tion, public  schools,  Fall  River,  Mass., 
1875-79;  and  Worcester,  Mass.,  1879-87. 
Director,  School  of  Fine  and  Applied 
Arts,  Pratt  Institute,  since  1887.  Au- 
thor of  "Egypt,  the  Land  of  the  Tem- 
ple Builders";  "With  Azir  Girges  in 
Egypt";  textbooks  on  art  education. 

PERRY,  W(inlfred)   A(nnette),  6172  Cha- 
bot  Road,  Oakland,  Calif. 
P. — Born    Wasepi,    Mich.    Pupil    of    San 
Francisco    School    of    Art    and    W.    V. 
Cahill  and  John  Rich, 

PESCHERET,  Leon  R.,  64  East  Van 
Buren  St.;  h.  2261  Giddings  St.,  Chi- 
cago,   111. 

Des. — Studied  in  London,  and  at  AIC. 
Member:     Palette    and    Chisel    C. 

PETERS,  C(harles)  F(rederick),  412  East 
50th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Mt.   Tremper,  N.  Y. 

I.,  E. — Born  Kristiania,  Norway,  Feb. 
19,  1882.  Cartoons  in  "Life";  illustra- 
tions in  "Scribner's,"  "Harper's," 
"Century." 

PETERS,  Charles  Rollo,  Monterey,  Cal.; 
and  Bohemian  Club,  San  Francisco,  Cal. 
P.— Born  California,  Apr.  10,  1862.  Pu- 
pil of  Virgil  Williams  in  San  Francisco; 
Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  under  Gerome, 
and  of  Boulanger  and  Lefebvre  in  Paris. 
Member:  Lotos  C;  Salma.C.  1901. 
Awards:  Bronze  medal,  Pan- Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver  medal,  St. 
Louis   Exp.,    1904. 

PETERS  (Dewitt)  Clinton,  Studio  606, 
1947  Broadway;  h.  78  West  55th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Baltimore,  June  11,  1865. 
Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  under 
G^rOme,  and  of  Lefebvre,  Boulanger  and 
Collin  in  Paris.  Award:  Bronze 
medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1889.  Founder  and 
principal  instructor,  Clinton  Peters  Art 
Classes,   New  York. 

PETERSON,  Elsa  KIrpal,  (Mrs.  R.  M. 
Tower  Peterson),  67  Hillside  Ave.;  h. 
140  Barclay  St.,  Flushing,  N.  Y. 
S. — Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  June  16, 
1891.  Pupil  of  Edith  Woodman  Bur- 
roughs and  J.  E.  Eraser.  Member  : 
Alliance;  ASL  of  N.  Y. 

PETERSEN,  Martin,  437  West  59th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  325  Hillside  Ave., 
West  Nutley.  N.  J. 

P.— Born  Denmark,  Nov.  23,  1870.  Pu- 
pil of  NAD.  Member:  NYWCC; 
Salma.C.  1906.     Awards:  Third  Hall- 


garten  prize,  NAD  1905;  Beal  prize, 
NYWCC  1906;  Inness  prize,  Salma.C. 
19U7. 

PETERSON,  Jane,  58  West  57th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  and  Elgin,  111. 
P. — Born  Elgin,  111.  Pupil  of  Brangwyn, 
Blanche  and  Sorolla.  Member: 
NYWCC;  AWCS;  N.  A.  Women  PS; 
SPNY;  Wash.  WCC;  Conn.  AFA;  Pen 
and  Brush  C;  NAC.  Awards:  Water 
color  prize.  Girls'  Art  Club,  Paris; 
hon.  mention,  Conn.  AFA  1916;  Fiagg 
prize  ($100),  Conn.  A.  F.  A.,  1917; 
hon.  mention,  NA  Women  PS,  1919. 
Work:  "Glimpse  of  the  Grand 
Canal,"  Art  Association,  Grand  Rapids, 
Mich.;  Girls'  Art  Club,  Paris;  Brooklyn 
Athletic  Club;  Public  Schools,  Evanston, 
111.;  Country  Club,  Torrington,  Conn.; 
Y.  M.  C.  A,  Elgin,  111.;  Boise  (Idaho) 
Public  Library.  Instructor  at  Art 
Students'    League,    1914-1919. 

PETREMONT,  Clarice  Marie,  Shelton, 
Conn. 

P.,  L,  C,  T.— Born  Brooklyn,  New 
York.  Pupil  of  Marshall  Fry  and  Paul 
Cornoyer.  Member:  New  Haven 
PCC;  Bridgeport  AL;  Boston  SAC; 
Alliance. 

PETROVITZ,     Milan,    723     Liberty    Ave., 
Pittsburgh,    Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

PEUGEOT,    George    l(ra),    693    Main    St.; 
h.  120  Highland  Ave.,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 
P.,    L— Born    Buffalo,    N.    Y.,    Nov.    26, 
1869.     PupU  of  Peter  Gowans.     Mem- 
ber:     Buffalo   SA. 

PEYRAUD,     Elizabeth     K.,     1230     Judson 
Ave.,    Highland   Park,    111. 
P. — M  ember:    Chicago    SA;    Chicago 
WCC. 

PEYRAUD,  Frank  C,  1608  Monroe  Bldg.; 
1230  Judson  Ave.,  Highland  Park,  111. 
P.— Born  Bulle,  Switzerland,  1858.  Pupil 
of  AIC;  Ecole  des  Beaux- Arts,  Bonnat, 
Frieburg,  in  Paris.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;  Chicago  WCC.  Awards: 
Fortnightly  prize,  AIC  1899;  Butler 
prize,  AIC  1912;  Municipal  Art  Lg. 
purchase,  AIC  1912;  Chicago  SA  medal, 
AIC  1912;  Cahn  hon.  mention,  AIC  1912; 
Carr  prize,  AIC  1913;  Grower  prize,  AIC 
1915;  bronze  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F., 
1915;  silver  medal,  Hamilton  Club,  Chi- 
cago, 1920.  Work  in:  Union  League 
Club,  Chicago;  Art  Institute  of  Chicago 
(Municipal  AL  collection);  fresco  in 
Peoria  Public  Library;  "After  Rain, 
Chicago,"  Friends  of  American  Art, 
Chicago,  111. 

PEYTON,    Alfred    Conway,   33   West   67th 

St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I. — Born  Dera  Doon,  British  India, 
Nov.  9,  1875.  Pupil  of  South  Kensing- 
ton 'Schools,  London,  Eng.  Member: 
AWCS;  NYWCC.  Award:  Silver 
medal  at  Bombay,  B.  I. 

PEYTON,  Mrs.  Alfred  Conway.  See  Men- 
zler-Peyton,    Bertha   S. 

PEYTON.  Ann  Moon  (Mrs.  Philip  B. 
Peyton),  3804  Locust  'St.,  Philadelphia, 
Pa. 

P.,  I. — Born  Charlottesville.  Va.,  June 
28,    1891.        Pupil    of     George     Bellows, 


530 


PFALTZGRAF 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


PICCIRILLI 


Robert  Henri  and  W.  M.  Chase.  Mem- 
ber:    Richmond  AC. 

PFALTZGRAF,  R.,  167  So.  Warren  Ave., 
Columbus,    O. 

p. — M  ember:  Pen  and  Pencil  C,  Co- 
lumbus. 

PFEIFFER,  Fritz  (Wllhelm),  69  Wiscon- 
sin St.;  h.  1614  Grand  Ave.,  Milwaukee, 
Wis.  ^  „ 

P.,  I.,  C. — Born  Adams  County,  Pa., 
June  3,  1889.  Pupil  of  Henri,  Chase  and 
Breckenridge.  Member:  Fellowship 
PAFA. 

PFEIFFER,    Harry    (R.),    539   West   King 
St.,      York,      Pa.;      summer,      Delaware 
Water  Gap,   Pa. 
P,^     T. — Born    Hanover,     Pa.,     Oct.     19, 

1874.  Pupil  of  Char.  C,  ASL.  of  N.Y., 
PAFA. 

PFIEFER,     Herman,    25     East    26th     St., 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

I. — M  ember:     SI. 
PHARES,   Frank,  218  Pine  St.,  Mt.  Holly, 

N.  J. 

P.— M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 
PHELAN,  Harold  L(eo),  67  West  67th  St. ; 

65  Central  Park  West,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P._   T.— Born  New  York,   N.   Y.,   July  23, 

1881.     Pupil  of  H.  W.  Ranger. 
PHELPS,  Edith  Catlin,  161  East  74th  St., 

New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Province- 
town,   Mass. 

P.,   E. — Born   New  York  City,   April  16, 

1875.  Pupil  of  Hawthorne;  Julian  in 
Paris.  Member:  Conn.  AFA;  N.A. 
Women  PS.  Award  :  Hon.  mention, 
Conn.    AFA,    1920. 

PHELPS,  Helen  Watson,  58  West  57th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Attleboro,  Mass.  Pupil  of 
Julian  Academy  and  Collin  in  Paris. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Prov- 
idence AC;  SPNY,  Awards:  Hon. 
mention.  Pan- Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
N.  Y.  Woman's  AC  prize,  1907;  Filing 
prize,  N.  Y.  Woman's  AC,  1909;  Wa- 
trous  figure  prize,  N.  A.  Women  PS, 
1914;  prize,  N.  A.  Women  PS,  1915. 

PHILBIN,  Clara,  2126  Auburn  Ave.,  Cin- 
cinnati, O. 

S. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

PHILBRICK,  Otis,  10  Hillcrest  Parkway, 
Winchester,  Mass. 

P.— Born  Mattapan.  Mass.,  Oct.  21,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Major  and  De  Camp.  Mem- 
ber:    Boston   SWCP. 

PHILIPP,  Robert,  15  East  87th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.     (P.) 

PHILLIPS,  Bert  G.,  Taos,  Taos  Co.,  New 
Mexico. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Hudson,  N.  Y.,  July  15, 
1868.  Pupil  of  NAD  and  ASL  in  New 
York;  Constant  and  L-aurens  in  Paris. 
Member:  Taos  Soc.  of  Artists  (sec.) 
Salma.C.  Specialty,  Indian  subjects. 
Work:  Mural  decoration,  Polk  County 
Court  House,  Des  Moines,  Iowa. 

PHILLIPS,  Coles,  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 
(I.) 

PHILLIPS,  Grace  H.,  121  Washington  PL, 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 


PHILLIPS,  Harriet  S.,  39  West  67th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Hague-on- 
Lake  George,  N.  Y. 

P.,  C— Born  Rome,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of  Fehr 
In  Munich;  Simon  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Kunstlerinen  Verein,  Munich 
(hon.);  NAC;   N.Y.   Soc.  C;   SPNY. 

PHILLIPS,  J.  Campbell,  1108  Carnegie 
Hall;  156  West  86th  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P.— Born  New  York,  Feb.  27,  1873.  Pu- 
pil of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Chase,  Cllne- 
dinst  and  Mowbray.  Member: 
Salma.C.  1905;  Lotos  C.  Awards: 
Isidor  portrait  prize,  Salma.  C,  1914. 
Work:  "The  First  Born,"  Corcoran 
Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C. ;  "The  Age 
of  Wonder,"  Albright  Gallery,  Buffalo, 
N.   Y. 

PHILLIPS,  J(ohn)  H(enry),  681  Fifth 
Ave.;  h.  121  Washington  PI.,  Babylon, 
L.  I.,   N.   Y. 

E.,  A.,  T.— Born  Sun  Prairie,  Wis.,  Feb. 
12,  1876.  Member:  Salma.  C,  Lg. 
of  N.Y.A.  Award  :  Traveling  Schol- 
arship, Chicago  Architectural  Club, 
1903.  W^  o  r  k  :  Elizabethan  Theater, 
Upper   Montclair,    N.   J. 

PHILLIPS,  S.  George,  1537  Chestnut  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Phila.   AC. 

PHOENIX,  Lauros  M(onroe),  64  Burling 
Lane,  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P.— Born  Chicago.  111..  Feb.  23. 
1885.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Woodstock  Summer 
School,  F.  Carlson.  Member:  Mural 
P.;  Minneapolis  SFA;  St.  Paul  AS;  ASL 
of  Chicago;  Minneapolis  AS.  Work: 
"Rip  Van  Winkle,"  Grill  Room,  St. 
Paul  Hotel;  "Aesculapidus,"  "The 
Fountain  of  Youth"  and  "Old  Herb 
Woman,"  Lobby  of  Lowry  Doctors' 
Bldg.,  St.  Paul,  Minn.;  "Minnehaha, ** 
L.  S.  Daroldson  Bldg.;  "Nine  Fairy 
Stories,"  New  Grand  Theatre,  Minne- 
apolis, Minn.  Dean,  Eastern  Division, 
Federal  School  of  Commercial  Design, 
New  York  City. 

PIAZZONI,  Gottardo  F.  P.,  712  Montgom- 
ery St.,  San  Francisco,  Cal.;  h.  Belve- 
dere, Marin  Co.,  Cal. 
P.,  E. — Born  Intragna,  Switzerland, 
April  14,  1872.  Pupil  of  San  Francisco  Art 
Assoc;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under 
Laurens,  Benjamin-Constant  and  Henry 
Martin  and  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  under 
Gerome.  Member:  San  F.  AA;  Cal. 
SE.  Represented  in  Palace  of  Fine 
Arts,  San  Francisco,  and  Golden  Gate 
Park  Museum,  San  Francisco;  and  Oak- 
land (Calif.)  Art  Gallery. 

PICCIRILLI,  Attilio,  467  East  142d  St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 

S.— Born  Massa,  Italy,  May  16,  1866. 
Pupil  of  Accademia  San  Luca,  Rome. 
Came  to  XJ.  S.  1888.  Member:  ANA 
1909;  N.Y.  Arch.Lg.  1902;  NSS  1902;  Al- 
lied AA.  Awards:  Bronze  medal, 
Pan-Am.Exp..  Buffalo,  1901;  silver  med- 
al. St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  hon.  mention. 
Paris  Salon.  1912;  srold  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Widener  gold  medal, 
PAFA,  1917.  Work:  "Maine  Memo- 
rial,"   New    York;    "MacDonough    Mon- 


531 


PICCIRILLI 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


PL  ATT 


ument,"  New  Orleans;  "Dancing  Faun" 
and  "Head  of  a  Boy,"  Fine  Arts  Acad- 
emy,   Buffalo. 

PICCIRILLI,  Furio,  467  East  142d  St.;  h. 
1  Beach  Terrace,  Borough  of  the  Bronx, 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

S.— Born  Massa,  Italy,  March  14,  1868. 
Pupil  of  Accademia  San  Luca,  Rome. 
Came  to  U.  S.  1888.  Member:  ANA; 
NSS  1907;  N.Y.  Arch  Lg.  1914  (assoc), 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention.  Pan  Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,   San   F.,   1915. 

PICKNELL,  George  W.,  R.F.D.,  43,  Nor- 
walk.  Conn. 

P.— Born  Springfield,  Vt.,  June  26,  1864. 
Pupil  of  Lefebvre  and  Constant.  Mem- 
ber: Salma.  C.  "Work:  "Stock 
Yard  in  Winter,"  Detroit  Institute  of 
Arts. 

PIELKE,  Rolfe,  care  of  Foster  and  Klei- 
ser,  28  Valencia  St.,  San  Francisco,  Cal. 
(I.) 

PIERCE,  Anna  Harriet,  402  Edgewood 
Ave.,  New  Haven,  Conn.;  summer, 
South  Britain,   Conn. 

P.,  I.,  W.,  T.— Born  in  South  Britain, 
Conn.,  May  17,  1880.  Pupil  of  F.  C. 
Jones,  George  Maynard,  Mora,  K.  H. 
Miller,  John  F.  Weir,  Niemeyer,  E.  C. 
Taylor. 

PIERCE,    Rowena    Elizabeth,    328    Broad- 
way, Providence,  R.  I. 
S. — M  ember:    Providence   AC. 

PIERPONT,  Clarence  S.,  1216  Turks  Head 
Bldg.,   Providence,   R.   I. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence  AC. 

PIETERSZ,  Bertus,  Hancock,  N.  H. 
P.,  W.,  T. — Born  Amsterdam,  Holland, 
Sept.  13,  1869.  Studied  in  Rotterdam, 
and  under  Harry  W.  Ranger.  Mem- 
ber: Lg.  of  N.Y.A.  Work:  "Cam- 
panile,"   Springfield,   Mass. 

PIETRO,  Mrs.  S.  C,  561  Madison  Ave., 
New  York,   N.  Y.    (S.) 

PIETZ,  Adam,  512  West  Clapier  St.,  Ger- 
mantown,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
S.,  Medalist.— Born  Offenbach,  Ger- 
many, July  19,  1873.  Studied  at  PAFA; 
AIC ;  and  in  Germany.  Member: 
Phila.  Sketch  C;  Fellowship  PAFA; 
American  Numismatic  Soc;  N.  Y.  Nu- 
mismatic Soc.  Work  in  Chicago  Art 
Inst.;  Memorial  Hall,  Philadelphia,  and 
American  Numismatic  Soc. ;  Navy  Yard, 
Phila.,  Admintstration  Bldg.;  Huston 
Club,  University  of  Pa.;  Phila.  Sketch 
Club. 

PIGOTT,  Frank  E.,  care  Steck  and  Spel- 
rein  Lithographic  Co.,  65  West  Houston 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:   Rochester  AC. 

PINCOVITZ,  H.  A.,  721  "Walnut  St.,  Phil- 
adelphia, Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

PIQUET,     M.    S.,    206    St.    Nicholas    Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

PIRSON,   Elmer   (William),  53  West  72nd 
St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P..    I.— Born    Buffalo,    N.    Y.,    July    26, 


1888.  Pupil  of  George  Bridgman,  James 
Earle  Eraser.  Member  :  Guild  of 
Free   Lance   Artists. 

PITKIN,    Caroline    W.,    550    West    157th 
St.,    New   York,    N.    Y. 
S. — M  ember:     N.   A.   Women   PS. 

PITMAN,  Elizabeth  S.,  Wallingford,  Ct. 
P. — M  ember:   New  Haven  PCC. 

PITMAN,  Sophia  L.,  Moses  Brown  School, 
156  Pitman   St.,   Providence,  R.  I. 
P.,  T. — Born  Providence,  R.  I.     Mem- 
ber: Providence  AC;  Providence  WCC; 
Copley  S. 

PITMAN,  Mrs.  Stephen  Minot,  125  George 

St.,    Providence,    R.    I, 
P. — M  ember:   Providence  AC;   Provi- 
dence WCC. 

PLACE,    Mrs.    Vera    Clark,    621    Kenwood 

Parkway,  Minneapolis,  Minn. 
P. — Born  Minneapolis,  Minn.,  Feb.  5, 
1890.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Dufner,  Richard 
Miller,  Antonio  de  la  Gandere.  Mem- 
ber: Attic  C.  Minneapolis;  Alumni 
Minneapolis  School  of  Art;  Minneapolis 
SFA.  Awards  :  First  and  second 
prizes,  Minnesota  State  Art  Exhibit. 

PLANT,   Olive,   1738   N   Street,   Washing- 
ton,   D.    C. 
P.— M  ember:     S.   Wash.  A. 

PLASCHKE,  Paul  A.,  care  Louisville 
"Times,"  Louisville,  Ky. 
P.,  I. — Born  Berlin,  Germany,  Feb.  2, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Cooper  Union  and  ASL 
of  N.  Y.  Member:  Soc.  Ind.  A.; 
Louisville  AL;  Palette  and  Chisel  C, 
Chicago.  Work  in  Chicago  Art  Inst. ; 
St.  Louis  City  Art  Museum;  John  Her- 
ron  Art  Inst.,  Indianapolis,  Ind. 

PLATT,  Alethea  Hill,  939  Eighth  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Sharon,  Conn, 
P.— Born  Scarsdale,  N.  Y.  Pup?'/  of 
Henry  B.  Snell,  Ben  Foster  and  ASL 
of  N.  Y. ;  Delecluse  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  NYWCC;  AWCS;  N.  A. 
Women  PS;  NAC;  Pen  and  Brush  C; 
SP.  N.Y. ;  Yonkers  A  A.  Awards:  First 
prize  for  water  color,  N.  Y.  Woman's  AC 
1903;  first  prize  Minnesota  Art  Assoc, 
Faribault,  1909.  Work:  "Old  World 
Work  Shop,"  Public  Library,  Fari- 
bault, Minn;  "An  Old  Garden,"  Ander- 
son (Ind.)  Art  Gallery;  portrait  of 
Judge  Lewis  C.  Piatt,  Court  House, 
White   Plains,    N.   Y. 

PLATT,  Charles  Adams,  101  Park  Ave.; 
h.  135  East  66th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  Arch.,  Ldscp.Arch.,  W. — Born  New 
York,  Oct.  1,  1861.  Pupil  of  NAD  and 
ASL  in  New  York;  Boulanger  and  Le- 
febvre in  Paris.  Member:  SAA 
1888;  ANA  1897;  NA  1911;  Nat.Inst.A.L. ; 
AWCS;  N.Y. Etching  C;  London  Soc.of 
Painter-Etchers;  N.Y.Chapter  AIA; 
Century  Assoc.  Awards  :  Webb 
prize,  SAA  1894;  bronze  medal,  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am.Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901;  medal  of  honor,  N.Y. 
Chapter  AIA  1913.  Author:  "Italian 
Gardens." 

PLATT,  Charles  H.,  Jr.,  43  Glover  Ave., 
Yonkers,  N.   Y.      (P.) 


532 


PLAUCHE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


POOLE 


PLAUCHE,   Leda   Hincks,  1716  Esplanade 

Ave.,  New  Orleans,  La. 
P. — Born  New  Orleans,  La.,  Dec.  30, 
1887.  Pupil  of  G.  L.  Viavant  and  Ells- 
worth Woodward.  Award  :  First 
prize  for  collection  of  Louisiana  birds, 
Nat.  Farm  and  Live  Stock  Show,  New 
Orleans,  .1916.  Specialty,  Carnival  and 
pageant  costume   design. 

PLEADWELL,  Amy  M  (argaret),  82 
Chestnut  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  summer, 
Nahant,    Mass. 

P.,  T.— Born  Taunton,  Mass.,  Sept.  15, 
1875.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art 
School,  Boston;  Grand  Chaumiere  and 
Colarossi  Academies  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber:     Copley   S;   N.   A.   Women  PS. 

PLEUTHNER,  Walter  C,  Scribner  Bldg.. 
599  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  Scars- 
dale,  N.  Y. 

P.  Arch.,  W.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Jan. 
24,  1885.  Pupil  of  Du  Mond  and  Mora. 
Member  :  S.Indp.A. ;  American  Cam- 
ouflage; Art  in  Trades  C;  N.  Y.  Arch. 
Lg.  Designed  Emerson  Phonograph 
Galleries,  New  York. 

PLOWMAN,  George  T(aylor),  99  Garden 
St.,  Cambridge,  Mass. 
I..  E. — Born  Le  Sueur,  Minn.,  Oct.  19, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Douglas  Volk  in  Minne- 
apolis; Eric  Pape  in  Boston;  studied  at 
Royal  College  of  Art,  South  Kensington, 
London  and  in  Paris.  Member: 
Chicago  SE;  N.Y.  SE;  Salma.  C;  Bos- 
ton SE  (pres.) ;  Cal.  SE;  NAC.  Award: 
Bronze  medal  for  etching,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Work:  Etchings  in  Boston 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts;  New  York  Public 
Library;  Library  of  Congress,  Washing- 
ton. Author:  "Etchings  and  Other 
Graphic  Arts,"   1914. 

PLUMB,  H(enry)  G(rant),  149  East  39th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Sher- 
burne,  N.   Y. 

P.,  T.— Born  Sherburne,  April  15,  1847. 
Pupil  of  NAD  in  New  York;  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts  in  Paris,  under  Gerome. 
Member:  Salma. C;  A. Fund  S. 
Award:  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp., 
1899. 

PLUMMER,  Ethel  M'Clellan  (Mrs.  Jacob- 
sen),  112  West  11th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

P.,  I. — Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
Henri  and  Mora.  Member:  Guild 
of  Free  Lance  Artists.  Illustrates  for 
"Vanity  Fair,"  "Life,"  "Shadowland." 

PODOLSKY,  Henry,  1335  Greenmount 
Ave.,    Baltimore,    Md.    (P.) 

POGANY,  W(illiam)  A(ndrew),  145  West 
55th  St.;  h.  196  'Seaman  Ave.,  New 
York.    N.    Y. 

P.,  S.,  I.,  E.,  C— Born  Hungary,  Aug. 
24,  1882.  Member:  Salma,  C. 
Awards  :  Gold  medals,  Leipsig,  and 
Budapest  Expositions;  gold  medal, 
Panama-Pacific  Exp.,  San  Francisco, 
1915.  Work  :  Twelve  paintings, 
Hungarian  National  Gallery,  Budapest. 
Author  and  illustrator  of  Pogany'.s  chil- 
dren books. 

POGSON,    Mrs.    Annie    L,,   112&   Corunado 
Terrace,   Los  Angeles,   Cal. 
P.— M  ember:    Cal.    AC. 


533 


POLASEK,  Albin,  Tree  Studio  Bldg.,  Chi- 
cago,   111. 

S.,  T. — Born  Frenstat,  Czechoslavakia. 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  American  Academy  in 
Rome.  Member:  NSS.  1914  (assoc); 
N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg. ;  SW  Sc.  (pres.,. 
Chicago  SA;  Cliff  Dwellers;  Alumni 
Asso.  of  the  Fellowship  of  the  Am.  Acad 
in  Rome.  Awards  :  Academy  of 
Rome  scholarship,  1910-1913;  hon.  men- 
tion, Paris  Salon,  1913;  Widener  priz- 
($500),  PAFA,  1914;  silver  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Logan  medal,  AIC, 
1917;  Shaffer  prize,  AIC.  1917;  Hea- 
prize,  AIC,  1917;  medal,  Milwaukee  Inst., 
1917.  Work:  "Fantasy,"  Metropoli- 
tan Museum,  New  York;  "F.  D.  Mil- 
let" bust,  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the 
Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia;  "Sower,"  Chi- 
cago Art  Institue;  and  in  the  Det^' 
Institute  of  Arts.  Head  of  Sculpture 
Department,    Chicago   Art   Institute. 

POLLEY,   Frederick,  371   South  Emerson 

Avenue,  Indianapolis.  Ind. 
P.,  E.— Born  Union  City,  Ind.,  Aug.  15, 
1875.  Pupil  of  Corcoran  Art  School, 
Washington;  Herron  Art  Inst.,  Indian- 
apolis, under  William  Forsyth.  Mem- 
ber: Ind.  AC.  Instructor  of  art  at 
Technical  High  School,  Indianapolis, 
Ind. 

POLONYI,   John,   434  East   15th   St.,    New 
York,   N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

POLOWETSKI,  Charles   Ezekiel,  47  Fifth 
Ave.,   New  York,   N.   Y, 
P. — Born   in  New  York.     Pupil  of  Bon- 
net in  Paris.     Member:    Paris  AAA; 
Salma.  C. 

POOKE,  Marion  Louise,  Fenway  Studios, 
Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  22  Win- 
nemay  St.,  Natick,  Mass. 
P.,  I.  ,T.— Born  Natick,  Mass.  Pupil  of 
Mass.  Normal  Art  'School,  Boston ; 
School  of  the  Museum  of  Fine  Arts, 
Boston.  Me  m  b  e  r  :  Conn.  AFA. 
Awards:  Silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  Hudson  prize,  Conn.  AFA, 
1917;  hon.  men.,  N.A.  Women  PS,  1921. 
Instructor  in  art,  Abbot  Academy, 
Andover,  Mass.;  and  Walnut  Hill 
School,   Natick,   Mass. 

POOLE,    Bert.    298    Edgehill    Road,    East 
Milton,    Mass. 

P.,  I.,  W.— Born  North  Bridgewater 
(now  Brockton),  Mass.,  Dec.  28,  1853. 
Pupil  of  Tommaso  Juglaris  and  evening 
art  schools  in  Boston.  Member:  Cop- 
ley S;  Artist-Designers  Lg.  of  New 
England.  Specialty,  panoramic  views  in 
color.  Work:  "City  of  Cambridge"; 
"Big  Creek  Panorama,"  Caribou,  Calif.; 
"Panorama,"  Kelsey  City,  Fla;  water 
color  in  Cambridge  City  Hall;  repre- 
sented in  Boston  Public  Library,   etc. 

POOLE,     Frederic    Victor,    65    East    Elm 
St.,    Chicago,    III. 

P.,  I.,  C,  T.— Born  Southampton  Hants. 
England.  Pupil  of  Frederick  Brown  in 
London.  Member:  Chicago  SA. 
Work:  "Portrait  of  President  Low- 
den",  Toronto  University.  Illustrates 
for  magazines. 


POOLE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


POSTGATE 


POOLE,     H(oratio)      Nelson,     712     Mont- 
gomery St..   San  Francisco,   Calif. 
P.,  L,  E. — Born  Haddonfield,  N.  J.,  Jan. 
16,  1885.     Pupil  of  PAFA.     Member: 
Calif.   SE;   Chicago   SE. 

POOR,  Henry  V(arnum),  Pamona,  Rock- 
land  Co.,    N.   Y. 

P.,  T.— Born  in  Kansas,  Sept.  30,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Slade  School  and  of  Walter 
Sickert  in  London;  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris.  Member:  San  Francisco  SA; 
Calif.  AC.  Award:  Walter  purchase 
prize  ($300),  San  P.  AA,  1918. 

POOR,  Henry  Warren,  Boston  Normal 
School;     h.     23     Oakland     St.,    Medford, 

]Vl3.SS, 

p.,  L.,  W.,  T. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Jan. 
10,  1863.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art 
School;  studied  in  Paris.  Member: 
Boston  AC. 

POORE,  Henry  R(ankln),  45  Ridge  St., 
Orange,  N.  J.;  summer,  Lyme,  Conn. 
P.,  I.,  W.,  T. — Born  Newark,  N.  J., 
March  21,  1859.  Pupil  of  Peter  Moran 
and  PAFA  in  Philadelphia;  NAD  in 
New  York;  Luminals  and  Bouguereau 
in  Paris.  Member:  ANA  1888; 
Phila.Sketch  C;  ACPhila.;  Salma.C; 
Lotos  C;  Union  Inter.des  Beaux- Arts 
et  des  Lettres;  Fellowship  PAFA,  1916; 
MacD.C. ;  NAC.  Awards:  First  prize 
($2,000),  >\merican  Art  Association; 
second  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD,  1888; 
bronze  medal,  Pan-Amer.  Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
gold  medal,  American  Art  Soc,  Phila., 
1906;  gold  medal.  Buenos  Aires,  1910; 
silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work  :  "Night  of  the  Nativity."  Fine 
Arts  Academy,  Buffalo;  "The  Shore," 
City  Museum,  St.  Louis;  "In  the 
Meadow,"  Art  Association.  Indianapolis; 
"Old  English  'Stag  Hound,"  Worcester 
Museum.  Author:  "Pictorial  Composi- 
tion"; "The  Pictorial  Figure";  "The 
Conception  of  Art." 

POPE,  Alexander,  125  Tremont  St.,  Bos- 
ton, Mass.;  h.  1013  Beacon  St.,  Brook- 
line,  Mass.;  summer,  Crow  Point,  Hing- 
ham,   Mass. 

P.,  S. — Born  Boston,  March  25,  1849. 
Member:  Copley  S.  1893;  Boston 
AC.  Published  "Upland  Game  Birds 
and  Water  Fowl  of  the  United  States." 
At  first  painted  and  modeled  animals; 
since  1912  chiefly  portrait  painter. 

POPE,  Mrs.  Marion  Hoiden,  854  Walker 
Ave..    Oakland,    Calif. 

P.,  E. — Born  San  Francisco.  Calif.  Pupil 
of  A.  Mathews  and  Whistler.  Mem- 
ber: San  F.  AA.;  Calif.  SE.  Work: 
Three  mural  decorations  in  the  Carnegie 
Library,    Oakland,   Calif. 

POPINI,  Alexander,  11  East  8th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P.,    I. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

POPOFF,   Andrew    P.,    121    Jamaica   Ave., 
Flushing,  L.  I.,  N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

POPOFF,   Olga.     See  Mrs.  Miiller. 

PORTER,  Bruce,  944  Chestnut  'St.,  San 
Francisco.   Cal. 

Mural  P.,  S.,  W. — Born  San  Francisco, 
Feb.  23,  18G5.     Studied  in  San  Francisco, 


England  and  France.  Member:  Am. 
PS.  Award  :  Chevalier  Legion  of 
Honor  of  France.  Work:  Designed 
"Stevenson  Memorial,"  San  Francisco; 
stained  glass  and  mural  paintings  in 
churches  and  public  buildings  of  Cali- 
fornia. Author:  "The  Arts  in  Cali- 
fornia,"  etc. 

PORTER,  Charles  Ethen,  Rockville,  Conn, 
P.— M  ember:    Conn.AFA. 

PORTER,  James  T(ank),  412  East  37th 
St.,   New  York,    N.   Y. 

S.— Born  Tientsin,  China,  Oct.  17.  1883. 
Pupil  of  Robert  Aitkin.  Member: 
ASL  of  N.Y.  Work:  "Portrait  bust 
of  James  W.  Porter,"  "Portrait  relief 
of  my  Mother,"  owned  by  Beloit  Col- 
lege,  Wis. 

PORTER,    Love,    12    East    30th    St.,    New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P.~M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

PORTER,  IVI(ary)  K(ing),  1761  Q  St., 
Washmgton,  D.   C.  -^  , 

Min.P.— Born  Batavia,  111.,  June  8,  1865 
Pupil  of  Volk;  ASL  of  Washington.  D. 
C.  Member:  Wash.  WCC;  Wash. 
AC. 

''^'^J'^'^'.  Raymond  A(verm),  Massachu- 
setts Normal  Art  School,  Boston;  h. 
Dana  Hill  Apts.,  331  Harvard  St.,  Cam- 
bridge, Mass. 

^^~^°P  Hermon,  N.  Y.,  Feb.  18,  1883. 
Member:  Boston  SAC;  Copley  S 
Work:  Memorial  to  President  Tyler. 
Richmond,  Va.;  statue,  "The  Green 
Mountain  Boy,"  Rutland,  Vt. ;  Victory 
Memorial,  Salem,  Mass.;  World  War 
Memorial,  Commonwealth  Armory,  Bos- 
ton, Mass. 

PORTNOFF,  Alexander,  703  Walnut  St., 
h.  23rd  St.  and  Fairmont  Ave.,  Phila- 
delphia,  Pa. 

S.,  T.— Born  in  Russia  in  1887.  Pupil 
of  Charles  Grafly;  PAFA.  Member- 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Graphic  SC  of  Phila- 
delphia. Awards  :  Cresson  Euro- 
pean Scholarship,  PAFA,  1912  and  1913; 
hon.  mention,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  Fran- 
cisco,   1915. 

POST,  May  Audubon,  4446  Sansom  St.. 
Philadelphia,   Pa. 

P.,  I. — Born  in  New  York  City.  Pupil  of 
PAFA  under  Chase.  Beaux,  Grafly  and 
Breckenridge;  Drexel  Inst,  under  How- 
ard Pyle;  Lucien  Simon  in  Paris. 
Member:  Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila 
WCC;  Plastic  C;  S.Indp.A.  Awards: 
Traveling  scholarships,  PAFA:  gold 
medal,  ACPhila.   1903. 

POST,  W(illiam)  Merritt,  West  Morris 
Conn. 

Ldscp.P. — Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Dec 
11,  1856.  Pupil  of  Frost  Johnson;  ASL 
of  N.  Y.  under  Beckwnn.  Member- 
ANA  1910;  AWCS:  NYWCC;  A. Fund  S. 
(treas.);  Salma.C.  1900;  Conn.AFA, 
Award  :  Hon.  mention,  Pan-Am. Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901.  Work:  "Landscape," 
Newark  Museum  Association. 

POSTGATE,  M.  J.,  5  St.  Francis  Place, 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y.   (P.) 


534 


POTTER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


POWELL 


POTTER,  Bessie.  See  Mrs.  Robert  Von- 
iioh. 

POTTER,  E(dward)  C(lark),  108  North 
St.,  Greenwich,  Conn. 
S.— Born  New  London,  Conn.,  Nov.  26. 
1857.  Member:  SAA  1894;  NSS  1893; 
ANA  1905,  NA  1906;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1898; 
Nat.Inst.A.L.  Award:  Gold  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Specialty,  animals. 
Work  with  D.  C.  French:  "Gen.  Grant," 
Fairmount  Park,  Philadelphia;  "Wash- 
ington," Paris  and  Chicago;  "Gen. 
Hooker,"  Boston.  Alone:  "Fulton,"  Li- 
brary of  Congress,  Washington;  "Gov. 
Blair,"  Lansing,  Mich.;  "Gen.  Slocum," 
Gettysburg;  "Sleeping  Fawn,"  Art  In- 
stitute of  Chicago;  equestrian  statue  of 
Gen.  Phil  Kearny,  Arlington  Cemetery, 
Washington,   D.   C. 

POTTER,    H(arry)    S(pafford),    539    West 
112th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
1.— Born   Detroit,   Mich.,    1870.     Pupil  of 
Constant,   Laurens   and   Jules   Simon   in 
Paris.    Member:  SI  1910;  Paris  AAA. 

POTTER,  Martha  J(ulia),  288  Dwight  St., 
New  Haven  High  School,  New  Haven, 
Conn. 

P.,  T.— Born  Essex,  Conn.,  Jan.  14,  1864. 
Pupil  of  J.  H.  Niemeyer,  John  F.  Weir, 
A.  W.  Dow,  Marshall  Fry.  Member: 
N.  H.  Paint  and  Clay  C;  Conn.  AFA; 
Eastern  Arts  Asso. 

POTTER,  Mary  Knight,  184  Boylston  St.; 
h.  66  Chestnut  St.,  Boston.  Mass. 
P.,  W.— Born  Boston.  Pupil  of  Metro- 
politan Museum  School  and  ASL  in  New 
York;  Cowles  Art  School  in  Boston; 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Member  : 
Copley  S.,  Boston;  Author:  "Love  in 
Art,"  "Art  of  the  Louvre,"  "Art  of  the 
Vatican,"  "Art  of  the  Venice  Acad- 
emy,"   etc. 

POTTER,    IVl.    Helen,    198    Waterman    St., 
Providence,   R.   I. 
P. — M  ember:      Providence  WCC. 

POTTER,  Nathan  D(umont),  149  Sixth 
Ave.;  h.  92  Riverside  Drive,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  summer,  108  North  St.,  Green- 
wich,  Conn. 

P.,  S.— Born  Enfield,  Mass.,  Apl.  30, 
1893.  Pupil  of  D.  C.  French  and  Robert 
Reid.  Work:  Clock,  eagles,  East 
Ohio  Gas  Co.,  Cleveland;  Clock,  figures, 
Greenwich  Trust  Co.,  Greenwich,  Conn. 

POTTER,     William     J.,     22     Lake     Ave., 
Broadmoor,   Colorado   Springs,   Colo. 
P.,     T.— Born    Bellport,     Pa.,     July     14, 
1883.      Pupil    of   PAFA,    and    of   Walter 
Siebert,   in  London. 

POTTHAST,  Edward  H(enry),  222  Cen- 
tral Park  South,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  June  11,  1857. 
Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Academy;  studied 
in  Antwerp,  Munich  and  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: SAA  1902;  ANA  1899,  NA  1906; 
AWCS;  NYWCC,  Salma.  C,  1895;  Lotos 
C;  Allied  AA;  Cincinnati  AC.  (hon.). 
Awards:  Clarke  prize,  NAD  1899; 
Evans  prize,  AWCS  1901;  Inness  prize, 
Salma.C.  1904;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  Morgan  prize,  Salma.C.  1904; 
Inness  prize,  Salma.C.  1905;  Hudnut 
prize  ($200),  AWCS  1914;  silver  medal, 
P.-P.Exp.,      San     F.,      1915.        Work 


"Dutch  Interior,"  Cincinnati  Museum; 
"On  the  Beach"  and  "Bathers,"  Brook- 
lyn Institute  Museum;  "The  Pilot"; 
Hackley  Art  Gallery,  Muskegon,  Mich. 
"A     Holiday,"     Chicago    Art    Institute. 

POTTS,  Wdliiam)  Sherman,  45  East  59th 
St..  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Port. P.,  Min.P.— Born  Milburn,  N.  J.. 
July  29,  1876.  Pupil  of  C.  N.  Flagg  in 
Hartford;  PAFA;  Laurens  and  Constant 
in  Paris.  Member:  Conn. AFA;  AS 
Min.P.;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A. 

POUPELET,    Jane,    30    rue   Dutot,    Paris, 
France. 
S. — M  ember:     N.  A.  Women  PS. 

POUSETTE-DART,     Nathaniel     J.,     Val- 
halla,  N.   Y. 

P.,  S.,  E.,  T.,  L.— Born  St.  Paul,  Minn., 
Sept.  7,  1886.  Pupil  of  St.  Paul  Art 
School;  Henri  and  MacNeil  in  New 
York;  PAFA.  Member:  Artists' 
Soc,  St.  Paul  Inst.;  Gargoyle  C. 
Awards  :  Cresson  Scholarships,  1909 
and  1910;  Toppan  prize,  1910,  all  at 
PAFA;  hon.  mention  for  painting  and 
second  prize  for  etching,  1913;  third 
prize  for  painting  and  first  prize  for 
etching,  1914;  all  from  Minnesota  State 
Art  Society;  hon.  mention  for  painting, 
St.  Paul  Inst.,  1915;  first  prize  for  paint- 
ing, Minnesota  State  Art  Society,  1916. 
Director  of  art  department  at  St.  Cath- 
erine's College,  St.  Paul,  Minn.;  St. 
Benedict's  College,  St.  Joseph,  Minn., 
and  Minnesota  College,  Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

POWELL,  Arthur  J.  E.,  59  East  59th  St.. 
New    York,    N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Vanwert,  O.,  Dec.  11,  1864. 
Pupil  of  San  Francisco  School  of  De- 
sign; St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts; 
Julian  Academy,  Toudouze  and  Fer- 
rier  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA,  1921; 
Salma.  C.  1904;  Paris  AAA;  A.  Fund  S. ; 
Allied  AA;  NAC  (life);  NYWCC. 
Awards  :  Vezin  prize  ($100),  Salma. 
C,  1913;  Ranger  Purchase  prize,  NAD, 
1921. 

POWELL,  Caroline  A(melia),  121  West 
Carrillo  St.,  Santa  Barbara,  Calif. 
Wood  Engr. — Born  Dublin,  Ireland.  Pu- 
pil of  W.  J.  Linton  and  Timothy  Cole; 
studied  drawing  at  Cooper  Union  and 
NAD  in  New  York.  Member:  Soc. 
of  American  Wood  Engr.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chi- 
cago, 1893;  silver  medal.  Pan- Am. Exp., 
Buffalo.  1901.  Work  in:  Boston  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts;  New  York  Public 
Library;  Springfield  (Mass.)  Public  Li- 
brary;  Carnegie  Institute,  Pittsburgh. 

POWELL,    Doane,    2149    South    33rd    St., 
Omaha,  Nebr. 

I.— Born  Omaha,  Nebr.,  March  4,  1881. 
Studied  in  France.  Member:  Omaha 
AG.      Cartoonist  on    "Omaha   Bee." 

POWELL,     Ella     IVIay,    639    Addison    St., 
Chicago,   111. 

P. — Born  Davenport.  la.,  Apl.,  1879.  Pu- 
pil   of    Collin    and    Courtois    in    Paris. 

POWELL,     Lucien    Whiting,    Purcellville, 
Va. 

P.— Born  in  Virginia,  Dec.  13,  1846. 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  London  School  of  Art; 


535 


POWERS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


PRINCE 


studied  in  Rome,  Venice  and  Paris. 
Member:  S. Wash.  A.;  Wash.WCC. 
Award:  Parsons  prize,  S.  Wash. A. 
1903.  Work:  "The  Afterglow,"  and 
"Grand  Canyon,  Arizona,"  Corcoran 
Gallery,  Washington;  "Grand  Canyon 
of  the  Yellowstone  River,"  National 
Gallerv.   Washington. 

POWERS,  John   M.,  154  Nassau  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 
I. — M  ember:     SI. 

POWERS,  Marion  (Mrs.  W.  A.  Kirkpat- 
rick).  Fenway  Studios,  30  Ipswich  St., 
Boston,  Mass.;  summer,  Friendship, 
Me. 

P. — Born  London,  England,  of  American 
parents.  Pupil  of  Garrido  in  Paris. 
Member:  N.  A. Women  PS.  Awards: 
liippincott  prize,  PAFA,  1907;  silver 
medal,  Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910;  gold 
medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work: 
."Tresors,"  in  Luxembourg,  Paris,  bought 
from  Salon,  1904;  mural  decoration  for 
Canadian  Pacific  Railway  at  Vancou- 
ver, B.  C. 

PRAHAR,  Renee,  45  Christopher  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

S. — Born  in  New  York.  Member:  N. 
A.    Women    PS. 

PRASUHN,    John    G.,   1310  Hiatt   St.,    In- 
dianapolis, Ind. 
S.— M  ember:     Ind.    SS. 

PRATHER,    Ralph    Carlyle,    2795    E.    16th 
Ave.;    P.    O.    Box    1274,    Denver,    Colo.; 
summer,    Estes   Park,    Colo. 
I. — Born    Franklin,    Pa.,    Nov.    4,    1889. 

PRATT,  Philip  H(enry),  School  of  Fine 
and  Applied  Arts,  Pratt  Inst.;  h.  224 
Willoughby  Ave.,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  Aug. 
10,  1888.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  FA; 
Phila.  Industrial  Art  School;  South 
Kensington,  London.  Member:  2x4 
Soc;  St.  L.  AG.  Work:  Twelve 
mural  panels  for  Wisconsin  State 
Capitol. 

PRECHT,  Fred  A.,  70  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

PRELLWITZ,  Edith  Mitchill  (Mrs.  Henry 
Prellwitz),  Peconic,  L.  I.,  N.  Y, 
P. — Born  South  Orange,  N.  J.,  Jan.  28. 
1865.  Pupil  of  ASL  under  Brush  and 
Cox;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under 
Bouguereau,  Robert-Fleury  and  Cour- 
tois.  Member:  SAA  1898;  ANA  1906; 
N.Y. Woman's  AC.  Awards:  Second 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1894;  Dodge 
prize,  NAD  1895;  medal,  Atlanta  Exp., 
1895;  bronze  medal,  Pan-Am.Exp.,  Buf- 
falo,  1901. 

PRELLWITZ,  Henry,  Peconic,  L.  I.,  N.  Y,. 
P.,  T.— Born  New  York,  Nov.  13,  1865. 
Pupil  of  T.  W.  Dewing  and  ASL  in 
New  "iork;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  SAA  1897;  ANA  1906,  NA 
1912;  Salma.  C.  1903;  Century  Assoc. 
Awards  :  Third  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD  1893;  bronze  medal,  Pan-Am.Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  Clarke  prize,  NAD  1907. 

PRENDERGAST,    Charles    E.,    50   Wash- 
ington   Sq.,    New    York,    N.    Y. 
S.,  E.,  C. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  May  27, 
1868.    Member:  Copley  S.;  S.Indp.A. 


James     M.,    Bellport,    L.    I., 


PRENDERGAST,      Maurice     B(razil),     50 

South  Washington  Square,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Oct.,  1861. 
Pupil  of  Academy  Julian,  Laurens  and 
Blanc  in  Paris.  Member:  NYWCC; 
Copley  S.,  1898;  Boston  WCC;  Boston 
GA;  Am.  PS  (pres.,  1914);  S.Indp.A.; 
Lg.  of  N.Y.A.;  New  Soc.  A.  Award  : 
Bronze  medal  for  water  color,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901. 

PRESTON, 
N.    Y. 
I. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

PRESTON,  Mary  Wilson  (Mrs.  James  M, 
Preston),  22  West  9th  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

I. — Born  New  York,  Aug.  11,  1873.  Pu- 
pil of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  and  of  NAD; 
Whistler  school  in  Paris.  Member: 
SI  1904  (assoc).  Award:  Bronze 
medal,  P.-P.Exp.,   San  F.,  1915. 

PRICE,  Anna,   145   Greenway,   Forest  Hill 
Garden,  L.   I.,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:       N.    A.    Women    PS. 

PRICE,  C.  S.,  Belvedere,  Calif.   (P.,  L) 

PRICE,  Edith  Ballinger,  7  Arnold  Ave., 
Newport;  summer,  "The  Acorn",  Wake- 
field,   R.    I. 

P.,  I.,  W. — Born  New  Brunswick,  N.  J., 
Apl.  26,  1897.  Pupil  of  P.  L.  Hale,  A. 
R.  James,  Helena  Sturtevant,  Geo.  May- 
nard  and  Thos.  Fogarty.  Member: 
Newport  AA.  Work:  Author  and 
illustrator  of  "Blue  Magic";  "Silver 
Shoal  Light";  "Us  and  the  Bottleman"; 
"The  Happy  Venture." 

PRICE,  Eugenia,  202  West  French  Place, 
San  Antonio,  Tex. 

P.,  T. — Born  Beaumont,  Tex.,  Jan.  29, 
1865.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  FA; 
AIC;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber :  Alumni  AIC;  Chicago  AC;  Texas 
FAS;  Chicago  S.  Min.  P. 

PRICE,     Gray.       See     Mrs.     Merrels. 

PRICE,  M.  Elizabeth,  10  East  9th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  New  Hope,  Pa. 
P.,  T. — Born  Martinsburg,  West  Va. 
Pupil  Pennsylvania  Museum  and  School 
of  Industrial  Art,  PAFA.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Plastic  C. ;  N.  A. 
Women  PS;  Whitney  Studio  Club;  Lg. 
of  N.Y. A.  Director  of  Neighborhood 
Art  School  of  Greenwich  House. 

PRICE,  Margaret  Evans,  16304  Clifton 
Blvd.,  Cleveland,  O. ;  h.  East  Aurora, 
N.   Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Mar.  20,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art  School,  De- 
camp, and  Major.  Illustrator  of  chil- 
dren's books. 

PRICE,  Mary  Roberts  Ball  (Mrs.  Joseph 
Price),  5001  Frankford  Ave.,  Philadel- 
phia, Pa. 

P.  —  Member:  Fellowship  PAFA 
(assoc);   Plastic  C. 

PRICE,     Norman,     187     Riverside     Drive, 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
I. — ^M  ember:    SI. 

PRINCE,    Ethel,    The   Portner,    Washing- 
ton,   D.    C. 
P. — M  ember:   S.Wash.A. 


536 


PRINCE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


QUIMBY 


PRINCE,  William  Meade,  111  East  10th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Mil- 
ford,    Conn. 

I.— Born  Roanoke,  Va.,  July  9,  1893. 
Pupil  of  N.  Y.  School  of  Fine  and  Ap- 
plied Art.  Member:  Guild  of  Free 
Lance  Artists;    Salma.   C. 

PRIOR,  Charles  M.,  571  W.  139th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

I.,  P..  E,.,  D..  T.— Born  New  York,  Dec. 
15,  1865.  Pupil  of  E.  M.  Ward  and 
NAD.     Member:     S.   Indp.  A. 

PRIZER,    Agnes     I.,     813    O'Fallon    Ave., 

Dayton,    Ky. 

P.^ — M  ember  :        Cincinnati    Woman's 

AC. 
PRIZER,   Tillie    Neville,   Westport.    Conn. 

P.— M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

PROCTOR,     A(lexander)      Phimister,     168 

East  51st  St.,  New  York  City;  433  Mel- 
ville Ave.,  Palo  Alto,  Calif. 
S.,  P. — Born  Bozanquit,  Ont.,  Canada, 
Sept.  27,  1862.  Pupil  of  NAD  and  ASL 
in  New  York;  Puech  and  Injalbert  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1901,  NA 
1904;  SAA  1895;  AWCS;  N.Y.Arch.Lg. 
1899;  NSS  1S93;  Nat.Inst.AL;  A.Aid  S.; 
Century  Assoc;  Bohemian  C,  San  Fran- 
cisco. Awards  :  Medal,  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  Rinehart  scholar- 
ship to  Paris,  1895-1900;  gold  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  gold  medal  for 
sculpture  and  bronze  medal  for  paint- 
ing, St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  N.Y.Arch.Lg. 
medal,  1911;  gold  medal.  P.-P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915.  Specialty,  Western  subjects. 
Work:  "Panthers,"  Prospect  Park, 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ;  "Puma,"  "Fawn,"  "Dog 
with  Bone"  and  "Fate,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  "Indian  Warrior," 
Brooklyn  Museum;  "Tigers,"  Princeton 
Univ.;  Buffaloes  and  Tigers  on  bridges, 
Washington,  D.  C;  "Moose,"  Carnegie 
Inst.,  Pittsburgh;  "Pioneer,"  University 
of  Oregon,  Eugene;  Louis  McKinley 
monument,  Buffalo;  "Broncho  Buster," 
Denver  Civic  Center;  "On  War  Trail"; 
equestrian  statue  of  Col.  Theodore 
Roosevelt,  Portland,  Ore;  "Circuit 
Rider,"  State  House,  Salem,  Ore. 
PROTZMANN,  George,  296  East  162d  St., 
New   York,    N.   Y.      (P.) 

PUGH,    Mrs.    Elizabeth    Worthington,    1118 

Cypress  Ave.,   Cincinnati,  O. 

P. — M  ember:       Cincinnati    Woman's 

AC. 
PULLINGER,    Herbert,    1430    South   Penn 

Square,  Philadelphia. 

I.,  P.— Born   Philadelphia,    Aug.    5,    1S78. 

Pupil    of    PAFA    under    McCarter     and 

Anshutz.  Member:         Fellowship 

PAFA;   Phila.   Sketch  C;   Phila.  WCC. 

PULSIFER,  Janet  D.,  32  Argyle  Park, 
Buffalo,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

PURDIE,  Evelyn,  383  Harvard  St.,  Cam- 
bridge, Mass. 

Min.P. — Born  Smyrna,  Asia  Minor.  Pu- 
pil of  Boston  Museum  School  under 
Grundmann;  Carolus-Duran,  Henner 
and  Mme.  Debillemont-Chardon  in 
Paris.  Member:  Woman's  Inter.Art 
Society,  London  and  Paris;  Copley  S. ; 
Pa.S.Min,.P.:  Boston  GA. 


PUREFOY,     Heslope,    27     Charlotte     St., 

Asheville,  N.   C. 

Min.  P.— Born  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  June 
17,  1884.  Pupil  of  Alice  Beckington  and 
Lucia  Fairchild  Fuller.  Member: 
Pa.S. Min.P. 

F>URVIS,  William  G.,  Maywood,   111. 
P. — M  ember:   Chicago  SA. 

PUSHMAN,  Hovsep  T.,  10  Ave.  Perceval, 
Paris,  France;  and  Fine  Arts  Bldg., 
Chicago,  111. 

P. — Pupil  of  Lefebvre,  Robert-Fleury 
and  Dechenaud  in  Paris.  Member: 
Cal.  AC;  Paris  AAA.  Awards:  Third 
class  medal,  Paris  Salon,  1914;  Acker- 
man   prize,    Calif.    AC,    1918. 

PUTHUFF,  Hanson  (Duvall),  161  N.  Col- 
lege View  Ave.,  Eagle  Rock,  Calif. 
P.— Born  Waverly,  Mo.,  Aug.  21,  1875. 
Pupil  of  University  Art  School,  Den- 
ver, Col.  Member:  Calif.  AC;  San  F. 
AA;  Ten  Painters  of  Los  Angeles. 
Awards:  Silver  medal,  Pan.- 
Calif.  Exp.,  'San  Diego,  1916;  first  prize, 
Calif.  AC,  1916.  Work:  "Majestic 
Oaks,"  Exposition  Park  Museum,  Los 
Angeles,  Calif.;  "California  Landscape," 
Artists'   Club,   Denver,   Col. 

PUTNAM,   Arion,   757   South  Los  Angeles 
'St.,    Los   Angeles.    Calif. 
P.— M  ember:     Calif.  AC. 

PUTNAM,  Arthur,  care  of  Macbeth  Gal- 
lery, 450  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N,  Y. 
S.— Member:  NSS  1913.  Award: 
Gold  medal.  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work:  "Snarling  Jaguar,"  Metropoli- 
tan Museum.  New  York. 

PUTNAM,  Miss  Brenda,  49  West  12th  St., 
New  York,    N.    Y. 

S.,  T. — Born  Minneapohs,  Minn.,  June 
3,  1890.  Pupil  of  Bela  Pratt,  J.  E. 
Eraser  and  Charles  Grafly.  Member: 
NSS;  N. A.  Women  PS.  Award:  Hon. 
mention   Chicago  Art  Institute,   1917. 

PUTNAM,  Stephen  G(ree!ey),  College 
Point,  Queens,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Wood  Engr. — Born  Nashua,  N.  H.,  Oct. 
17,  1852.  Studied  drawing  at  Brooklyn 
Art  Assoc,  and  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  pupil  of 
W.  H.  Herrick.  Frank  French  and  E. 
J.  Whitney.  Member:  AI  Graphic 
A.  Awards:  Bronze  medal,  Paris 
Exp.,  1889;  medal,  Columbian  Exp., 
Chicago,  1893;  bronze  medal,  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am.  Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901. 

PYLE,    W.     Scott,    375    Park    Ave.,     New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

QUANCHI,  Leon  William,  119  East  23rd 
St.;  h.  66  East  120th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.— Born  New  York  City,  Sept.  23,  1892. 
Pupil  of  G.  deF.  Brush;  F.  C.  Jones; 
Douglas  Volk. 

QUEST,  E.  Eloise,  258  Ryerson  St., 
Brooklyn,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

QUIMBY,  Fred  G.,  Trinity  Court,  Boston, 
Mass. 
P. — M  ember:  Boston  AC. 


537 


QUINLAN 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


RAND 


QUINLAN,   Will   J.,   333   Warburton  Ave., 
Yonkers,   N.  Y. 

P.,  Etcher. — Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  June 
29,  1877.  Pupil  of  J.  B.  Whittaker  at 
Adelphi  College;  NAD  in  New  York 
under  Maynard  and  Ward;  architecture 
at  Pratt  Inst.  Member:  Salma.C. ; 
Chicag-o  SE;  N.  Y.  SE;  Cal.  SE;  New 
Haven  PCC;  Brooklyn  SE;  Calif.  P.M. 
Awards  :  Shaw  black  and  white 
prize,  Salma.  C.  1913;  Shaw  etching 
prize,  Salma.  C.  1913  and  1914.  Work 
in:  New  York  Public  Library;  Oakland 
(Cal.)  Public  Museum. 

QUINN,    Edmond    I.,    207    East    61st    St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

S.,  P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
Eakins  in  Philadelphia;  Injalbert  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA;  NSS  1907; 
N.Y.  Arch.  Lg.  1911;  Nat.  Inst.  A.L. 
Award:  Silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Work:  Statue,  "John 
Howard,"  Williamsport,  Pa.;  statute, 
"Zoroaster,"  Brooklyn  Institute  of  Arts 
and  Sciences;  reliefs  on  "King's  Moun- 
tain (S.  C.)  Battle  Monument";  Bust  of 
Edgar  Allan  Poe,  Fordham,  New  York; 
figures  on  Pittsburgh  (Pa.)  Athletic 
Club;  "Nymph,"  statuette,  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  statute  of  Maj. 
Gen.  John  E.  Pemberton,  Vicksburg 
(Miss.)  National  Military  Pk.;  statute 
of  Edwin  Booth  as  "Hamlet,"  Gramercy 
Park,  New  York;  bust  of  Prof.  Hooper, 
Brooklyn  Museum. 

QUINTON,    Mrs.   W.  W.     See   Sage,   Cor- 
nelia. 

QUISTGAARD,    J.    von     Rehiing,    Oyster 
Bay,    L.   I.,   N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

RAAB,    George,   438   Jefferson   Ave.,    Mil- 
waukee,   Wis. 

P.,  S.,  T.— Born  Sheboygan,  Wis.,  Feb. 
26,  1866.  Pupil  of  Richard  Lorenz  in 
Milwaukee;  C.  Smith  in  Weimar;  Cour- 
tols  in  Paris.  Member:  Milwaukee 
AS;  Wis.  PS.  Award:  Medal,  Mil- 
waukee Art  Inst.,  1917.  Work:  "The 
Lone  Pine,"  St.  Paul  Institute;  "The 
Veil  of  Snow,"  Milwaukee  Art  Inst. 
Curator,  Layton  Art  Gallery. 

RADITZ.  Lazar,  1520  Chestnut  St.;  h.  ISt) 
North  20th  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  sum- 
mer, Pointe-au-Pic,  P.  Q.,  Canada. 
P.— Born  Dvinsk,  Russia,  Apl.  15,  1887. 
Pupil  of  Chase  and  Tarbell.  Mem- 
ber: Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila.  AC. 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  second  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD,  1918.  Work:  Self  portrait. 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts, 
Philadelphia;  "Dr.  I.  M.  Hays",  Amer- 
ican Philosophical  Societv.  Phila.;  "Mrs. 
R".  Reading,  (Pa.)  Museum;  "Judge 
Mayer  Sulzberger".  Dropsie  College, 
Phila.;  "Dr.  Hobert  M.  Hare",  Universi- 
ty of  Pennsylvania,  Phila.;  "Daniel 
Baugh",  Baugh  Inst,  of  Anatomy. 
Phila.;  "Dr.  S.  G.  Dixon",  Academy  of 
Natural  Science,  Phila. 

RADITZ,     Violetta     C,  '  1520     North     20th 
St.,    Philadelphia,    Pa.    (P.) 


RAE,  John,  Cedars  Road,  Caldwell,  N.  J.; 
summer.  Center  Lovell,  Me. 
I.,P.,W.— Born  Jersey  City,  N.  J.,  July 
4,  1882.  Pupil  of  Howard  Pyle  and  F.  V. 
Du  Mond.  Member:  SI,  1912; 
Illustrated  "The  Girl  I  Left  Behind 
Me,"  "Historic  Houses  of  New  Jersey," 
"The  Big  Family,"  "Pies  and  Pirates," 
"Why";  "Fables  in  Rhyme."  Author 
and  illustrator  of  "New  Adventures  of 
Alice."  Represented  in  Library  of  Con- 
gress, Washington. 

RAISBECK,   J.   J.,   211   Climax   St.,   Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 
P. — M  ember:      Pitts.  AA. 

RAKEMANN,  Carl,  North  Chevy  Chase, 
Md. 

Mural  P.,  I. — Born  Washington,  April  27, 
1878.  Pupil  of  academies  in  Munich, 
Diisseldorf  and  Paris.  Member:  S. 
Wash. A.;  Wash.WCC;  Art  and  Archaeol- 
ogy Lg.  Work  :  Four  lunettes  in  room 
of  Senate  Committee  on  Military  Af- 
fairs and  four  paintings  in  lobby  of 
House  of  Representatives,  U.  S.  Capitol, 
Washington;  portrait  of  ex-Speaker 
Henderson,  U.  S.  Soldiers'  Home.  Ten- 
nessee; portrait  of  ex-President  Hayes, 
Hayes  Memorial,  Museum,  Fremont,  O. 
Portraits  for  the  State  House,  Colum- 
bus, O.;  Ohio  State  Archaeological  and 
Historical   Society;   Kenyon   College,   O. 

RALEIGH,  Henry,  Westport,  Conn.;  sum- 
mer, 60  Iverna  Court,  Kensington,  W., 
London,  England. 

I.,  E. — Born  Portland,  Ore.,  Nov.  23, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Hopkins  Academy,  San 
Francisco.  Member:  Alliance;  P-G; 
Guild  of  Free  Lance  A;  Salma.  C. 
Award  :  Shaw  prize  for  illustration, 
Salma.    C,    1916. 

RAMSEY,  L.  A.,  255  West  6th  No..  Salt 
Lake  City,   Utah. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Bridgeport,  111.,  March 
24,  1873.  Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  Soc. 
Utah    Artists. 

RANCH,  Mildred,  3727  St.  Martin  Place, 
Cincinnati,    O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

RAND,  Ellen  G.  Emmet  (Mrs.  William 
Blanchard  Rand),  Salisbury,  Conn. 
P. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  March  4, 
1876.  Studied  in  New  York  and  Paris. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Port.  P. 
Awards  :  Silver  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  gold  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915.  Work:  "Portrait  of  Augustus 
Saint  Gaudens"  and  of  "Benjamin  Alt- 
man,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York. 

RAND,  Henry  A(sbury),  Holicong,  Bucks 
Co.,   Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  April  1, 
1886.  Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Chase,  An- 
shutz  and  Breckenridge.  Member: 
Phila.  Sketch  C;  Fellowship  PAFA. 
Work:  "Snow  Shadows,"  Pennsylva- 
nia Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts,  Phila- 
delphia. 

RAND,    Margaret    A(rno!d),    49    Kirkland 
St.,    Cambridge,    Mass. 
P..  T. — Born    Dedham,    Mass.,    Oct.    21, 
1868.    Pupil  of  Emily  D.  Norcroas,  Clara 


538 


RANDALL 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


RAVENSCROFT 


Goodyear,  Geo.  H.  Smillie  and  Henry 
W.  Rice.  Member:  Copley  S.  1894. 
W  o '•  k  :    "Pansies."    Boston   Art   Club. 

RANDALL,  Asa  Grant,  498  Broadway, 
Providence,  R.  I.;  summer,  Boothbay 
Harbor,  Me. 

P.,  T. — Born  Waterboro,  Me.,  Apr,  8, 
1869.    Pupil  of  Howard  Helmick,  Arthur 

•  Dow,  and  Pratt  Inst.  Member: 
Providence  AC;  Providence  WCC. 
Founder,  Commonwealth  Art  Colony, 
Boothbay  Harbor,  Me. 

RANDALL,  D.  Ernest,  1736  Union  St., 
San  Francisco,   Cal. 

P.,  I.— Born  Rush  Co.,  Ind.,  June  20, 
1877.  Pupil  of  AIC  under  Vanderpoel 
and  Hubble.  Member:  ASL  of  Chi- 
cago; Art  Workers'  Guild  of  St.  Paul; 
Minnesota    State   Art    Soc. 

RANDALL,  L.  C,  154  Lorain  Ave.,  Co- 
lumbus,  O. 

P. — M  ember:  Pen  and  Pencil  Club, 
Columbus. 

RANDALL,    Paul    A.,    3204    Bellefontaine 
St.,   Indianapolis,   Ind. 
P..     I.— Born    Warsaw,    Ind.,     Sept.     29, 
1879.     Pupil  of  William  Forsyth  and  C. 
A.  Wheeler.     Member:  Indiana  AC. 

RANDOLPH,  Lee  F.,  care  Cal.  School  of 

Fine  Arts,  San  Francisco,  Cal. 
P.,  E.,  Ldscp.  Arch. — Born  Ravenna,  O., 
June  3,  1880.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art 
Academy;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Cox; 
Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  and  Julian  Acad- 
emy in  Paris.  Member:  Chicago  SB; 
Cal.  SE;  Buffalo  SA.  A  w  a  r  d  s:  Bronze 
medal  for  painting,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F., 
1915;  silver  medal  for  painting,  San  F. 
AA,  1919.  Work  in:  Luxembourg, 
Paris.  Director  California  School  of 
Fine  Arts. 

RAN  NELLS,  Will,  684  Miller  Ave.,  Colum- 
bus, O. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Caldwell,  O.,  July  21, 
1892.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Acad. 
Work:  Cover  designs  for  "Life," 
"Judge,"  "Country  Gentleman";  "The 
Red  Cross  Magazine"  and  "The  People's 
Home  Journal."  Illustrated  "Dog 
Stars."     Specializes  in  portrait  of  dogs. 

RANNUS,    A.    W.,    900    Sixth    Ave.,    New 
York,   N.  Y. 
S. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

RAPER,  Edna,  5512  Montgomery  Road, 
Pleasant   Ridge,   O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

RAPHAEL,  Joseph,  345  Sutter  St..  San 
Francisco,   Cal. 

P. — Born  Jackson,  Amador  Co.,  Cal.,  in 
1872.  Pupil  of  San  F.  AA.;  Beaux- Arts, 
Julian  Academy,  and  Laurens  in  Paris. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1915;  silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F., 
1915;  first  purchase  prize.  San  F.  AA; 
gold  medal,  San  F.  AA.  1918.  Work  in 
Golden  Gate  Park  Museum.  San  Fran- 
circo,  and  San  Francisco  Art  Associa- 
tion. 

RAPHAEL,     Samuel,     1     Madison     Ave., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 


RAPPAPORT,    Maurice    I.,   220  West  14th 
St.,    New    York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

RASARIO,  Ada,  Valduggia,  Prov.  of 
Novara,  Italy.    (P.) 

RASCHEN,  Carl  Martin,  368  Alexander 
St.,  Rochester,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.— Born  Dec.  17,  1882.  Pupil  of 
Rochester  Athenaeum  and  Mectianics 
Inst,  and  Gilbert  Gaul.  Member: 
Rochester  AC;  Rochester  Picture  Paint- 
ers'  C;   St.   Louis  Brush   and  Pencil   C. 

RASMUSSEN,     Bertrand,     468     60th     St., 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Arendal,  Norway,  Oct.  8,  1890. 
Pupil  of  Laurens  in  Paris.     Member: 
S.Indp.A;  Brooklyn  AVCC;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A. 

RATCLIFF,  Blanche  Cooley,  (Mrs  Walter 
B.  Cooley),  510  Kentucky  Ave.,  Fort 
Worth,    Tex. 

P.— Born  Smithville.  Tex..  May  26,  1896. 
Pupil  of  O.  B.  Jacobson;  Dura  B.  Cock- 
rell.  Member  :  Les  Beaux-Art^, 
Norman,  Okla.  Work  in  University  of 
Oklahoma. 

RATHBONE,     Edith     K.,    Hotel    Welling- 
ton,   7th  Ave.   and   55th   St.,    New   York, 
N.   Y. 
S. — M  ember:      S.Indp.A. 

RATHBUN,    Seward    Hume,    1622    Massa- 
chusetts Ave.,  Washington.  D.  C. 
P.,  Arch.,  T. — Born  Washington,  D.  C, 
Jan.  18,  1886.    Member:    Wash.  WCC. 

RATTNER,  Abraham,  1523  Chestnut  St., 
Philadelphia,   Pa.      (P.) 

RAU,  William,  161  Columbus  Ave.,  New 
York.  N.  Y. ;  h.  10730  110th  St.,  Rich- 
mond Hill,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  1874.  Pu- 
pil of  Chase  and  Edgar  M.  Ward;  NAD. 
Member:  Inter.  Soc.  AL.  Work: 
Eight  mural  paintings,  Douglas  Co.  C. 
H.,  Omaha,  Neb.;  lunette  in  St. 
Mathews'  Church,  Hoboken,  N.  J.; 
panels  in  Melrose  Public  Library,  and 
High  Bridge  Public  Library,  New  York, 
N.  Y.,  etc. 

RAUGHT,  John  W(lllard),  Dunmore,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:   Salma.C.   1902. 

RAUL,  Harry  Lewis,  1807  Washington 
Blvd.,  Easton,  Pa.;  55  Pearl  St.,  Mystic, 
Conn. 

S.— Born  Easton,  Pa.,  Oct.  2,  1883.  Pu- 
pil of  New  York  School  of  Art;  F.  E. 
Elwell;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  F.  V.  Du- 
Mond;  PAFA  under  Grafly.  Work: 
"Green  Memorial  Statue,"  Easton,  Pa.; 
"Monument  to  Martyrs  of  the  Maine" 
(Hail,  Martyrs'  statue),  Northampton 
Co..  Pa.;  "Soldiers'  Monument"  (Old 
Glory   statue).    West   Chester,    Pa. 

RAUL.  Josephine  Gesner  (Mrs.  Harry 
Lewis  Raul),  55  Pearl  St.,  Mystic.  Conn. 
P.— Born  Linden,  N.  J.,  April  23,  1897. 
Pupil  of  NAD;  G.  Albert  Thompson; 
ASL   of  N.   Y,     Member:     Conn.   SA. 

RAVENSCROFT,  Ellen,  421  Lake  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer.  Province- 
town,    Mass. 

P..  C,  T. — Born  Jackson,  Miss.,  April 
29,  1876.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Henri;  Cas- 
tellucho  in  Paris.  Member:  N.A. 
Women   PS;    St.   L.   AG;    Provincetown 


539 


RAVLIN 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


REDERUS 


AA.  Awards  :  Portrait  prize,  C.  L. 
Wolfe  Art  Club,  1908;  landscape  prize, 
C.   L.   Wolfe  Art  Club,   1915. 

RAVLIN,    Grace,    28  West   37th   St.,    New 
York,   N.   Y.  R 

P.— Born  Kaneville,  111.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
PAFA  under  Chase;  Simon,  Menard  and 
Courtois  in  Paris.  Member:  Asso-  r 
ciee  Society  Nationale  des  Beaux-Arts, 
Paris,  1912,  and  Peintres  Orientalists 
Francais;  Societaire  Salon  d'Automne.  ^ 
Awards:  Third  medal.  Amis  des  Arts, 
Toulon,  1911;  silver  medal.  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  Field  and  Butler  prizes, 
AIC,  1918.  Work:  "Procession  of 
the  Redentore,  Venice,"  Art  Institute  of 
Chicago;  "Arab  Women  in  the  Ceme- 
tery Tangier,"  Luxembourg,  Paris;  four 
paintings  owned  by  French  Government 
and  two  by  City  of  Chicago. 

RAWSON,  Carl  W(endell),  637  Kenwood 
Parkway,  Minnetipolis,  Minn. 
P.— Born  Des  Moines,  la.,  Jan.  28,  1884. 
Pupil  of  Cumming  Art  School;  NAD; 
Minneapolis  School  of  Art.  Mem- 
ber:    Attic  C;  Minneapolis  AS, 

RAWSTHORNE,  J.  W.,  601  Bailey-Farrel 

Bldg.,    Pittsburgh,    Pa. 

P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 
RAY,    Man,   49   West   8th    St.,    New   York,        R 

N.  Y. 

P.,    S.,   W. — Born  Philadelphia,   Aug.    27,        R 

1890. 
RAYMOND,  Frank  Willoughby,  123  Fifth 

Ave.,   Ne\\    York,  N.   Y. 

E.,  Engr. — Born  Dubuque,  la.,  1881.  Pu- 
pil of  AI  Chicago.     Member:  Cal.SE; 

Chicago     SE;     Palette     and     Chisel     C. 

Work    in:    Art    Institute    of    Chicago; 

Toledo   Museum   of  Art. 
RAYMOND,     Grace,     933     Mansfield     St.,        ^ 

Winfleld,  Kansas. 

P.— M  ember:     Wash.   WCC. 

RAYNES,    Joseph    F.,    56    West    17th    St.,        ^ 
New  York,   N.   Y.      (P.) 

REA,    John    L(owra),    Plattsburgh,    Clin- 
ton Co.,   N.    Y. 

S.,  W.,  L.,  T. — Born  Beekmantown, 
Clinton  Co.,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  29,  1882.  Pupil 
of  H.  A.  MacNeil  and  James  Earle 
Fraser. 

READ,   Adele   Von    H.,   1710   Chestnut   St., 
Philadelphia,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Fellowship  PAFA. 

READ,  E(lmer)  Joseph,  249  West  Passaic        R 
Ave.,  Rutherford,   N.   J. 
P. — Born   Howard,    Steuben   Co.,   N.   Y., 
June  19,  1862.     Pupil  of  College  of  Fine 
Arts,  Syracuse  Univ.;  Fremiet  in  Paris. 
During   winter    paints    in   West   Indies. 

READ,     Frank     E.,    232    Harvard,    North, 
Seattle,  Wash. 

P.,     E.,     Arch.,     W. — Born    Austinburg,        R 
Aug.    4,    1862.      Pupil    of    W.    M.    Hunt. 
Member:     Seattle  Fine  Arts  Soc.  p 

READ,  Henry,  1311  Pearl  St.;  h.  1360 
Corona  St.,  Denver,  Col. 
P.,W.,T.,L. — Born  Twickenham,  Eng- 
land, Nov.  16,  1851.  Member:  Art 
Commission  of  the  City  and  County  of 
Denver;    Nat.    Acad.    A.    (regent);    Col. 

540 


Chpt.  AIA  (hon.);  Denver  AA  (hon.). 
Director,  Denver  Students'  School  of 
Art.  Work  in:  Denver  Art  Associa- 
tion. 

EADIO,    Wilfred    A.,    10   Ellsworth   Ter- 
race, Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pittsburgh  AA. 

EAMER,  Maude,  264  Summer  St.,  Buf- 
falo,   N.    Y.    (P.,  T.) 

EASER,  Wilbur  (Aaron),  15  Arden 
Place,  Yonkers,  N.  Y. ; 
P.,  L.— Born  Hickville,  O.,  Dec.  25,  1860. 
Pupil  of  Mark  Hopkins  Inst,  in  San 
Francisco;  Constant  and  Lefebvre  in 
Paris.  Member:  San  Francisco  Art 
Assoc.  Awards:  Gold  and  silver 
medals,  California  Exp.,  1894;  first 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1897.  Spe- 
cialty, portraits.  Work:  "Mother  and 
Daughter,"  Carnegie  Gallery,  Pitts- 
burgh; "Old  Man  and  Sleeping  Child," 
Art  Gallery,  Des  Moines,  la.;  portrait 
of  "Senator  W.  B.  Allison,"  U.  S. 
Senate  Lobby,  Washington;  "Senator 
C.  S.  Page,"  The  Capitol,  Montpelier, 
Vt.;  "Senator  N.  B.  Scott,"  The  Capi- 
tol, Charleston,  W.  Va.;  "Bishop 
Lewis,"  State  Historical  Society,  Des 
Moines,   la. 

EASONER,     Mrs.     David.       See     Gladys 

Thayer. 

EAUGH,  F(rank),  Oak  Cliff,  Tex. 
P. — Born  near  Jacksonville,  111.,  Dec.  29, 
1860.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine 
Arts;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under 
Doucet.  M  e  m  be  r  :  Dallas  Art  Asso- 
ciation (hon.).  Work:  "Driving  the 
Herd,"  Dallas  (Tex.)  Art  Association. 
Specialty,  Texas  cattle  and  western 
landscape. 

EBER,     Alfred     A.,     1450     Kelton    Ave., 
Dormont,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 


H. 


5    Madison    Ct. 


ECCHIA,     Richard 

Boston,  Mass. 
S.— Born  Quincy,  Mass.,  Nov.  20,  1885. 
Studied  at  Boston  Museum  of  Fine  Arts 
School;  and  in  Paris  and  Italy.  Mem- 
ber: Boston  GA;  Copley  S.  Award: 
Bronze  medal;  P.-P  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work:  Bas-relief  portrait  of  Gov. 
Curtis  Guild,  Boston  State  House; 
"Architecture,"  figure  panel  on  Boston 
Museum;  Red  Cross  panel  in  Musee  de 
I'Armee,  Gallery  Foch,  Paris. 

ECKLESS,  Stanley  L(awrence),  Lum- 
berville,  Bucks  Co.,  Pa. 
P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Aug.  22, 
1892.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  and  Julian  in 
Paris.  Member:  Graphic  Sketch 
Club,  Philadelphia;  Paris  AAA. 
Awards  :  Cresson  Traveling  Schol- 
arship,  PAFA,   1915-1916. 

ECTOR.  Anne,  444  West  22nd  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

EDERUS,  S.  F.,  18  South  Glen  Oak  Ave., 
Dubuque,   la. 

P.,  W.,  L.— Born  Netherlands,  July  29, 
1854.  Pupil  of  R.  Wynkoop,  Bridgeport, 
Conn.  Member:  Milwaukee  AI;  Du- 
buque AS.  Work  in  Presbyerian 
Church,    Nortonville,   Kas. 


REDFIELD 


WHO*S  WHO  IN  ART 


REICHMANN 


REDFIELD,  Edward  W(Illis),  Centre 
Bridge,  Bucks  Co.,  Pa. 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Bridgeville,  Del.,  Dec. 
19,  1868.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Bouguereau 
and  Robert-Fleury  in  Paris.  M  e  m- 
ber:  SAA  1903;  Nat.  Inst.  AL;  AC 
Phila.;  Fellowsliip  PAFA;  Salma.  C. 
Awards:  Medal,  AC  Phila.  1896; 
bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  bronze 
medal.  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
Temple  medal,  PAFA  1903;  second 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1904;  Shaw 
Fund  prize,  SAA  1904;  silver  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Sesnan  gold  medal, 
PAFA  1905;  second  medal,  C.I.Pitts- 
burgh 1905;  Webb  prize,  SAA  1906; 
gold  medal  of  honor,  PAFA  1907;  Fischer 
prize  and  bronze  medal,  Corcoran  AG 
1907;  first  W.  A.  Clark  prize  and  gold 
medal,  Corcoran  AG  1908;  hon.  mention, 
Paris  Salon,  1908;  third  class  medal, 
Paris  Salon.  1909;  second  Harris  medal, 
AIC  1909;  gold  medal,  Buenos  Aires 
Exp.,  1910;  Lippincott  prize,  PAFA  1912; 
gold  medal,  Wash.SA  1913;  Palmer  gold 
medal  (51,000),  AIC  1913;  gold  medal 
($1,500),  CI  Pittsburgh  1914;  hors  con- 
cours  (jury  of  awards).  P. -P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915;  first  prize  Wilmington  Soc. 
Fine  Arts,  1916;  Carnegie  prize,  NAD, 
1918;  Altman  prize  ($1,000),  NAD,  1919; 
Stotesbury  prize;  PAFA,  1920.  Work: 
"Canal  in  Winter,"  "Luxembourg  Mu- 
seum, Paris;  "The  Delaware  River"  and 
"Sleighing,"  Corcoran  Gallery,  Wash- 
ington; "Road  to  the  Village,"  Cincin- 
nati Museum;  "Sycamore  Hill,"  Carnegie 
Institute,  Pittsburgh;  "The  Ravine," 
Boston  Museum;  "The  Old  Elm,"  Penn- 
sylvania Academy,  Philadelphia;  "Feb- 
ruary," Brooklyn  Institute  Museum; 
"The  Crest,"  Herron  Art  Inst.,  Indian- 
apolis; "Grey  Days,"  Detroit  Institute; 
"Center  Bridge,"  Art  Institvite  of 
Chicago;  "The  Laurel  Brook,"  Buffalo 
Fine  Arts  Academy;  "River  in  Winter," 
Minneapolis  Institute  of  Arts;  "Snow- 
drifts," R.  I.  School  of  Design,  Provi- 
dence; "Overlooking  the  Valley,"  Metro- 
politan Museum,  New  York;  "The 
Frozen  River,"  Brooks  Memorial  Art 
Gallery,  Memphis,  Tenn.;  "The  Island," 
National  Gallery  of  Art,  Washington; 
"The  Evening  Breeze,"  "The  Island  in 
Springtime,"  Cooke  Collection,  Hono- 
lulu; "Winter,  Center  Bridge,"  Telfair 
Academy,  Savannah,  Ga.;  "Wheat 
Fields,"  Delgado  Museum,  New  Orleans, 
La. 

REDFIELD,    Grace    Chapman,    1013    Lin- 
den Ave.,   Wilmette,   111. 
P.— M  ember:    Chicago   WCC. 

REDFIELD,  Heloise  Guillou,  121  West 
40th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  211 
Upland  Way,  Wayne,  Pa. 
Min.  P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  1883. 
Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Chase  and  Cecilia 
Beaux;  Mme.  La  Forge  and  Delecluse  in 
Paris.  Member:  Am. S. Min. P.;  Pa.S. 
Min. P.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Buf- 
falo SA;  silver  medal,  P. -P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915. 

REDMOND,   Margaret,  Cheshan,  N.  H. 
P.,  C. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.     Pupil  of 
PAFA;    Twachtman    in    New   York;    Si- 
mon and  M6nard  in  Paris.    Member: 


Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila. WCC;  Copley 
S.;  Boston  SAC;  S.Indp.A.  Specialty, 
stained    glass. 

REED,  Earl  H.,  4758  Lake  Park  Ave,.,  Chi- 
cago, 111. 

Etcher.— Born  Geneva,  111.,  July  5,  1863. 
Self-taught.  Member:  Chicago  SA. 
Work  in:  Toledo  Museum  of  Art; 
Library  of  Congress,  Washington,  D.  C; 
Chicago  Art  Institute;  New  York  Public 
Library;  St.  Louis  Art  Museum;  Mil- 
waukee Art  Institute.  Author:  "Etch- 
ing: A  Practical  Treatise";  "The  Voices 
of  the  Dunes  and  Other  Etchings";  "The 
Dune  Country";  "Sketches  in  Jacobia"; 
"Sketches  in  Duneland" ;  "Tales  of  a 
Vanishing  River." 

REED,  Grace  Adelaide,  95  Mt.  Vernon 
St.,    Boston,    Mass. 

P.,  T.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  July  14, 
1874.  Pupil  of  Woodbury,  Denman 
Ross,  Francis  Hodgekins;  Delecluse  and 
Renard  in  Paris;  Mass.  Normal  Art 
School.      Member:      Copley   S. 

REED,  Lilian  R.,  Greble  Bldg.,  1710 
Chestnut  St.;  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil 
of  Phila.  School  of  Design  for  Women; 
Lathrop  and  Daingerfleld.  Member: 
Plastic  C;  Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila. 
Art  Teachers'  Assn.;  Phila.  Alliance. 
Award:  Georgine  Shillard  gold  medal. 
Plastic   Club. 

REEVS,  George  M.,  35  West  14th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

Port.  P.— Born  Yonkers,  N.  Y.,  1864. 
Pupil  of  Constant,  Laurens,  Gerome. 
Member:  Salma.  C. ;  A.  Fund  S. 
Award  :  portrait  prize,  Salma.  C, 
1906. 

REGESTER,  Charlotte,  439  West  23rd 
St.;  summer,  37  Berkley  PL,  Buffalo, 
N.   Y. 

P.,  C,  T. — Born  Baltimore,  May  28, 
1883.  Pupil  of  Rose  Clark;  W.  M. 
Chase;  Buffalo  ASL;  NY.  ASL.  Mem- 
ber:    N.A.   Women   PS;    Buffalo   SA. 

REGISTER,  Emmasita.     See  Mrs.  Corson. 

REICH,  Jacques,  New  Dorp,  S.  I.,  N.  Y. 
Etcher. — Born  in  Hungary,  Aug.  10, 
1852;  came  to  U.  S.  in  1873.  Studied 
in  Budapest,  Paris,  New  York  and  at 
PAFA.  Member:  Chicago  SE;  Calif. 
P.M.  Work:  Pen  portraits  for  Scrib- 
ner's  "Cyclopedia  of  Painters  and 
Paintings"  and  for  Appleton's  "Cyclo- 
paedia of  American  Biography";  Mace's 
"History  of  the  United  States;  Cordy's 
"History  of  the  United  States";  etched 
portraits  of  famous  Americans;  etch- 
ings in  Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  Metro- 
politan Museum  of  Art;  N.  Y.  City  Pub- 
lic Library;  N.  Y.  State  Libr. ;  Cornell 
University. 

REICHART,     Joseph     Francis,     428    East 
85th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

REICHMANN.  Mrs.  Josephine  Lemos.  1540 
East  57th  St.;  h.  1401  Hyde  Park  Blvd., 
Chicago,   111. 

P.— Born  Louisville,  Ky..  Mar.  24,  1864. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  C.  W.  Haw- 
thorne. Member:  Chicago  SA; 
Chicago  AC;   Cordon  C. 


541 


REID 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


RETT  I G 


REID,  Albert  Turner,  452  Fifth  Ave..  New 
York,   N.   Y.;   h.    1302   Fillmore   St..    To- 

I.— Born  Concordia,  Kan..  Aug.  12.  1873. 
Pupil  of  N.  Y.  School  of  Art  and  ASL 
of  N.  Y.  Member:  Authors,  Artists 
and  Dramatist  Lg.,  New  York.  Work: 
in  magazines  and  books;  "The  Leaven- 
worth Post"  (daily).  Owner  and  pub- 
lisher, The  Albert  T.  Reid  Cartoon 
Syndicate. 

REID,    H.   Logan,   77  West  45th  St.,   New 
York,  N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

REID,  Jean  Arnot,  care  of  Bankers'  Trust 
Co.,  57th  St.  and  Madison  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  h.  420  Palisaae  Ave., 
Yonkers,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Struan  Farms, 
Monterey,  Mass. 

Min.  P.— Born  Brooklyn.  N.  Y.,  July  22, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Robert  Brandegee;  Am. 
School  of  Min.  painting;  ASL  of  N.Y. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  A.S. 
Min.P. 

REID,     M(arie)     C(hristlne)     W(estfe!dt), 

Hunter  College,  68th  St.  and  Park  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  T.— Born  New  York  City.  Pupil  of 
J.  Alden  Weir,  Douglas  Volk,  G.  Whar- 
ton Edwards  and  F.  Edwin  Elwell. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  N.Y. 
Municipal  AS;  College  AA.  Professor 
of  Art,  Hunter  College  of  New  York 
City. 

REID,  Robert,  care  of  "The  Players,"  16 
Gramercy  Park,  New  York,  N,  Y. 
P.,  T.— Born  Stockbridge,  Mass.,  July 
29,  1862.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum 
School;  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Boulanger  and 
Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Member  :  ANA  . 
1902,  NA  1906;  Ten  Am.P.;  Nat.Inst.A.L. 
Awards  :  Medal,  Columbian  Exp., 
Chicago,  1893;  Clarke  prize,  NAD  1897; 
first  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1898;  silver 
medal  for  painting  and  gold  medal  for 
mural  decoration,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  sil- 
ver medal,  Pan-Am.Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  third 
W.  A.  Clark  prize  ($1,000),  Corcoran  AG 
1909;  gold  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.. 
1915.  Work:  "The  Open  Fire"  and 
"The  Japanese  Screen,"  Corcoran 
Gallery,  Washington;  "The  Pink  Car- 
nation," Albright  Art  Gallery,  Buf- 
falo; "Sunset  Glow,"  Brooklyn  Institute 
Museum;  "Fleur-de-Lys,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  "Defiant  Autumn," 
Herron  Art  Inst.,  Indianapolis;  also  rep- 
resented in  collections  of  National  Gal- 
lery of  Art,  Washington;  Nebraska  Art 
Association,  Lincoln;  Art  Association, 
Richmond,  Ind. ;  Cincinnati  Museum; 
Omaha  Museum;  "The  Miniature,"  De- 
troit Institute  of  Arts;  "The  Yellow 
Flower,"  Minneapolis  Institute  of  Arts. 
Mural  decorations:  "James  Otis  Argu- 
ing Against  the  Writs  of  Assistance," 
"The  Boston  Tea  Party,"  "Paul  Re- 
vere's  Ride."  Massachusetts  State  House. 
Boston;  "The  Senses"  (five  panels).  Li- 
brary of  Congress,  Washington;  "Jus- 
tice," frieze  in  Appellate  Court,  New 
York;  "The  Martyrdom  of  St.  Paul," 
Paulist  Church,  New  York;   "Adoration 


of  the  Magi";  "Light  of  Education," 
Central  High  School,  Springfield,  Mass.; 
"Against  the  Sky,"  Ft.  Worth  (Tex.) 
Museum;  designed  and  executed  win- 
dows in  H.  H.  Rogers  Memorial 
Church,  Fair  Haven,  Mass. 

REIFFEL,  Charles,  Belden  Hill  Road, 
Wilton,    Conn. 

Ldscp.P.— BoT-n  Indianapolis.  Ind.  Self- 
taught  .  Member:  Allied  AA;  Con- 
temporary; Int.  Soc.  A.  L.;  Conn.  SA; 
Salma.  C. ;  Conn,  AFA;  Buffalo  SA. 
Awards:  Fellowship  prize,  Buffalo 
SA  1908;  Harris  silver  medal,  AIC,  1917; 
hon.  men..  Conn.  AFA,  1920.  Work: 
"Railway  Yards — Winter  Evening," 
Corcoran   Gallery,  Washington. 

REIMS,  Salvatore,  126  East  75th  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (S.) 

REINDEL,  William  George,  Euclid,  O. 
P.,E. — Born  Eraser,  Macomb  Co.,  Mich., 
June  25,  1871.  Studied  in  America  and 
Europe;  largely  self-taught.  Mem- 
ber: Cleveland  SA;  Chicago  SA;  Chi- 
cago SE.  Represented  in  New  York 
Public  Library. 

REINHART,  Stewart,  45  Washington  Sq., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  "Studio  Farm," 
Mt.  Kisco,  N.  Y. 

P.,  S.,  E.— Born  in  Baltimore,  Feb  19, 
1897.  Pupil  of  Edward  Berge,  Maxwell 
Miller. 

REINKE,   Ottilie,   681   Downer   Ave.,   Mil- 
waukee,  Wis. 
P.— M  ember:       Wis.    PS. 

REISS,  F(ritz)  Winold,  4  Christopher  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I.,  E.,  T. — Born  in  Germany.  Pupil 
of  Franz  Von  Stuck;  Royal  Academy, 
Munich.  Member:  S.Indp.A.  Work: 
Appoll's  Theater,  South  Sea  Island  Ball- 
room of  Hotel  Sherman,  Chicago;  Res- 
taurant Crillon,  Restaurant  Elysee,  New 
York  City. 

RELYEA,  Cliarles  M.,  2447  Morris  Ave.; 
h.  2323  Valentine  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.,  P.— Born  Albany,  N.  Y.,  Apr.  23, 
1863.  Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Thomas 
Eakins;  F.  V.  Du  Mond  in  New  York. 
Member:  Salma.  C. ;  Allied  AA. ; 
Players'   C. 

RENOUARD,     G.     A.,     291     Sixth     Ave., 

Brooklyn,   New  York,   N.  Y.      (P.) 
RENWICK,     Howard     Crosby,     33     West 

67th  St.,   New  York.  N.  Y. 

P.— M  ember:     Allied  AA.;  Salma.  C. 
RENZETTI,     Aurelius,    712     So.    10th    St.. 

Philadelphia.  Pa.     (S.) 

RESLER,  George  Earl,  1726  Juhet  St.;  395 
Winslow  Ave.,  St.  Paul,  Minn. 
E. — M  ember:  Chicago  SE.  Award: 
First  prize,  1913,  and  second  prize,  1914, 
Minnesota  State  Art  Commission; 
bronze  medal  for  etching,  St.  Paul  Inst., 
1918. 

RETTIG,  John,  2227  Kemper  Lane,  Wal- 
nut Hills,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P. — Born  Cincinnati.  Pupil  of  Cincin- 
nati Art  School,  Duveneck  and  Pott- 
hast;  Collin,  Courtois  and  Prinet  In 
Paris.  Member:  Salma.C;  Cincin- 
nati AC  (hon.);  S.  Indp.  A. 


542 


RETTIG 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


RICE 


RETTIG,     Martin,    19    Garfield    PL,    Cin- 
cinnati,  O. 

P. — Born  Cincinnati.  Pupil  of  Cincin- 
nati Art  Academy  under  Frank  Duve- 
neck.     Member:   Cincinnati  AC. 

REUTERDAHL,  Henry,  United  States 
Navy  Recruiting  Bureau,  320  West  39th 
'St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  W. — Born  Malmo,  Sweden,  Aug. 
12,  1871.  Self-taught.  Member: 
N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  1911;  Assoc.  U.  S. 
Naval  Inst,  and  Am.  Soc.  Naval 
Arch.  and  Engineers;  A.Fund  S. 
Award:  Silver  medal,  P.-P,.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915;  Beck  Prize,  Phila.  WCC,  1919. 
Work:  Ten  paintings  of  the  battle- 
ship cruise  around  South  America, 
U.  S.  Naval  Academy,  Annapolis; 
numerous  sketches  and  posters  in  the 
Navy  Dept.,  Washington;  National 
Museum,  Washington;  Naval  War 
College,  Newport;  "Blast  Furnaces." 
Toledo  Art  Museum;  "Winter  in 
Weehawken,"  Kalamazoo  (Mich.)  Art 
Association;  Culver  Military  Acad- 
emy. Specialty,  naval,  marine  and 
industrial  subjects.  Writer  and  lecturer 
on  naval  subjects;  war  correspondent 
during  Spanish  war  and  in  European 
conflict,  1914.  Official  artist.  United 
States  Navy,  during  World  War,  1917- 
1918. 

REYNARD,    Grant   T.,   Leonia,   N.    J.    (I.) 

REYNEAU,   Mrs.   Paul  O.,  20  Kirby  Ave., 
W.,   Detroit,    Mich.    (P.) 

REYNOLDS,      Frederick      (Thomas),     154 

East  38th  St.,   New  York,  N.  Y. 

E.,    C,    L.,    T.— Born    London,    Feb.    19, 

1882.  Studied  in  London.  Member: 
Brooklyn  SE;   Calif.   P.M.;   Chicago  SE. 

REYNOLDS,  George,  1645  Wilton  PL,  Los 

Angeles,  Cal. 

P.— M  ember:    Calif.   AC. 

REYNOLDS,  Wellington  J(arard),  3  E. 
Ontario  St.,  Chicago,  111. 
Port.P..  T.— Born  Chicago,  Apr.  9.  1866. 
Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Constant  in  Paris; 
Royal  Academy  in  Munich.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SA;  Cliff  Dwellers. 
Awards:  Medal,  Marshall  Field  ex. 
1908;  medal  of  honor,  Chicago  SA  1910. 
Work:  Portrait  of  Mr.  Hitchcock, 
University  of  Chicago;  "The  Coquette." 
Golden  Gate  Park  Museum,  San  Fran- 
cisco; "A  Votre  Sante,"  Piedmont  Gal- 
lery, Oakland.  Cal. 

REYNOLDS,    Mrs.    William    H.,   11   Hum- 
boldt Ave.,  Providence,  R.  I. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence  AC. 

RHEAD,    Louis    (John),    217    Ocean   Ave.. 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.,  P. — Born  Etruria,  Staffordshire,  Eng- 
land,   Nov.    6,    1857;    came    to    U.    S.    in 

1883.  Pupil  of  Edward  J.  Poynter  and 
Alphonse  Legros  in  London.  Mem- 
ber: N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  1902;  NYWCC. 
Awards  :  Gold  medal  for  posters, 
Boston  1895;  hon.  mention,  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  gold  medal  for 
painting,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work: 
Illustrations  for  Harper's  Juvenile 
Classics. 


RHETT,  Hannah  McC(ord),  7  Lamball 
St.,  Charleston,  S.  C. 

P.,  T.— Born  Columbia,  S.  C,  Feb.  28, 
1871.  Pupil  of  ASL  in  New  York;  Collin 
and  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member: 
ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Carolina  Art  Assoc. 
(Assoc).  Awards:  Bronze  and  sil- 
ver medals,  AAS;  silver  medal,  Appala- 
chian Exp.,  1911. 

RHIND,  J(ohn)  Massey,  208  East  20th  St.; 
h.  34  Gramercy  Park,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S. — Born  Edinburgh,  Scotland,  July  9, 
1860.  Pupil  of  his  father,  John  Rhind, 
R.S.A.;  Dalou  in  Paris;  came  to  U.  S. 
in  1889.  Member:  NSS  1893;  N.Y. 
Arch.Lg.  1894;  N.Y.Municipal  AS;  NAC; 
Salma.  C.  Awards:  National  schol- 
arship, South  Kensington,  London;  gold 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp..  1904.  Work: 
Astor  door,  Trinity  Church.  New  York; 
equestrian,  "George  Washington."  New- 
ark, N.  J.;  "Stephen  Girard,"  Philadel- 
phia; "Peter  Stuyvesant,"  Jersey  City; 
"Robert  Burns,"  Pittsburgh;  McKin- 
ley  Memorial,  Niles,  O.;  numerous 
decorations  for  federal  and  municipal 
buildings. 

RIBCOWSKY,  Dey  de,  233  South  Broad- 
way, Los  Angeles,  Calif. 
Marine  P.— Born  at  Rustchuk,  Bul- 
garia, Oct.  13,  1880.  Studied  in  Paris, 
Florence  and  Petrograd.  Member: 
Art  Association  of  Newport;  Buenos 
Aires  Society  of  Fine  Arts.  Awards  : 
Silver  medal,  Petrograd,  1902;  silver 
medal,  Uruguay  Exhibition,  Montevideo, 
1908.  Represented  in  South  American 
Museums.  Inventor  of  the  Medium 
"Reflex." 

RICE,   Charles    H.,   Sea  Bright,   N.   J. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

RICCI,  Ulysses  A.,  206  East  33rd  St.,  New 
York.   N.    Y. 
S.— Member:  NSS  1914   (assoc). 

RICCIARDI,  Cesare  A.,  Art  Alliance,  1823 
Walnut  St.;  831  South  Mildred  St.. 
Philadelphia,   Pa. 

P.— Born  Italy,  June  8,  1892.  Pupil  oi 
PAFA.  Member:  Fellowship  PAFA: 
Phila.  Sketch  C;  Phila.  Alliancei 
Awards:  First  Wanamaker  prize, 
1916;  hon.  mention,  Americanization 
through    art,    Phila.,    1916. 

RICE,    Dorothy,     See  Mrs.   Waldo   Peirce. 

RICE,    Emma    Duel,    2217    Q    St.,    N.    W.. 

Washington.  D.  C. 

P. — M  ember:   Wash. WCC. 

RICE,     Henry    W.,    Fenway    Studios,     30 
Ipswich   St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P. — Born    Pownal,    Me.      Pupil    of    Ross 
Turner. 


See  Mrs.   Paul  A. 


RICE,   Jenny    Delony. 

Meyrowitz. 

RICE,    Myra    M.,   Newfane,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:    Buffalo    SA. 

RICE,  William  C(larke),  145  East  23rd  St.: 
h.  645  Madison  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
summer.  Center  Lovell,  Me. 
P.,  S.,  L,  C,  W..  T.— Born  Brooklyn, 
N.  Y.,  Apr.  19,  1875.  Pupil  of  George 
deF.  Brush;  ASL.  of  N.Y.  Member: 
N.Y.  Arch.  Lg.    Work:    Mura.l  decora- 


543 


RICE 


WHO*S  WHO  IN  ART 


RICHARDSON 


tion  in  Apartment  Hotel,  7th  Ave.  and 

58th  St.,  New  York.  Represented  in 
National   Gallery,   Washington. 

RICE,    William     M(orton)     J(ackson).    15 

West  67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Port. P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Feb.  18, 
1854.  Pupil  of  Beckwith  In  New  York; 
Carolus  Duran  In  Paris.  Member: 
ANA  1900;  SAA  1886;  Century  AsBoa 
Award:  Bronze  medal,  Pan-Am.Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901. 

RICE,  William  S.,  2083  Rosedale  Ave., 
Oakland,    Cahf. 

P..  I.,  C,  W..  T.— Born  June  23,  1873. 
Pupil  of  Phila.  School  of  Industrial  Art 
and  Drexel  Inst..  Phila.  Member  : 
Calif.  SE;  Calif.  P.M.  San  F.  AA; 
Oakland  AA.  Work:  "The  Oakland 
Estuary,"  Calif.  State  Library;  "Wind- 
swept," Calif.  School  of  Arts  and  Crafts. 
Specialty,  wood  block  prints,  landscape 
painting  in  oils  and  water  colors. 

RICH,  John  H(ubbard),  4823  Sixth  Ave., 
Los  Angeles,   Calif. 

P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  March  5,  1876. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  School  of  Boston 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts.  Member:  Cal. 
AC;  Salma.C.  Award:  Paige  travel- 
ing scholarship  from  School  of  Boston 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  1905-07;  silver 
medal  San  Diego  Exp.,  1915;  Black 
prize,  Calif  AC,  1917;  second  prize, 
Calif.  AC.  1916;  Ackerman  prize,  Calif. 
AC,  1919;  silver  medal,  Panama-Calif. 
Exp.,   San  Diego,  1916. 

RICHARD,      Henri,     967     Madison     Ave., 
Paterson,   N.   J. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

RICHARD,  Jacob,  1301  North  Rockwell 
St.,  Chicago,  111. 

P. — Born  Ukrania,  1887.  Pupil  of  Harry 
Wolcott. 

RICHARDS,  Ella  E.,  1009  Carnegie  Hall, 
New  York,   N.  Y. 

P. — Born  in  Virginia.  'Studied  in  Balti- 
more, New  York  and  with  Lefebvre, 
Robert  Fleury  and  Collin  In  Paris. 
Awards  :  Medal,  Omaha  Exp.,  1899; 
bronze  medal.  Charleston  Exp.,  1902. 
"Work  in:  The  American  Society  of 
Civil  Engineers,  New  York;  Bank  of 
Montclair,  N.  J.;  Norfolk  (Va.)  National 
Bank   and   Citizen's   Bank   of   Norfolk. 

RICHARDS,  George  IV!(atiier),  452  Fifth 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer.  New 
Canaan,   Conn. 

P.,  T.— Born  Darien,  Conn..  Sept.  3.  1880. 
Pupil  of  Douglas  John  Connah,  Robert 
Henri,  Edward  Penfield.  Member: 
Salma.  C;  Whitney  Studio  C.  Illus- 
trator for  "Century,"  "Collier's,"  "Ad- 
venture," "McCall's." 

RICHARDS,      Harriet      R(oosevelt),      227 

Edwards  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 
P.,  I. — Born  Hartford,  Conn.  Pupil  of 
Yale  School  of  Fine  Arts;  Frank  Ben- 
son in  Boston;  Howard  Pyle  in  Wil- 
mington, Del.  Member:  Paint  and 
Clay  C.  of  New  Haven.  Illustrated: 
Holiday  editions  of  books  by  Louisa 
Alcott  and  W.  D.  Howells,  etc. 


RICHARDS,  Lee  Greene,  125  So.  2d  East, 
Salt  Lake  City,  Utah. 
P..  S.,  L— Born  Salt  Lake  City,  July  27, 
1878.  Pupil  of  J.  T.  Harwood.  Laurens 
and  Bonnat.  Member  :  Salon  d'Au- 
tomne;  Paris  AAA;  Utah  SA  (pres.). 
Award:  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1904. 

RICHARDS,  Lucy  Currier  (Mrs.  F.  P. 
Wilson).  30  East  57th  St..  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  and  Silvermine,  Norwalk,  Conn. 
S. — Born  Lawrence.  Mass.  Pupil  of 
Boston  Museum  School;  Kops  in  Dres- 
den; Eustritz  in  Berlin;  Julian  Academy 
in  Paris.  Member:  Copley  S.;  Bos- 
ton GA;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  MacD.  C. 

RICHARDS,  IVIyra  R.,  1446  North  Ala- 
bama St.,  Indianapolis,  Ind. 
S..  P. — Born  Indianapolis.  Jan.  31,  1882. 
Pupil  of  Herron  Art  Institute  under 
Otis  Adams,  Rudolf  Schwartz  and  Geo. 
Julian  Zolnay.     Member:   Ind.   SS. 

RICHARDSON,      Catherine      Priestly,      88 

Garden    St.,    Cambridge,    Mass.    (P.) 

RICHARDSON,  Clara  Virginia,  1503  Mas- 
ter St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer, 
"The  Sherwood,"  Portland,  Me. 
P.,  E.,  T.— Born  at  Philadelphia,  April 
24,  1855.  Pupil  of  Ferris,  Moran,  Snell. 
Member:  Plastic  C;  Phila.  Alli- 
ance; Alumnae  of  the  Phila.  School  of 
Design   for  Women. 

RICHARDSON,  F(rank)  H(enry),  Studio 
Bldg.,  110  Tremont  St.,  Boston;  h. 
County  Road,  Ipswich,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  July  4,  1859. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under 
Boulanger  and  Lefebvre.  Member: 
Boston  AC:  Salma.C.  1901.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1899;  bronze 
medal,  AAS  1902.  Work:  "Hauling 
Seaweed,"  Boston  Art  Club;  "Breton 
Widow  at  Prayer,"  Lasell  Seminary, 
Auburndale,  Mass.;  "Portrait  of  Rear 
Admiral  George  F.  F.  Wilde,"  Town 
Hall,  Braintree,  Mass.;  "Dr.  William  C. 
Collar,"  Roxbury  Latin  School,  Bos- 
ton, Mass. 

RICHARDSON,  Frederick,  Century  As- 
soc, 7  West  43d  St..  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
Cliff  Dwellers,  Chicago. 
I.,  P.,  T.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Oct.  26, 
1862.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine 
Arts;  Doucet  and  Lefebvre  in  Paris, 
Member:  Century  Assoc;  SI  1905. 

RICHARDSON,    James    B.,    330    14th    St., 
Washington,    D.    C. 
P. — M  ember:    S.  Wash.  A. 

RICHARDSON,  Margaret  F.,  Fenway 
Studios,  Boston,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Winnetka,  111.  Pupil  of  De 
Camp.  Tarbell  and  Major.  Member: 
Boston  GA.  Awards:  Harris  bronze 
medal,  AIC,  1911;  Maynard  portrait 
prize,  NAD,  1913.  Represented  in  the 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine 
Arts. 

RICHARDSON,     Marion,    140    West    57th 

St.,  New  York,   N.  Y. 

P..    E.— Born    Brooklyn,    N.    Y.,    Jan.    24. 

1877.      Pupil    of    Chase,    du    Mond,    Sen- 

seney  and   others.     Member:     Calif. 

P.M. 


544 


RICHARDSON 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


RISQUE 


RICHARDSON,  Mrs.  Mary  Curtis,  1032 
Vallejo  St.,  San  Francisco,  Cal. 
P. — Born  New  York,  Apr.  9,  1848. 
Pupil  of  Benoni  Irwin,  Virgil  Williams 
and  William  Sartain.  Awards:  Nor- 
man Dodgre  prize.  NAD  1887;  silver 
medal  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work 
in:  Golden  Gate  Park  Museum,  San 
Francisco;  Music  and  Art  Association, 
Pasadena,    Cal. 

RICHARDSON,  Mary  N(eal),  309  Fenway 
Studios,  30  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass.; 
summer,    Canton,   Me. 

Port. P. — Born  Mt.  Vernon,  Me.,  Feb.  17, 
1859.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School; 
Colarossi  Academy  and  A.  Koopman  in 
Paris.  Member:  Copley  S.  1897. 
Work:  "Prof.  Charles  C.  Hutchins," 
Walker  Art  Gallery,  Bowdoin  College, 
Brunswick,   Me. 

RICHERT,  C(harles)    H(enry),  10  Linden 
St.,   Arlington   Heights,    Mass. 
P.— Born    Boston,    Mass.,    July    7.    1880. 
Pupil  of  De  Camp  and  Major  in  Boston. 
Member:  Boston  SWCP. 

RICHMOND.  Agnes  M.  (Mrs.  Winthrop 
Turney),  122  East  59th  St.,  New  York. 
N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Alton.  111.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N. 
Y.,  under  Brush,  Louis  Loeb,  F.  V.  Du 
Mond;  St.  Louis  'School  of  Fine  Arts. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Allied 
AA.   S.   Indp.   A.;   Wash.  A.C. 

RICHMOND,  Almond,  Meadville,  Pa.     (P.) 

RICHMOND.    Mrs.    Evelyn    N.,   197   Bowen 
St.,    Providence,    R.    I. 
P. — M  ember:       Providence    WCC. 

RICHMOND,    Robert   C(rawford),   3055    Q 
St.,   N.W.,  Washington.   D.  C. 
P.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  June  26,  1867. 

RICHTER,  Henry  L.,  Long  Beach,  Calif. 
P.— Born  Saxony,  Oct.  22.  1871.  Studied 
at  AIC  and  in  Munich.  Member: 
Denver  AA.  Mural  decorations  in  the 
Colorado  State  Normal  School,  Gunnison, 

RICHTER,  Wilmer  S(iegfried),  608  Denc- 
kla  Bldg.,  11th  and  Market  Sts.,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa.;  h.  39  Pennsylvania  Ave., 
Brookline  Manor,  Del.  Co.,  Pa. 
I. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Jan.  20, 
1891.  Pupil  of  School  of  Industrial  Art, 
Philadelphia. 

RICKETSON,  Walton,  10  Anthony  St., 
New   Bedford,   Mass. 

S.— Born  New  Bedford,  May  27,  1839. 
Member:  New  Bedford  AC.  Work: 
Portrait  busts  of  Louisa  M.  Alcott. 
A.  Bronson  Alcott.  Henry  D.  Thoreau, 
George  W.  Curtis,  R.  W.  Emerson,  and 
others,  and  in  Public  Libraries,  New 
Bedford,  Mass.;  Brown  University, 
Providence,  R.  I.;  Friends  Academy, 
New  Bedford;  Concord  (Mass.)  Library. 
Specialties,  intaglios,  bas-reliefs  and 
busts. 

RIDDELL,  William  W.,  3211  West  62nd 
St.,  Chicago,  111. 

P. — Born  Chicago  in  1877.  Pupil  of 
AIC,  and  of  Laurens  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Palette  and  Chisel  C;  Laguna 
Beach  AA. 


RIDDER,  Arthur,  200  North  Hamhn  Ave. 
Chicago,   111. 
P. — M  ember:      Chicago   SA. 

RIDDLE,  Alice   L.,  see  Mrs.  Hans  Kindler. 

RIDER,    Charles   Joseph,   160   South  Craig 
St.,    Pa.sadena,    Calif.;    summer,     Supai, 
Grand  Canyon,  Arizona. 
P..    S.— Born    Trenton,    N.    J..    Jan.    21, 
1880.        Pupil    of    W.    M.    Chase. 

RIEPPEL,  Edwig,  404  East  52nd  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (S.) 

RIESENBERG,      Sidney,      739      Palisades 
Ave.    Yonkers,    N.    Y. 
I.— M  ember:   SI  1913. 

RIGBY,  Joseph    P.,   Press   Publishing  Co., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
I. — M  ember  :   Pittsburgh  AA. 

RIIS,  Anna  M.,  care  of  Art  Academy;  h. 
3325  Burnet  Ave.,  Cincinnati,  Ohio. 
D.,  C,  T. — Born  in  Norway.  Pupil  of 
Royal  and  Imperial  School  for  Art  and 
Industry,  Vienna;  Royal  Art  School  of 
Christiania.  Member  :  Cincinnati 
Woman's  AC;  Crafters;  Cincinnati 
Ceramic    C. 

RILEY,  Agnes,  214  Edgecomb  Ave.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S. Indp.  A. 

RILEY,   Mary  G.,  2141  Le  Roy  PL,  Wash- 
ington,  D.   C. 
P. — M  ember:     S.   Wash.  A. 

RING,  Alice  Blair,  225  East  Pasadena 
St.,   Pomona,   Calif. 

P. — Born  Knightville,  Mass.,  May  4, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Laurens,  Julien  Dupr6, 
Hitchcock,  Mme.  La  Forge  and  Melchers 
in  Paris;  ASL  of  N.  Y.,  and  in  Wash- 
ington. Member:  Cleveland  Woin- 
an's  AA;  Laguna  Beach  AA;  Pomona 
Valley  ACA. 

RINGIUS,  Carl,  62  Vernon  St.,  Hartford, 
Conn.;  summer.  East  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P.,  C,  W.— Born  Bastad,  Sweden,  Dec. 
3,  1879.  Pupil  of  Charles  Noel  Flagg 
and  Robert  B.  Brandegee  at  Hartford. 
Member:  Conn.AFA;  Soc.of  Granhic 
Art,  Stockholm;  Boston  SAC;  Chicago 
AG;  Hartford  AC. 

RION,  Hanna  (Mrs.  Frank  Ver  Beck), 
care  Curtis  Brown,  Ltd.,  6  Henrietta 
St.,  Covent  Garden,  London.  England. 
P.,  I. — Born  Winnsbornugh.  S.  C..  July 
11,  1875.  Pupil  of  Frank  Ver  Beck. 
Author:  "Let's  Make  a  Flower  Garden," 
"The  Garden  in  the  Wilderness,"  etc. 

RIORDAN,  G.  C,  318  Monmouth  St.,  New- 
port.  Ky. 
P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  AC. 

RIPLEY.  Lucy  Perkins,  36  West  12th  St., 
New  York.   N.   Y. 

S.— M  ember:  N.  A.  Women  ,PS. 
Award  :  Barnett  prize,  N.  A.  Women 
PS,   1919. 

RISQUE,  Caroline  Everett,  4021  Enright 
Ave..  St.  Louis,  Mo.;  and  4  Rue  de 
Chevreuse,  Paris,  France. 
S.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo..  1886.  Pupil  of 
St.  IvOuis  School  of  Fine  Arts  under 
Zolnay.  Member:  St.  Louis  AG. 
Award  :  Weston  prize  ($50),  St.  Louis 
AG  1914.  Represented  in  Museum  of 
New   Orleans;    St.   Louis  Artists'   Guild. 


545 


RISWOLD 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


ROBINSON 


RISWOLD.  Gilbert  P.,  1038  Fine  Arts 
Bldg-.,  410  South  Michigan  Ave.,  Chica- 
go; h.  742  North  Ridgeland  Ave.,  Oak 
Park,    111. 

S.— Born  Sioux  Falls,,  S.  D.,  Jan.  23, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Lorado  Taft  and  Charles 
Milligan.  Work:  "Statue  of  Stephen 
A.  Douglas",  Springfield,  111.;  "Mormon 
Pioneer  Monument",  'Salt  Lake  City, 
Utah. 

RITCHIE,    Alexander,    715    Seneca    Ave., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

RITMAN,  Louis,  care  of  The  Macbeth 
Gallery,  450  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.   Y.      (P.) 

RITSCHEL.  William,  58  West  57th  St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 

Marine  P. — Born  Nuremberg,  Germany, 
July  11.  1864.  Pupil  of  F.  Kaulbach 
and  C.  Raupp  in  Munich;  came  to  U.  S. 
in  1895.  Member:  ANA  1910,  NA 
1914:  NYWCC;  AWCS;  Salma.C.  1901; 
A. Fund  S.;  NAC;  Kunstverein.  Munich. 
Awards:  Hon.  mention,  Salma.C; 
hon.  mention.  CI  Pittsburgh,  1912;  Car- 
negie prize,  NAD  1913;  gold  medal  and 
$1,000,  NAC  1914;  gold  medal,  P.-P.Exp.. 
San  F.,  1915;  gold  medal.  State  Fair, 
Sacramento,  Calif..  1916;  gold  medal, 
Phila.  AC.  1918.  Work:  "Rocks  and 
Breakers."  Pennsylvania  Academy  of 
the  Fine  Arts;  "Across  the  Plains,  Ari- 
zona," Ft.  Worth  (Tex.)  Museum; 
"Desert  Wanderers,"  Chicago  Art  In- 
stitute; "Fog  and  Breakers,"  Detroit 
Art  Club;  "Rockbound  Coast,"  City 
Art  Museum,  St.  Louis;  "Evening  Tide, 
California,"  Smithsonian  Institution, 
Washington,   D.  C. 

RITTENBERG,  Henry  R.,  222  W.  59th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P..  T.— Born  Libau.  Russia,  Oct.  2. 
1879.  Pupil  of  W.  M.  Chase  at  PAFA; 
Ludwig  Heterich  in  Munich.  Mem- 
ber: ANA;  Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila. 
AC;  Salma.  C;  NAC;  Allied  AA. 
A  w  ar  d  s  :  Hon.  mention,  AC  Phila., 
1906;  Maynard  portrait  prize,  NAD, 
1920.     Instructor  ASL  of  N.Y. 


H. 


Bloomingburg, 


RITTER.       Charles 

N.  Y.    (P.) 

ROBB,     Elizabeth     B.,     24     Herron     Ave., 
Emsworth,  Pa. 

P.  —  Member:  Pittsburgh  AA. 
Awards  :  Third  prize,  AA  Pitts- 
burgh, 1914;  first  prize,  AA  Pittsburgh, 
1915. 

ROBBINS.  Frederick  (Goodrich),  2319 
Lombard  St.,  San  Francisco,  Calif. 
P.,  E.,  T. — Born  Oak  Park,  111.,  May  5, 
1893.  Pupil  of  Carl  N.  Werntz,  Spencer 
Mackev,  Lee  Randolph.  Member: 
Calif.  PM;  Calif.   SE. 

ROBBINS,     John     Williams,     Farmington, 
Conn. 

P.,  E. — Born  Windham,  Conn.,  Feb.  16, 
1856.  Studied  in  Boston  Normal  Art 
School  under  Walter  Smith,  and  Cowles 
Art  School  under  Emil  Carlsen;  in  life 
class  under  P.  F.  Vinton;  water  color 
under  T.  O.  Langerfeldt;  and  ASL  of 
N.Y.  under  Brush  and  Dewing.  Work 
in   N.    Y.    Pub.    Libr. ;    Museum    of   Fine 


Arts,  Boston;  Metropolitan  Museum  of 
Art;  Grolier  Club,  New  York;  AIC;  Con- 
gressional Library,  Washington;  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Washington.  Inventor 
of  Brulegravure. 
ROBERTS,  Alice  Mumford  (Mrs.  Robert 
Stewart  Culin),  296  Sterling  PI.,  Brook- 
lyn, New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Phila.,  Jan.  30,  1875.  Pupil  of 
Joseph  De  Camp,  Carl  Newman  and 
Robert  Henri.  Member:  Fellowship 
PAFA.  Awards  :  Mary  Smith  prize, 
PAFA  1906  and  1910;  bronze  medal, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F,..  1915. 

ROBERTS,  Elizabeth  W(entworth),  Con- 
cord, Mass.;  summer,  Annisquam,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  June  10, 
1871.  Pupil  of  Elizabeth  Bonsall  and 
H.  R.  Poore  in  Philadelphia;  Bougue- 
reau,  Robert-Fleury,  Lefebvre  and  Mer- 
son  in  Paris.  Member:  PAFA  (as- 
soc.  fellow);  Niter.  Soc.  AL;  Province- 
town  AA;  Concord  AA;  Awards: 
Mary  Smith  prize,  PAFA  1889;  hon. 
mention,  Paris  Salon,  1892.  Work: 
"The  Boy  with  the  Violin,"  Pennsyl- 
vania Academy,  Philadelphia;  "The 
Madonnas  of  Marks."  Asilo  San 
Giovanni  in  Bragora,  Venice,  Italy; 
"Reflections,"  Public  Library,  Concord, 
Mass.;  "Concord:  March,"  Fenway  Court, 
Boston. 

ROBERTS,  Milnora,  4505  15th  St.,  N.  E., 
Seattle,    Wash.    (P.) 

ROBERTS,  Mrs.  Violet  K(ent),  417  Colum- 
bia Rd.,  N.  W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.,  I.,  W.— Born  The  Dalles,  Ore.,  Nov. 
22,  1880.  Pupil  of  Benson,  Beck,  Mosch- 
cowitz.  Prellwitz.  Member:  Alumni 
Pratt   Inst. 

ROBESON,  Edna  Amelia,  Bettendorf,  la. 
Min.  P. — Born  Davenport,  la.,  Jan.  25, 
1887.  Pupil  of  Frank  Phoenix  and  ASL 
of   N.    Y.      Member:    Pa.    S.    Min.    P. 

ROBINS.  Hugo.  9  East  14th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y.      (P.) 

ROBINS,  Susan  P.  B.,  95  Mt.  Vernon  St., 
Boston,  Mass. 

P. — Born  Boston,  1849.  Pupil  of  John 
Johnston,  Ross  Turner  and  F.  Crownin- 
shield  and  Boston  Museum  School 
under  Philip  Hale.  Member:  Cop- 
ley S,   1894. 

ROBINSON,    Adah    IVI(atilda).    1118   West 
13th  'St.,  Oklahoma  City,  Okla. 
P.,    W.,    L..    T. — Born    Richmond.    Ind., 
July    13,    1882.       Pupil    of    J.    E.    Bundy, 
George  Elmer  Browne  and  AIC. 

ROBINSON,  Alexander,  care  Morgan, 
Harjes  &  Co.,  14  Place  Vendome;  stu- 
dio, 235  Faubourg  St.  Honore,  Paris, 
France;  care  A.  H.  Burrage,  49  Aid- 
worth  St..  Boston.  Mass. 
P.,  T. — Born  Portsmouth,  N.  H.,  May 
11,  1867.  Pupil  of  Lowell  School  of  De- 
sign (Boston  Museum  of  Art);  Acad- 
emic Julian,  Paris,  under  Ducet  and 
Constant.  Member:  NYWCC;  Phila. 
WCC;  Chicago  WCC;  AWCS;  Salma.C; 
Societe  Nationale  des  Aquarellistes, 
Paris;  Cercle  d'Art,  Tournai  and 
Bruges,  Belgium;  United  Arts  Club, 
London.    Award  :  Silver  medal,  P. -P. 


546 


ROBINSON 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


ROECKER 


Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work:  "Church 
Interior"  and  group  of  11  pastels,  To- 
ledo Art  Museum;  "Falling  Leaves," 
Rockford  (111.)  Art  Association;  ••■Canal 
Venice,"  Mississippi  Art  Association, 
Jackson;  "Jehaun-Ara,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts;  ten  paint- 
ings and  nine  aquarelles,  Delgado  Mu- 
seum, New  Orleans;  "Dordrecht"  and 
"Spanish  Coast,"  five  aquarelles  and 
twelve  drawings,  Newcomb  Art  Gallery, 
Tulane  Univ.,  New  Orleans;  twenty- 
seven  Italian  water  colors,  Desmond 
Fitzgerald  Art  Gallery,  Brookline,  Mass.; 
"La  Dame  aux  Tulipes"  and  "Summer," 
Museum  d'lxelles;  "Autumn,  England," 
Moscow  (Russia) ;  and  in  collections  at 
Glasgow,  Dundee,  London,  and  Man- 
chester   (England). 

ROBINSON,  Alonzo  Clark,  6  Rue  Au- 
mont-Therville;  h.  17  Rue  Cardinet, 
Paris,   France. 

S..  W.— Born  Darien,  Conn.,  Sept.  3, 
1S76.  Member:  'Soc.  Inter.  des 
Beaux-Arts   et  des   Lettres. 

ROBINSON,    Boardman,  146   Fourth  Ave., 
New     Brighton,      Staten     Island,     New 
York,   N.   Y. 
I.— Member:   SI  1909;   P-G. 

ROBINSON,   Charles  W.,  28  Armond   St., 
Rochester,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:   Rochester  AC. 

ROBINSON,  David,  13  West  29th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Silvermine,  Conn. 
P.,  I. — Born  Warsaw,  Poland,  July  31, 
1886.  Studied  in  America,  France  and 
Germany.  Member:  SI,  1910;  Salma. 
C;    S.Indp.A. 

ROBINSON,  Florence  V(!ncent),  510 
Park  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Nov.  18,  1874. 
Pupil  of  Vignal  and  Harpignies  in 
Paris.  Member:  Societe  des  Aqua- 
rellists. Paris;  AWCS.  Work:  In 
Harvard  University,  Cambridge;  Cleve- 
land School  of  Art;  Government  col- 
lections of  France;  "Chateau  de  Ver- 
sailles,"  Boston  Museum   of  Fine  Arts. 

ROBINSON,  H.  L.,  1155  Madison  Ave., 
Columbus.   O. 

S.,  P. — Member:  Pen  and  Pencil  C, 
Columbus. 

ROBINSON,  Jean  A.,  5  Bennett  St., 
Charleston,    S.    C.    (P.) 

ROBINSON,  Kathleen  B(everley),  (Mrs. 
Frank  L.  Ingels),  6016  Ellis  Ave., 
Chicago,  111. 

S..  T. — Born  Aurora.  Ontario,  Canada, 
1882.  Pupil  of  AIC  under  Taft.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SA.  Instructor,  AIC. 
Award:  Shaffer  prize  ($100),  AIC. 
1913.  Work  in:  Brooklyn  Institute 
Museum. 

ROBINSON,   Oliver   D.,   105   North  Village 
Ave.,    Rockville   Centre,    L.    I.,    N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

ROBINSON.  V>/iII(iam)  S.,  202  West  74th 
St..  New  York.  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  East  Gloucester,  Mass.,  Sept. 
In.  1861.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art 
School  in  Boston;  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1901.  NA 
1911;  AWCS  1897;  NYWCC  1891; 
Salma.    C.    1897    (life);    Lotos    C.    1900; 


A.  Fund  S.,  1889;  NAC;  Allied  AA, 
1919.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention  Paris 
Expo.,  1900;  hon.  mention  Pan-Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  Newhouse  prize, 
Salma.  C,  1901;  bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Carnegie  prize, 
NAD  1910;  silver  medal,  Buenos  Aires 
Exp..  1910;  silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915;  fourth  W.  A.  Clark  prize 
($500),  and  hon.  mention,  Corcoran  Gal- 
lery, Washington,  1919.  Work:  "The 
Golden  Bough,"  Carnegie  Institute, 
Pittsburgh;  "Golden  Days,"  Art  Muse- 
um, Dallas,  Tex.;  "Monhegan  Head- 
land." National  Gallery,  Washington, 
D.    C. 

ROBINSON,  W(illiam)  T.,  Auditorium 
Bldg.,   Maiden,   Mass. 

P. — Born  Somerville,  Mass.,  Sept.  17, 
1852.  Pupil  of  George  N.  Cass  in  Bos- 
ton; Ecole  des  Beaux- Arts,  Ecole  de 
Medecine.  Gobelin  Tapestry  Schools, 
Bouguereau  and  Diogene  Maillart  in 
Paris.      Member:     NAC    (life). 

ROCHE,  M.  Paul,  630  77th  St.,  Brooklyn, 
New  York,   N.  Y. 

E.,  P.,  T.— Born  Cork,  Ireland,  Jan.  22, 
1885.  Member:  Brooklyn  SE;  Salma. 
C.  Represented  in  Brooklyn  Museum; 
Chicago  Art  Institute;  Detroit  Institute; 
Library  of  Congress,   Wa.shington,  D.  C. 

ROCHON,  (IVIarie)  Louise,  h.  3303  13th 
St.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
L— Born  Washington,  D.  C.  Pupil  of 
Ossip  Perelma.  Member:  Wash.  AC. 
Work:  Fashion  drawings  for  "Even- 
ing  Star." 

ROCKWELL,  Evelyn  Enola,  38  West  59th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  York 
Harbor,   Me. 

P.— Born  Chicago,  1887.  Pupil  of 
PAFA;  ASL  of  N.Y.;  Woodbury,  and 
Chase.  Member  :  NAC.  Specialty, 
portraits  of  children  in  pastel. 

ROCKWELL,  Norman,  40  Prospect  St., 
New   Rochelle,   N.   Y. 

L— Born  New  York  City,  Feb.  3,  1894. 
Pupil  of  George  Bridgman  and  Thomas 
Fogarty.  Member:  Guild  of  Free 
Lance   Artists;    Salma.    C. 

RODERICK,  C(harles)  E.  D(uncan),  May 
St.,    Portland.    Me. 

P. — Born  Nova  Scotia.  Pupil  of  Charles 
K.    Fox.      Member:      Portland   AS. 

RODERICK,  L(ulu)  Z(ita),  Newport,  R.  I.; 
h.  St.  John.  N.  B.,  Canada. 
P.,  I.,  W.,  T.— Born  Nova  Scotia.  Pupil 
of  Paul  Moschcowitz.  Me  m  b  e  r  :  New- 
port AA;  R.  I.  Asso.  Teachers  D.  and 
M.  T. 

RODGERS,     M.     C,    1707    Farmers    Bank 
Bldg..   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  A. A. 

ROECKER,  Hfenry)  Leon,  444  East  42d 
Place,  Hyde  Park,  Chicago,  111. 
P. — Born  Burlington,  la.  Pupil  of  Acad- 
emy of  Design  in  Chicago;  Gysis  at 
Royal  Academy  in  Munich.  Member  : 
Chicago  SA:  Chicago  WCC;  "The  Cliff 
Dwellers,"  "Cor  Ardens."  Awards: 
Hon.  mention.  Munich.  1889;  Yerkes 
prize,  AIC  1894:  Arche  C.  prize,  AIC 
1897;  Chicago  SA  medal.  1909;  Carr 
prize,  AIC  1911. 


547 


ROGALL 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


ROSE 


ROGALL,     Wilhelmina,     96     Fifth     Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  e  m  b  e  r  :   N.   A.  Women  P.  'S. 

ROGERS,  Barksdale,  Greenwich,  Conn. 
I.,  P. — Born  Macon,  Ga.  Pupil  of  Stein- 
len  in  Paris;  also  studied  in  Munich. 
Work:  Illustrations  for  "Judge," 
"The  New  York  Sunday  World,"  "Scrib- 
ners'    Magazine"    and    "Puck." 

ROGERS,  Mrs.  Eleanor  Gale,  The  Ken- 
dis,  1710  West  6th  St.,  Los  Angeles,  Gal. 
P.— M  ember:    Calif.    AC. 

ROGERS,  Frances,  246  Fulton  St.,  Brook- 
lyn,   New    York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:      N.   A.  Women  PS. 

ROGERS,  Gretchen  W.,  210  Fenway  Stu- 
dios. Boston,  Mass. 

P. — M  ember:  Boston  GA.  Award: 
Silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,   San  F.,  1915. 

ROGERS,  John  A(rthur),  Box  506,  Day- 
tona,  Pla. 

E.,  Arch.,  T. — Born  Louisville,  Ky.,  Apr. 
12.  1870.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Mass.  Inst. 
Tech.;   AIC;  Boston  Museum. 

ROGERS,  Louise  De  Gignllllet,  Green- 
wich, Conn. 

P.,E. — Born  Macon,  Ga.  Pupil  of  Stein- 
len,  Paris;  Robert  Henri,  and  also  stud- 
ied in  Munich.  Member:  Brooklyn 
SE;  Conn.  SA.  Painted  portraits  of 
Ex-Vice-Pres.  Marshall,  William  Jen- 
nings Bryan,  Senator  Tillman  and 
others. 

ROGERS,     William     Allen,     640     Madison 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Caricaturist. — Born  Springfield,  O.,  May 
23,  1854.     Member:   SI  1904;   Century 
Assoc.     On  staff  of  "New  York  Herald." 

ROHN,  Ray,  514  Walnut  St.,  Philadelphia, 
Pa. 
I. — M  ember:    SI. 

ROLLE,  A.  H.  O.,  134  Quincy  Place, 
Washington,   D.   C. 

P.— Born  Minnesota,  March  30,  1875. 
Pupil  of  Corcoran  School  of  Art,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C.  Member:  S.WashA.; 
Wash.  Landscp.   C. 

ROLLINS,  Warren  E.,  34  West  51st  St., 
New  York,   N.  Y.    (P.) 

ROLSHOVEN,  Julius,  care  of  Budworth, 
424  West  52nd  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T.— Born  Detroit,  Oct.  28,  1858. 
Pupil  of  Cooper  Union,  New  York; 
Hugo  Crola  at  Diisseldorf;  Loefftz  In 
Munich;  Frank  Duveneck  in  Florence; 
Robert-Fleury  in  Paris.  Member: 
Soc,  Nat.  des  Beaux- Arts,  Paris; 
Secession,  Munich;  Detroit  Fine  Arts 
Soc.  (hon.);  International  Art  Con- 
gress; Paris  Soc.  A  and  L;  Scarab 
Club,  Detroit;  Foreign  Arts  Club,  Flor- 
ence; Bene  Merensa  Societa  di  Belle 
Arte,  Florence;  Taos  'SA;  NAC. 
Awards:  Second  medal,  Paris  Exp., 
1889;  hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp..  1900; 
bronze  medal,  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  medals,  Munich,  Berlin,  Brussels 
and  Chicago;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  Hors  Concours,  Soci6t6 
Franqaise.  Paris.  Work:  "Chioggia 
Fishing  Girl,"  and  two  etchings,  Cin- 
cinnati Museum;  "The  Refectory  of 
San  Damaino,  Assisi."  Detroit  Institute, 


represented  in  Minneapolis  Museum, 
Brooklyn  Museum  and  Union  League 
Club   of   Chicago. 

ROIVIANO,  Nicholas,  313  Race  St.;  h.  1328 
South  9th  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.,  S.,  C,  W.— Born  Montoro,  Italy, 
Dec.  6,  1889.  Pupil  of  Albert  Laessle. 
Represented  in  Pennsylvania  Academy 
of  the  Fine  Arts;  Philadelphia  Art  Al- 
liance; Graphic  Sketch  Club  of  Phila- 
delphia. 

ROIVIANOWSKY,     Dimitri,     227     Waverly 
PL,   New  York,  N.   Y.    (P.) 

ROMERO,    Emilio,   Guayama,   Porto  Rico. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

ROOK,     Edward     F(rancis),     Old    Lyme, 

Conn. 

P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  1870.  Pupil 
of  Constant  and  Laurens  in  Paris. 
Member:  ANA  1908;  Lotos  C; 
Lyme  A. A.  Awards:  Temple  gold 
medal.  PAFA  1898;  bronze  medal,  Pan- 
Am. Exp.  Buffalo,  1901;  two  silver 
medals,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  bronze 
medal,  C.I.  Pittsburgh,  1910;  silver 
medal  Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910;  gold 
medal.  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  third 
W.  A.  Clark  prize  ($1,000),  and 
bronze  medal,  Corcoran  Gallery,  Wash- 
ington, 1919.  Work:  "Deserted  Street 
— Moonlight,"  Pennsylvania  Academy, 
Philadelphia;  "Pearl  Cloud.s — Moonlight" 
and  "Wisteria,"  Cincinnati  Museum; 
represented  in  Boston  Art  Club  and  In 
Lotos  Club,  New  York,  and  Portland 
Art  Museum. 

ROOS,    Peter,    24    Sacramento    St.,    Cam- 
bridge, Mass. 

P.,  T.— Born  Sweden,  Feb.  22,  1850. 
Member:  Boston  AC.  Award  : 
Medal,  Boston,  1874.  Specialty,  land- 
scape. 

ROOT.   Robert   Marshall,   Svndicate  Bldg., 
Shelbyville,    111. 

P.,  L— Born  Shelbyville,  111.,  Mar.  20, 
1863.  Pupil  of  Constant,  Laurens  and 
Lefebvre.  Award:  State  Centennial 
Medal.  Springfield,  1918.  Works; 
Historical  painting  "Lincoln  and  Doug- 
las Debate.  1858".  Springfield;  "Portrait 
Lt.  Gov.  Barat  O'Harra",  Lt.  Governor's 
oflace,  Springfield;  "The  Power,  The 
Wisdom,  The  Justice  of  the  Law"  in 
Atty.   General's  office,   Springfield. 

ROSE.  George  L..  Forest  Hall,  1256  Wis- 
consin Ave.,  Washington.  D.  C;  h.  6 
Laurel  PI.,  Upper  Montclair,  N.  J. 
P.— Born  Newport,  R.  I.,  Oct.  8,  1861. 
Pupil  of  John  La  Farge.  Member: 
Mural  P. 

ROSE,    Guy,    303    North    Fair   Oaks    Ave., 
Pasadena,  Cal. 

P. — Born  San  Gabriel,  Cal.,  March  3, 
1867.  Pupil  of  Emil  Carlsen  in  San 
Francisco;  Lefebvre,  Constant  and 
Doucet  in  Paris.  Member:  Calif.  AC; 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1894;  medal,  Atlanta  Exp.,  1895;  bronze 
medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  sil- 
ver medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  gold 
medal,  Panama-Calif.  Exp..  San  Diego, 
1915;    prize    ($50).    Calif.    AC,    1916;    first 


548 


ROSELAND 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


ROSSE 


Black  prize,  Calif.  AC,  1919;  Landscape 
prize,  Sacramento,  1920;  first  Harrison 
prize,   Los  Angeles  AC,   1921. 

ROSELAND,  Harry,  191  Clinton  St., 
Brooklyn;  h.  2118  Albermarle  Road, 
Flatbush.  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Brooklyn,  May  12,  1867.  Pupil 
of  J.  B.  Whittaker  in  Brooklyn;  Beck- 
with  In  New  York.  Member:  Brook- 
lyn AC;  Salma.C.  1896.  Awards: 
Gold  medal,  Brooklyn  AC  1888;  second 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1898;  silver 
medal,  Boston,  1900;  bronze  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  silver  medal, 
AAS  1902;  gold  medal,  Boston,  1904; 
gold  medal,  AAS  1907.  Specialty,  ne- 
gro subjects. 

ROSEN,   Charles,  New   Hope,   Bucks  Co., 
Pa. 

P. — Born  Westmoreland  Co.,  Pa.,  Apr. 
28,  1878.  Pupil  of  NAD  and  N.Y. School 
of  Art  under  Chase,  Du  Mond  and  F. 
C.  Jones.  Member:  ANA  1912,  NA 
1917;  NAC;  Salma.  C.  Awards:  Third 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD,  1910;  first  Hall- 
garten  prize,  NAD  1912;  Shaw  purchase 
prize  ($500);  Salma.  C.  1914;  hon.  men- 
tion, CI  Pittsburgh,  1914;  silver  medal, 
P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Inness  gold 
medal,  NAD,  1916;  Altman  prize 
($1,000),  NAD,  1916.  Work:  "Washed 
Out  Bottomlands,"  Minneapolis  So- 
ciety of  Fine  Arts;  "Late  Sunlight," 
Duluth  Fine  Arts  Association;  "Frozen 
River,"  Delgado  Museum,  New  Orleans, 
La.  "Winter  Sunlight,"  Youngstown 
Art  Museum;  "North  Haven,"  City  Art 
Museum,    St.  Louis,   Mo. 

ROSENBERG,  H(enry)  M.,  Halifax, 
N.  S.;  h.  Dartmouth,  N.  S. 
P. — Born  New  Brunswick,  N.  J.,  Feb. 
28,  1858.  Pupil  of  Royal  Academy  in 
Munich;  studied  in  Florence  and  Ven- 
ice. Member:  Salma.C.  Director, 
Victoria  School  of  Art  and  Design, 
Halifax. 

ROSENBERG,  James  N.,  27  West  67th  St., 
New  Y'ork,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Nov.  20,  1874.  Member: 
NAC;   S.Indp.A. 

ROSENBERG.    Rosa,    1614    North    Frank- 
lin   St.,    Philadelphia,    Pa. 
P. — M  ember  :      Fellowship   PAFA. 

ROSENBERG,  Samuel,  345  Fifth  Ave.; 
h.  3211  Elsmore  Sq.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
Port.  P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  June 
28,  1896.  Pupil  of  Collens,  Sparks  and 
Volk.  Member  :  Pittsburgh  AA. 
Represented  in  Pittsburgh  public 
schools. 

ROSENFIELD,    Hugo,    22   West    74th    St., 
New   Y^ork,    N.   Y. 

P.— Studied  at  AIC;  ASL  of  N.  Y.,  and 
in  Paris. 

ROSENFIELD,    Lester,   22  West  74th   St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Minneapolis,  Minn.,  Feb.  1, 
1886.  Pupil  of  AIC;  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
Royal   Academy,    Munich. 

ROSENKRANZ,    Clarence    C,    314    Haw- 
thorne   Road,    Duluth,    Minn. 
P. — Born    Hammondsport,    N.    Y.      Pupil 
of    John    Ward    Stimson,    W.    M.    Chase 
and  Walter  Shirlaw.     Member:  Buf- 


falo SA;  Duluth  AA;  Minn.  State  AA. 
Awards  :  First  hon.  mention  1909, 
Fellowship  prize,  1911,  second  hon.  men- 
lion,  1912,  Buffalo  Fine  Arts  Academy; 
first  prize,  Minn.  Art  Com.  1913.  Wo  r  k  : 
"New  England  Winter",  Minn.  Art  So- 
ciety, and  in  Ribbing  and  Buhl,  Minn., 
Public  Libraries. 
ROSENMEYER,  B(ernard)  J(acob),  Ten- 
afly,   N.  J. 

1.,  P.— Born  New  York,  Jan.  9,  1870. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Mowbray; 
Constant  and  Laurens  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: SI  1902.  Work  in:  Carnegie  In- 
stitute, Pittsburgh;  Print  Dept.  of  N.  Y. 
Public   Library. 

ROSENSTEIN,  A.,  146  West  55th  St., 
New  l^ork,   N.   Y.      (S.) 

ROSENTHAL,  Albert,  1722  Walnut  St.. 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Port. P.,  Etcher.— Born  Philadelphia, 
Jan.  30,  1863.  Pupil  of  his  father,  Max 
Rosenthal,  and  of  PAFA;  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts  in  Paris  under  G6r0me; 
studied  in  Munich.  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA;  Charcoal  C.  Balto.; 
Wash.  AC;  Salma.  C.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
bronze  medal,   P. -P.  Exp.,   San  F.,  1915. 

ROSENTHAL,  David,  30  Hulbert  Block; 
h.  24  Erchenbrecher  Ave.,  Cincinnati,  O, 
P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Cincinnati,  Feb.  15. 
1876.  Studied  in  Munich,  Rome,  Flor- 
ence and  Milan.  Member:  Cincin- 
nati AC. 

ROSENTHAL,  Doris,  216  Third  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  T.— Born  Riverside,  Calif.  Pupil  of 
Bellows,  Dow,  and  Sloan. 

ROSENTHAL,   IVI(ichael),  1947  Broadway, 
h.  8  Ludlow  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born   Russia,    June    20,    1885.      Pupil 
of     Robert     Henri     and     Homer     Boss. 
Member:     S.  Indp.  A. 

ROSS,  Denman  W(aldo),  24  Craigie  St., 
Cambridge,   Mass. 

P.,  W..  L..  T.— Born  Cincinnati,  O., 
Jan.  10,  1853.  Member:  Copley  S. 
1892;  Boston  SAC  (life).  Trustee  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts,  Boston.  Lecturer 
on  "Theory  of  Design"  at  Harvard 
Univ. 

ROSS,  Gordon,  25  Plymouth  St.,  Mont- 
clair,   N.    J.    (I.) 

ROSS,  Isabel,  516  Franklin  St.,  Buffalo, 
N.   Y.    (P.) 

ROSS,   Raymond   L.,  3210  17th  St.,   N.  E., 
Washington,    D.    C. 
P.— M  ember:    Wash.    WCC. 

ROSS,   Y.,  care  of  J.   R.   Chesno,   51  West 
iOth  St.,   New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

ROSSE.  Hermann,  Art  Inst,  of  Chicago, 
Chicago.  111.;  h.  Wade  St..  Ravini-i.  111.: 
summer,  20  Niewe  Uitleg,  The  Hague, 
Holland. 

P..  Arch..  C,  L.,  T.— Born  The  Hague, 
Holland.  Jan.  1.  1887.  Studied  in  Hol- 
land. Member:  Kunstkring  of  The 
Hague;         Cliff        Dwellers,        Chicago. 


549 


ROSSEAU 


WHO*S  WHO  IN  ART 


RUCKSTULL 


Award:  Medal  of  honor,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Work:  Painting  in  dome 
of  the  Peace  Palace.  The  Hague;  mural 
decorations  in  Salt  Lake  City  Orpheum 
Theatre, 
ROSSEAU,  Percival  L(eonard),  Grassy 
Hill,   Lyme,    Conn. 

P. — Born  New  Orleans,  La.,  Sept.  21, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Lefebvre  and  Robert - 
Fleury  in  Paris.  Member:  Lyme 
AA;  Lotos  C.  Awards:  Hon.  men- 
tion, Paris  Salon,  1900;  third  class 
medal,  Paris  Salon,  1906. 

ROTERS,    Carl    G.,    9   East   10th    St.,   New 
York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

ROTH,  Ernest  David,  care  of  Salma- 
gundi Club,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

P.,  E.— Born  Stuttgart,  Germany,  Jan. 
17,  1879.  Pupil  of  NAD  in  New  York; 
etching  under  James  D.  Smillie.  Mem- 
ber: ANA;  NYWCC;  Salma.  C; 
Chicago  SE;  N.  Y.  SE;  Cal.  SE;  P.-G; 
AWCS;  Wash.  WCC.  Awards:  Third 
Shaw  prize  for  black  and  white.  Salma. 
C,  1911;  first  Shaw  prize  for  black  and 
white,  Salma.  C,  1912;  first  prize  for 
architectural  subject,  Chicago  SE,  1914; 
Vezin  thumb-box  prize,  Salma.  C,  1915; 
bronze  medal  for  painting  and  silver 
medal  for  etching,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F., 
1915;  J.  Sanford  Saltus  prize,  Salma.  C, 
1917;  first  hon.  mention,  Chicago  Art 
Inst.,  1917;  Shaw  prize,  Salma.  C,  1918. 
Prints  in:  New  York  Public  Library; 
Boston  Museum  of  Art;  Library  of  Con- 
gress, Washington,  D.C.;  Public  Library, 
Newark,  N.  J.;  Chicago  Art  Institute; 
Minneapolis  Inst,  of  Art;  Uffizi  Gallery, 
Florence,    Italy. 

ROTH,    Mrs.    Ernest,    (Elizabeth    Macken- 
zie),   436    Fort    Washington    Ave.,    New 
York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:    N.    A.    Women    PS. 

ROTH,  F(rederick)  G(eorge)  R(ichard), 
Sherwood  Place,  Englewood,  N.  J. 
S.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Apr.  28,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Hellmer  and  Meyerheim  in 
Vienna.  Member:  NSS  1900;  ANA 
1906,  NA  1906;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1902;  Nat. 
Inst.  AL;  SAA  1903;  Salma.  C,  1902; 
NSS;  New  Soc.  of  A.;  Soc.  Am.  Animal 
P.  &S.  Awards:  Silver  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  silver  medal,  Buenos 
Aires  Exp.,  1910;  gold  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Represented  in 
Metropolitan  Museum.  New  York  and 
Detroit    Institute    of    Arts. 

ROTH,      Herbert,     care     of     "New     York 
World,"  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.— M  ember:   SI  1912. 

ROTH,    Robert,   123   Lexington  Ave.,   New 
York,   N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

ROTHBORT,  Samuel,  1518  Lincoln  Place, 

Brooklyn,  N.   Y. 

P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

ROTHWELL,  Elizabeth  L.,  435  Atwood 
St.,   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 

P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  Art  Assoc. 
Award  :  Third  prize,  Pittsburgh  AA, 
1915. 


ROUGERON.  Marcel  J(u!es),  94  Park 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Paris,  France,  Oct.  6,  1875. 
Pupil  of  Julian,  Jerome,  di  Datti,  Vibert^. 
Member  :  'Societe  Royale  des  Art- 
istes Beiges.  Awards  :  Officer  of 
Public  Instruction  of  France,  1900; 
Grand   Croix   of    St.    Stanislaus,    1904. 

ROULAND,  Orlando,  130  West  57th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  T.— Born  Pleasant  Ridge,  111.,  Dec. 
21,  1871.  Pupil  of  Max  Thedy  in  Ger- 
many; Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under 
Laurens  and  Constant.  Member: 
Salma.  C.  1901;  Paris  AAA;  Phila.  AC; 
Allied  AA;  MacD.  C;  Alliance.  Work 
in:  Yale  Univ.,  New  Haven,  Conn.; 
Trinity  College,  Cambridge  Univ.,  Eng- 
land; University  of  Texas  and  State 
Capitol,  Austin,  Tex. ;  Historical  So- 
ciety, St.  Paul,  Minn.;  Wheaton  Semi- 
nary, Norton,  Mass.;  Carnegie  Insti- 
tution, Washington,  D.  C. ;  Engineers' 
Club  and  Society  of  Mining  Engineers, 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  City  Club,  Boston; 
Art  Museum,  Montclair,  N.  J.;  National 
Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C. ;  Public 
Library,  Lexington,  Ky. ;  Amherst  Col- 
lege; Art  Club,   Erie,   Pa. 

ROUST,    Mrs.    Helma,    455   West   34th   St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

ROWE,  Clarence  (Herbert),  Cos  Cob, 
Conn. 

I.,  E. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  May  11, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Max  Bohm,  PAFA,  Bou- 
guereau  and  Ferrier  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Salma.  C;  SI;  Greenwich  SA; 
Guild  of  Free  Lance  Artists. 

ROWELL,  Mrs.  Fanny,  National  Arts 
Club,  14  Gramercy  Pk.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  Mt.  Hebron,  Berryville, 
Va. 

P.,  L„ — Born  Princeton,  N.  J.,  May  11, 
1865.  Pupil  of  J.  B.  Whittaker  in 
Brooklyn;  Colarossi  Academy  in  Paris; 
Trager  at  Sevres.  Member:  NAC; 
N.Y.Soc.C;  N.Y.Municipal  AS;  Arts  C. 
of  Jersey  City;  Bridgeport  AC  (hon.); 
Jersey  Keramic  C.  (hon.);  Wash.  AC. 
Awards  :  Diamond  medal  for  design 
in  pottery,  Nat.  Lg.  of  Mineral  Painters 
1898.  Lecturer,  "History  of  Art," 
"Municipal  Art." 

ROWEN,    George    Miles,    Silver    Springs, 
Md. 
P. — M  ember:     S.  Wash.  A. 

RUBINS,  H.  W.,,  1200  2nd  Ave.,  South, 
Minneapolis,   Min. 

E.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Nov.  25.  1865. 
Pupil  of  AI  Chicago.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SE;  Minneapolis  SFA.  Work  in: 
New   York   Public   Library. 

RUCKSTULL,      F(rederic)      W(ellington). 

National  Arts  Club,  15  Gramercy  Pk., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

S'..  L..  W. — Born  Breitenbach,  Alsace. 
May  22,  1853;  came  to  America  when 
one  year  old.  Pupil  of  Julian  Academy 
in  Paris  under  Boulanger  and  Lefebvre, 
and  of  Rollins  Academv  under  Mercie. 
Member:  NSS  1893;  N.  Y.  Arch. 
Lg.  1894;  NAC;  Nat.  Inst.  AL;  N.  Y. 
Municipal  AS.     Awards  :   Hon.   men- 


550 


RUDD 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


RUZICKA 


tion,  Paris  Salon,  1888;  medal,  Columbi- 
an Exp.,  Chicago,  1893.  Sect.  Committee 
for  erection  of  Dewey  Arch,  1898;  chief 
of  sculpture.  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 
Work:  "Evening,"  life-size  marble, 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York;  eques- 
trian statue  of  "Gen.  J.  F.  Har- 
tranft,"  Harrisburg,  Pa.;  equestrian 
statue  of  "Gen.  Wade  Hampton,"  Co- 
lumbia, S.  C;  "Confederate  Monument," 
Baltimore;  "Defense  of  the  Flag," 
Little  Rock,  Ark.;  "Women's  Monu- 
ment," Columbia,  S.  C;  "John  C.  Cal- 
houn," and  "U.  M.  Rose,"  the  Capitol. 
Washington;  "Solon,"  "Goethe.  Frank- 
lin, Macaulay,"  Library  of  Congress, 
Washington;  "Wisdom"  and  "Force." 
Appellate  Court.  New  York;  "Three 
Partisan  Generals  Monument,"  Colum- 
bia. S.  C;  "Confederate  Monument," 
Salisbury,  N.  C. ;  "Soldiers'  Monument," 
Jamaica,  New  York  City;  "Mercury 
Teasing  Eagle  of  Jupiter,"  St.  Louis; 
Pennsylvania  Soldier  Monument,  Peters- 
burg. Va.  •  "Phoenicia."  New  York  Cus- 
toms House,  "Minerva,"  Liberty  Monu- 
ment, Battlefield  of  Long  Island. 

RUDD,     Mrs.     Emma,     56     Butternut     St., 
Lyons,   N.   Y. 
Pi— M  ember:    N.    A.    Women    PS. 

RUDERSDORF,     Lillian,     21     East     Van 
Buren   St.,   Chicago,   111. 
P.,    C,    T. — Born    Clarkson,    Neb.,    Feb, 
5,   1882.     Pupil   of  Univ.   of  Neb.;    AIC. 
Member:  Omaha  AG. 

RUDOLPH,  iVIrs.  Pauline  Dohn,  Winnetka, 
111. 

P.— Born  Chicago.  Pupil  of  PAFA; 
Boulanger,  Lefebvre,  Lasar  and  Cou- 
ture in  Paris.  Member:  Palette 
Club;  Cosmopolitan  C,  Chicago;  Chi- 
cago SA.  Award  :  First  Yerkes 
prize.  Chicago  SA. 

RUDY,  IVIary  Eleanor  Robinson,  4516  Lake 
Park  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.— Born  Burlington,  la..  May  29,  1861. 
Pupil:  AIC;  A.  E.  Brooks,  Nyholm  and 
others.  Member:  Alumni  AIC; 
Arche  C. 

RUGGLES,  Theo  Alice.  See  Mrs.  H.  H. 
Kitson. 

RUMMELL,  John,  68  Greenfield  St.,  Buf- 
falo, N.  Y. ;  summer,  75  Granite  St., 
Rockport,   Mass. 

P.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Springville,  N.  Y., 
Aug.  24,  1861.  Pupil  of  L.  B.  C.  Josephs, 
Carl  Ahrens,  and  John  F.  Carlson. 
Member:  Buffalo  SA;  Buffalo  G.  AA. 
Awards  :  First  hon.  mention,  Buffalo 
SA,  1917;  second  hon.  mention,  Buffalo 
SA.  1918  and  1919;  Fellowship  prize 
($50),  Buffalo  SA,   1921. 

RUMMLER,  Alex.  J.,  21  Maple  Ave., 
Glenbrook,   Conn. 

P.— Born  Dubuque,  la..  July  25,  1867. 
Pupil  of  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member: 
Salma.C.    1900. 

RUMSEY,  Charles  Gary,  Glen  Head,  L.  I., 
N.  Y. 

S. — Award:  F,ronze  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,   San  F.,   1915. 


RUMSEY,  Evelyn,  320  Delaware  Ave., 
Buffalo,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

RUNGIUS,     Carl,     96     Fifth     Ave.,     New 
York,   N.   Y. 
I.,   P. — Born   Berlin,   Germany,   Aug.   18, 

1869.  Pupil  of  Paul  Meyerheim  in  Ber- 
lin; came  to  U.  S.  1894.  Member: 
ANA  1913;  NA,  1920;  Salma.  C. ;  NAC; 
SMPF  West;  Soc.  Am.  Animal  P.  &  S. 
Specialty,  American  big  game. 

RUPPRECHT,  Edgar  A.,  1207  Tower 
Bldg.,   Chicago,  111.     (P.) 

RUSE,  Margaret,  Donner  Ave.,  Monessen, 
Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pittsburgh  AA. 

RUSH,  Olive,  390  Canon  Rd.,  Santa  Fe, 
N.   M. 

P.,  I. — Bern  Fairmount,  Ind.  Pupil  of 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Twachtman  and 
Mowbray;  Howard  Pyle  at  Wilmington; 
Richard  Miller  in  Paris.  Member: 
NYWCC;  Wilmington  SFA;  Santa  Fe 
Art  C.  Awards:  Hon  mention, 
Richmond  AA.  1919;  first  prize,  Herron , 
Art  Inst.,  1919.  Work  :  "The  Gospel," 
altar  panels,  St.  Andrew's  Church.  Wil- 
mington, Del.,  Herron  Art  Institute; 
Nathaniel  Hawthorne  School,  Indian- 
apolis. 

RUSSELL,  Charles   M(arion),  1219  Fourth 
Ave.,    North    Great    Falls,    Mont.;    sum- 
mer, Apgar,  Lake  McDonald,  Mont. 
P.,  S..  I.,  W.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  Max. 
19,   1865. 

RUSSELL,  Walter,  1  West  67th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  and  Washington,  Conn. 
P.,  W.— Born  Boston,  May  19,  1871. 
Pupil  of  Albert  Munsell  and  Ernest 
Major  in  Boston;  Howard  Pyle  at  Wil- 
mington; Laurens  in  Paris.  Specialty, 
portraits  of  children.  Author:  "The 
'Sea  Children."  "Bending  the  Twig," 
"The  Age  of  Innocence." 

RUSSMANN,  Felix,  Palos  Park,  111. 
P.— Born  New  York  City,  Aug.  2,  1888. 
Pupil  of  NAD;  Munich  Royal  Academy. 
Member:  Chicago  SA;  Washington 
AC.  Award  :  Third  Hallgarten 
prize,    NAD,    1918. 

RUYL,  Louis  H.,  171  Madison  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Hingham,  Mass. 
I.,    E.— Born   Brooklyn,    N.    Y..    Nov.    13, 

1870.  Member:  Guild  of  Free  Lance 
Artists,  Stowaway  Club.  Illustrations 
for  "Cape  Cod,  Old  and  New,"  "Old 
Post  Road,  from  Boston  to  Plymouth." 
"From  Provincetown  to  Portsmouth." 

RUZICKA,      R(udolph),      954      Lexington 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Dobbs  Ferry, 
N.  Y. 
I.,   E.,   Wood   Engr. — Born   in   Bohemia, 

June  29,  1883.  Pupil:  AIC;  New  York 
School  of  Art.  M  e  m-b  e  r  :  P-G. 
Work  :  Illustrated  "Fountains  of 
Papal  Rome";  "New  York";  "Newark"; 
examples  in  Art  Institute  of  Chicago; 
Carnegie  Institute.  Pittsburgh;  Metro- 
politan Museum.  New  York;  Library  of 
Congress,  Washington;  Brooklyn  Insti- 
tute of  Arts  and  Sciences. 


551 


RYAN 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


SAINT  GAUDENS 


RYAN,     Douglas,     3     Vandam      St.,      New 

York,  N.  Y.  (I.) 
RYAN,     Edward,     3     Vandam     St.,     New 

York,  N.  Y.  (I.) 
RYDEN,      Henninq,      809     Madison     Ave., 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

S.,D.,P.— Born  in  Sweden,  Jan.  21,  1869. 

Pupil    of    AIC;     studied    in    Berlin    and 

London.       Member:      Salma.C.     1908. 

Award:      Hon.      mention,      P.-P,.Exp., 

San    F.,     1915.       Work    in:      American 

Numismatic  Society. 

RYDER,  Chauncey  F(oster),  27  W.  10th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Wilton, 
N.    H. 

P. — Born  Danbury,  Conn.,  Feb.  29,  1868. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  Julian  Academy,  Collin 
and  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member: 
ANA  1914;  NA  1920;  AAVCS;  Allied  AA; 
Chicago  WCC;  Salma.  C.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon.  1907;  silver 
medal,  P.-P  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Balti- 
more WCC  prize.  Work  in:  Art 
Institute  of  Chicago;  Delgado  Museum, 
New  Orleans,  La.;  Washington  State 
Art  Association,  Seattle,  Wash.;  Cor- 
coran Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C; 
Hackley  Art  Gallery,  Muskegon,  Mich.; 
National  Exhibition  Association,  Toron- 
to, Canada;  Artists'  Club,  Denver,  Colo.; 
Engineers'  Club,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
Society  des  Amis  des  Arts,  Douai, 
France;  City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis; 
Butler  Art  Institute,  Youngstown,  O. ; 
Minneapolis  Inst,  of  Arts:  National 
Gallery,  Wa.shington,  D.  C;  Wilmmgton 
SFA;  Randolph-Macon  Woman's  Col- 
lege, Lynchburg,  Va.,  Quinnipiac  Club, 
New    Haven,    Dayton    Museum    of   Arts. 

RYDER,  Worth,  Berkeley,  Calif. 

P.,  E..  W.,  L.,  T. — Born  Kirkwood,  111., 
Nov.  10,  1884.  Award:  Silver  medal 
for  etching,   P.-P.   Exp.,   San  F.,   1915. 

RYERSON,  Margery  (Austen),  315  West 
57th  St..  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Provincetown,   Mass. 

p  E  w. — Born  Morristown,  N.  J.,  Sept. 
15,'  1886.  Pupil  of  Robert  Henri  and 
Charles  W.  Hawthorne.  Member: 
Wash.  WCC;   Brooklyn   SE. 

RYERSON,  Mary  Mcllvaine,  53  East  56th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Prov- 
incetown, Mass.  .,  . 
S.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
Saint    Gaudens   and   Eraser. 

RYLAND,  Robert  K(nlght),  232  West  14th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  and  RussellvIUe, 
Ky. 

Mural  P..  I.— Born  Grenada.  Miss.. 
Feb.  10,  1873.  Pupil  of  ASL  and  NAD 
in  New  York.  Member:  Mural  P. ; 
N.Y.Arch.I  g.  1910;  Salma.C.  Awards: 
Lazarus  European  Scholarship,  1902- 
1905. 

RYMAN,  C.  M.,  Miners'  Bank,  Wilkes- 
Barre,   Pa.      (Min.  P.) 

RYON,  James  P..  28  East  49th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.    (P.) 

SABATINI,  Raphael,  1740  South  15th  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

S.,  T. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Nov.  26, 
1898.     Pupil   of  Charles   Grafly. 


SACHS,  Joseph,  10  South  18th  St.;  h.  754 
Passyunk  Ave.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Shavli,  Russia,  Sept.  1,  1887. 
Pupil:  PAFA,  Anshutz,  Chase  and  Ken- 
dall. Member:  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Phila.    Sketch   C;   Phila.   Alliance. 

SACKER,  Amy  M.,  739  Boylston  St.;  h. 
64  Charlesgate  East,  Boston,  Mass. 
I.,  C,  L.,  T.— Born  Boston,  July  17, 
1876.  Pupil  of  DeCamp  and  C.  How- 
ard Walker.  Member:  Boston  SAC; 
Copley  S.  Award:  Bronze  medal  for 
book  covers,  P. -Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901. 
Art  Director  in  Motion  Pictures. 

SACKETT,  Clara  E(lisabeth),  30  Ipswich 
St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  summer,  care  Mrs. 
Steele  MacKaye,  Shirley,  Mass. 
P.,  T.— Born  Westfield,  N.  Y.  Pupil 
of  ASL  of  -N.  Y.;  Aman-Jean  and  Dele- 
cluse  in  Paris.  Member  :  Buffalo 
SA;  Buffalo  Guild  of  AA;  Copley  S. 
Award  :     Prize,   Buffalo  SA. 

SAGE,  Cornelia  Bentley  (Mrs.  W.  W. 
Quinton).  Albright  Art  Gallery;  h. 
The  Trubee,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 
P.,  W.— Born  Buffalo,  Oct.  3,  1876. 
Pupil  of.  Buffalo  ASL;  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
under  Twachtman,  Beckwith.  Wiles  and 
Reid.  Member:  Buffalo  SA  (pres. 
1911-1917);  Buffalo  ASL;  Am.Assoc.of 
Museums;  Buffalo  Guild  of  Allied  Arts 
(hon.  pres.  1911-1912);  American  Scan- 
dinavian Society;  Boston  GA  (hon. 
assoc);  Archaeological  Soc.  of  Am.  (2d 
v.-pres.);  School  Art  Assoc,  (v. -pres.). 
Awards  :  Decoration  of  L'Officier  de 
rinstruction  Publique,  Paris,  1917;  Dec- 
oration Palme  d'Academique,  1917;  Cross 
of  the  Legion  of  Honor,  1921.  Di- 
rector, Albright  Art  Gallery  since  1910; 
and  of  the  School  of  the  Albright  Art 
Gallery,  1910-1916.  Editor,  "Academy 
Notes." 

SAGE,   Olive    K.,   12   South   Highland   St., 
Hartford,   Conn. 
P.— M  ember:  New  Haven  PCC. 

SAHLER,  Helen,  226  Central  Park,  South. 
New   York.    N.   Y. 

S. — Born  Carmel,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of  ASL 
of  N.  Y.;  Enid  Yandell  and  H.  A.  Mac- 
Neil.     Member:   N.  A.   Women  PS. 

SAINT,  Lawrence,  Bryn  Athyn,  Pa.;  h. 
Huntington  Valley,  Pa. 
E.,  C,  W..  L. — Born  Sharpsburg,  Pa., 
Jan.  29,  1885.  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Chase, 
Beaux,  Poore,  Sergeant  Kendall  and  in 
Europe.  Work  in  Victoria  and  Albert 
Museum.  London;  Carnegie  Institut*^. 
Pittsburgh;  Bryn  Athyn  Church.  Bryn 
Athyn,  Pa.  Illustrator  of  "Stained  Glass 
of  the  Middle  Ages  in  England  and 
France";  author  and  illustrator  of  "A 
Knight   of   the   Cross." 

SAINT  CLAIR,  Gordon,  26  Tree  Studio 
Bldg..  East  Ontario  St..  Chicago,  111.     (P.) 

SAINT  GAUDENS,  Annetta  Johnson 
CMrs.  Louis  Saint  Gaudens),  Windsor, 
Vt. 

S.— Born  Flint,  O.,  Sept.  11.  '  1869. 
M  ember:  N.  A.  AVomen  PS;  Chi- 
cago AG;  S.  Indn.  A.;  Columbus  A.  Lg. 
Awards  :  McMillin  prize.  N.  A.  Wom- 
en PS  1913:  hon.  mention.  Pan. -Calif. 
Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915.  Work  in  Bos- 
ton Museum  of  Art. 


552 


SAINT  GAUDENS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


SANGERNEBO 


SAINT  GAUDENS,  Carlotta  (Mrs.  Homer 
Saint  Gaudens),  Windsor,  Vt. ;  and  114 
East  66th  'St..  New  York.  N.  Y. 
M in. P.— Born  Rociiester.  N.  Y..  Oct.  11. 
1884.  Pupil  of  PAFA  and  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
under  Cliase,  Cox  and  Brusli.  Mem- 
ber: Am.S.Min.P.;  Pa.S.Min.P.;  Fel- 
lowship PAFA;   NAC. 

ST.  JOHN,  J.  Allen,  Tree  Studio  Bldg., 
Chicago,  111. 

P.,  I.— Born  Chicago,  Oct.  1,  1872. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Mowbray. 
Beckwith  and  Du  Mond.  Member: 
Chicago   SA. 

ST.  JOHN,  Lola  Alberta,  Miltanna  Gar- 
den, Albany,  Ind. 

P.,  C— Born  Albany,  Ind.,  July  16,  1879. 
Pupil  of  H.  R.  MoGinnis;  Cincinnati  Art 
Academy  under  Nowottny  and  Meakin; 
J.  O.  Adams  and  Brandt  Steele  at 
Indianapolis.  Member:  Indianapolis 
A.  Assoc;  Muncie  A.  Assoc;  Alliance; 
Indiana  AC.  Award  :  Hon.  mention, 
Muncie  A.  Assoc.  Work:  "October 
Morning,"    Montpelier    (Ind.)    Library. 

SAINT    LANNE,    Louis,    44    W.    30th    St., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 
S.— Member  :  NSS  1907. 

ST.  LEGER,  Isabella,  1115  Amsterdam 
Ave.,    New    York,    N.    Y.      (P.) 

SALEMME,  Antonio,  637  Madison  Ave., 
New   York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

SALERNO,  Vincent,  119  East  23rd  St., 
h.  117  West  116th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Sicily,  Italy,  Feb.  10,  1893. 
Pupil  of  A.  S.  Calder,  H.  A.  MacNeil. 
Work:  "Portrait  of  Justice  Hend- 
rick,"  Supreme  Court,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

SALISBURY,  Mrs.  A(tta)  W(est),  75  El- 
lenton  Ave.,  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Darnestown,  Md.  Pupil  of 
Corcoran  School  of  Art,  Cullen  Yates 
and  Leon  Dabo.  Member:  N.  A. 
Women  PS;  NAC;  Wolfe  C,  New  Ro- 
chelle AA. 

SALMON,  Lionel  E.,  2403  North  Union 
St.,   Tacoma,   Wash.    (P.) 

SALTUS,  J.  Sanford,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,    N.    Y.    (P.) 

SALVATORE,    Victor    D.,    8    Macdougal 

Alle-^  New  York.  N.  Y. ;  h.  "Swans- 
wick."  Springfield  Centre,  Otsego  Co., 
N.    Y. 

S..  P.,  T.— Born  Italy.  July  7,  1885. 
Pupil  of  Charles  Niehaus  and  A.  Phlm- 
ister  Proctor.  Member:  NSS  1913; 
A.  Aid  S.  Awards:  Bronze  medal, 
'St.  Louis  Exp..  1904-  silver  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Barnett  prize,  NAD, 
1919. 

SAMPSON,    Alden,    168    East    51st    St.;    h. 
12    West    44th    St.,    New    York,    N.    Y. 
P.,  W.— Born  Manchester,  Me.,  Mar.  13, 
1853. 

SANBORN,  C.  T.,  323  Chnton  St.,  Brook- 
lyn, N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 


SANBORN,  Earl  Edward,  162  Washing- 
ton St.,  Wellesley,  Hills,  Mass.;  sum- 
mer, Box  33,  York  Beach,  Me. 
P.,  T.— Born  Lyme,  N.  H..  May  21,  1890. 
Pupil  of  Burbank,  Tarbell,  Benson  and 
Paxton.  Member:  Boston  AC. 
Awards:  Paige  European  Traveling 
'Scholarship  from  the  Boston  Museum 
of  Fine  Arts,    1914-16. 

SANDONA,  Matteo,  471  Buena  Vista  Ave., 
San   Francisco,   Cal. 

P.— Born  Schio,  Italy,  Apr.  15,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Nani  and  Bianchi.  Mem- 
ber: San  F.  AA.  Awards  :  Silver 
medal,  Lewis  and  Clark  Exp.,  Portland, 
1905;  silver  medal,  Sacramento,  1917. 
Member:  International  Jury  of 
Awards  for  Paintings,  Panama-Paciflc 
Exposition,  San  Francisco,  1915;  Lg.  of 
N.  Y.  A.;  Bohemian  C,  San  Francisco. 
Work:  "Portrait  of  Mary  Pickford," 
National  Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C; 
"Chrysanthemums,"  Golden  Gate  Park 
Memorial  Museum,   San  Francisco. 

SANDS,  Anna  M.,  21st  and  N  Sts.,  N.  W., 
Washington,  D.  C. 
P.— M  ember:    Wash.WCC;  S. Wash. A. 

SANDZEN,  Sven  BIrger,  Bethany  Col- 
lege, Lindsborg,  Kan. 
P.,  E..  T.,  W..  L.— Born  Bildsberg.  Swe- 
den. Feb.  5,  1871.  Pupil  of  Stockholm 
Artists'  League  under  Zorn  and  Bergh; 
Aman-Jean  In  Paris:  came  to  U.  S.  in 
1894.  Professor  of  aesthetics  and  paint- 
ing, Bethany  College,  since  1894. 
Award:  First  Moore  prize  ($100), 
Artists  of  Kansas  City  and  vicinity. 
1917.  Work  in:  National  Museum, 
Stockholm;  Lund  Museum,  Sweden;  Li- 
brary of  Congress,  Washington;  Chi- 
cago Art  Institute. 

SANELL,  Louis,  2509  East  37th  St.,  Kan- 
sas City,   Mo.    (P.) 

SANFORD,    Edward    Field,    Jr.,    49    West 

12th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  New  York,  Apr.  6,  1886.  Stud- 
ied: ASL  of  N.  Y.;  NAD;  Julian  Acad- 
emy in  Paris;  Royal  Academy  in  Mu- 
nich. M  em  b  e  r  :  N.Y.Arch.Lg.;  NSS; 
Beaux-Arts  Inst.;  NAC.  Work: 
"Pegasus,"  bronze  statuette,  R.  I.  Schl. 
of  Design,  Providence;  Charles  Francis 
Adams  Memorial,  Washington  and  Leo 
University,  Lexington.  Va.;  Commemo- 
rative Tablet,  Columbia  University; 
Core  Memorial,  Norfolk,   Va. 

SANGER,  William,  408  West  20th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Marlborough- 
on-Hudson,   N.  Y. 

P..  E. —  Born  Berlin.  Germany,  Nov.  12, 
1875.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.;  Artists 
and  Artisans  Institute  of  N.Y.  Mem- 
ber: S.Indp.A.;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A.  Repre- 
sented In  the  Hispanic  Society  of 
America,  New  York. 

SANGERNEBO,  Emma  (Mrs.  Alexander 
Sangernebo),  5  East  Market  St.;  h.  2272 
Adams  St.,  Indianapolis,  Ind. 
P.— Born  in  Pittsburgh,  Jan.  23,  1877. 
Pupil  of  William  Forsyth.  Member: 
Ind.  AC.  Work:  Figure  panels, 
Loew's  Theatre,   Indianapolis. 


553 


SARG 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


SARTAIN 


SARG,  Tony,  54  West  9th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  h.  24  Ivanhoe  Terrace,  East 
Orange,   N.   J. 

P.,  I.,  C,  W.,  L.— Born  Guatemala,  Cen- 
tral America,  Apl.  24,  1880.  Member: 
Salma.  C;  SI.  Illustrated  "Speaking 
of  Operations"  and  "Fiddle  D.  D."  by 
Irvin  S.  Cobb.  Creator  of  Tony  Sarg's 
Marionettes. 

SARGEANT,  Geneve  Rixford,  577  Duboce 
Ave.,  San  Francisco,  Calif. 
P. — Born  San  Francisco,  July  14,  1868. 
Pupil  of  Emil  Carlsen,  W.  M.  Chase, 
and  Gari  Melchers.  Member:  San 
F.  AA;  Chicago  SA.  Award:  Cahn 
prize,  AIC  1903.  Work:  "Suma,  A 
Japanese  Girl",  Palace  of  Fine  Arts,  San 
Francisco. 

SARGENT,  John  S(inger),  care  of  Cop- 
ley-Plaza, Boston,  Mass.;  33  Tite  St., 
Chelsea,  S.  W.,  London,  England;  care 
the  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Boston,  Mass. 
Port,  and  Mural  P. — Born  Florence, 
Italy,  of  American  parents,  Jan.  12,  1856. 
Pupil  of  Academy  of  Fine  Arts,  Florence; 
Carolus  Duran  in  Paris.  Member: 
ANA  1891,  NA  1897;  Mural  P.;  Port.P.; 
Copley  S.  (hon.);  AIA  (hon.);  Paris  SAP; 
Soc.Nat.des  Beaux- Arts,  Paris;  Royal 
Academy,  London.  A.  1894;  RA  1897; 
Century  Assoc,  N.  Y.;  Nat.Inst.AL; 
Phila.WCC  (hon.);  Berlin  Academy;  In- 
stitute de  France,  1905.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1878;  second 
class  medal,  Paris  Salon,  1881;  medal  of 
honor,  Paris  Exp.,  1889;  medal,  AC. 
Phila.  1890;  medal,  Columbian  Exp., 
Chicago,  1893;  Temple  gold  medal, 
PAFA  1894;  medal  of  honor,  Paris  Exp., 
1900;  gold  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  Converse  gold  medal,  PAFA 
1903;  large  gold  medal,  Berlin,  1903; 
grand  prize,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  gold 
medal  of  honor,  Lidge  Exp.,  1905;  gold 
medal,  Venice,  1907;  Beck  gold  medal, 
PAFA  1909;  gold  medal  of  honor,  Nat. 
Inst.  Arts  and  Letters,  1914.  Cheva- 
lier of  the  Legion  of  Honor,  France, 
1889,  Officer  1897;  Order  of  Merit, 
Germany,  1909.  Work:  Mural  deco- 
rations, Boston  Public  Libx^ary;  "Car- 
mencita,"  Luxembourg  Museum,  Paris; 
"Carnation,  Lily,  Lily  Rose,"  and  "Ellen 
Terry  as  Lady  Macbeth,"  Tate  Gallery, 
London;  "Self-Portrait,"  Uffizi  Gallery, 
Florence,  Italy;  "Portrait  of  Henry  G. 
Marquand,"  "Portrait  of  W.  M.  Chase," 
"Gitana,"  "Padr6  Sebastian,"  "The 
Hermit,"  "Portrait,  Madame  X," 
"Marble  Quarry  at  Carrara,"  and  group 
of  water  colors.  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York;  "Portrait  of  Mrs.  Austen," 
Buffalo  Fine  Arts  Academy;  "His  Stu- 
dio," Boston  Museum;  "Venetian 
Water  Carriers"  and  "Countess  War- 
wick and  Son,"  and  11  water  colors, 
Worcester  (Mass.)  Art  Museum;  "Por- 
trait of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  W.  Field," 
Pennsylvania  Academy,  Philadelphia; 
eighty-three  water  colors,  Brooklyn  In- 
stitute Museum;  "James  Whitcomb 
Riley."  Art  Association,  Indianapolis; 
"Landscape  with  Goats"  and  "The 
Weavers,"  National  Gallery,  Washing- 
ton; "The  Fountain"  and  Portrait  of 
Mrs.   Chas.   Gifford  Dyer,   Art  Institute 


of  Chicago;  "Venetian  Bead  Stringers," 
Fine  Arts  Academy,  Buffalo;  "The 
Oyster  Gatherers  of  Concale,"  Corco- 
ran Gallery,  Washington,  D.  C. 

SARGENT,  M(argarett)  (W.),  107  West 
47th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Wellesley, 
Mass.;  summer,  care  Mrs.  Moon,  Dorset; 
Vt. 

S. — Born  Wellesley,  Mass.,  Aug.  31,  1892. 
Pupil  of  Woodbury  and  Borglum. 
Member:    N.  A.  Women  PS. 

SARGENT,  Walter,  North  Scituate,  Mass.; 
and  5717  Kenwood  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
P. — Born  Worcester,  Mass.,  May  7,  1868. 
Pupil  of  Colarossi  and  Delecluse  acad- 
emies, L'hermitte  and  Delance  in  Paris. 
Member:  Copley  S.  1896;  Paris  AAA; 
Chicago  SA.  Professor  of  Art  Educa- 
tion,   University  of   Chicago. 

SARKA,  Charles  N.,  692  Madison  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer.  Green  Lake. 
Fulton    Co.,    N.    Y. 

Mural  P.,  I.— Born  Chicago.  111.,  Dec.  6. 
1879.  Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.,  1918 
(assoc).  Awards:  Collaborative 
prize,  N.Y.Arch.  Lg.,  1913;  first  prize  for 
poster   cover,    St.   Louis   Pageant,    1914. 

SARTAIN,  Emily,  1346  North  Broad  St.. 
Philadelpnia,    Pa. 

P.,  Mezzotint  Engr.,  T.— Born  Philadel- 
phia. Pupil  of  her  father,  John  Sar- 
tain;  PAFA  under  Schiissele;  Luminals 
in  PariF.  M  em  b  e  r  :  Plastic  C.  (ex- 
pres.);  /.fellowship  PAFA;  Lyceum  C, 
London,  Contemporary  and  New  Cen- 
tury C,  Philadelphia;  Member  Jury  of 
Award,  Columbian  Exposition,  Chicago, 
1892.  Delegate  from  U.  S.  Govt,  to 
International  Congress  on  Instruction 
in  Drawing,  Paris,  1900;  Berne,  Switzer- 
land, 1904.  Principal  Philadelphia 
School  of  Design  for  Women.  A  w  ar  d  s: 
Medal,  Centennial  Exp.,  Phila.,  1876; 
Mary  Smith  prize,  PAFA  1881  and 
1883;  hon.  mention,  Pan-Am.  Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901. 

S.ARTAIN,  Harriet,  1823  Walnut  St.,;  h. 
1503  Master  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Ldscp.P.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil 
of  Philadelphia  School  of  Design  for 
Women  and  Teachers'  College.  New 
York.  Member  :  Plastic  C.  (pres. 
1913-1916);  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Phila. 
Alliance;  Phila.  ACG.  Fellowship  PAFA 
(assoc).  Dean  Phila.  School  of  De- 
sign for  Women. 

SARTAIN,  William,  140  West  57th  St., 
New   York,   N.    Y. 

P.,  T..  W.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pa.,  Nov. 
21,  1843.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Bonnat  and 
Ecole  des  Beaux- Arts  in  Paris;  studied 
also  in  Italy  and  Spain.  Member  : 
ANA  1880;  SAA  1877.  Awards:  Sil- 
ver medal,  Boston,  1881;  hon.  mention, 
PAFA  1887;  bronze  medal.  Pan- Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  silver  medal. 
Buenos  Ayres  Exp.,  1910.  Work: 
"Street  in  Dinan,  Brittany,"  Corcoran 
Gallery,  Washington;  "Algerian  Water 
Carriers,"  National  Gallery,  Washing- 
ton; "Outside  Mosque — Algiers"  and  "A 
Chapter  from  the  Koran,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York:  painting  owned  by 
Argentine     Government:     "The     Nubian 


554 


SARTELLE 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


SCHABELITZ 


Sheik,"  Luxembourg  Gallery,  Paris. 
Represented  in  collections  of  South 
Carolina  Art  Assoc,  and  Herron  Art 
Institute. 

SARTELLE,  Mildred  E.,  6  Lughton  Road, 
Wellesley,  Md.   (S.) 

SATRE,  August,  24  Vermont  Ave.,  Provi- 
dence,  R.   I. 
P. — M  ember  :       Providence   WCC. 

SAUNDERS,  Clara  R(ossman),  3025  P  St., 
Washington,  D.  C. 
P.— M  ember:    Wash. WCC;    Wash.SA. 

SAUNDERS,  Kendall,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Templeton,  Mass.,  Sept.  23, 
1886.  Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  under 
Laurens  in  Paris.  Member:  Salma. 
C. ;  Paris  AAA;  Union  Internationale 
des    Beaux-Arts    et    des   Lettres. 

SAVAGE,  Eugene  F.,  116  E.  66th  St.,  New 
York,   N,    Y. 

P. — A  ward:  American  Academy  in 
Rome  Fellowship,  1912-15.  Member: 
Mural  P. 

SAVIER,  Helen.  See  Mrs.  F.  V.  Du 
Mond. 

SAVILLE,  Bruce  Wilder,  care  of  Ohio 
State  University,  Hayes  Hall,  Colum- 
bus,  O. 

S.,  T. — Born  Quincy,  Mass.,  Mar.  16, 
1893.  Pupil  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Kitson. 
Member:  Copley  S.;  Boston  AL; 
Boston  AC.  Work:  "John  Hancock 
Statue,"  Quincy,  Mass.;  three  memo- 
rials to  civil  war  veterans,  Vicksburg 
(Miss.)  National  Park;  Colling  wood 
Memorial,  Kansas  City,  Mo.;  Potter 
Memorial,  Annapolis;  Memorial  Angel, 
Quincy  High  School;  Memorial  tablet 
to  Unknown  Dead  of  World  War, 
Quincy;  Canadian  Infantryman,  St. 
John's;  Victory  figure,  in  collaboration 
with  Mossman,  at  Chicopee,  Mass. ; 
Forrester  Memorial,  Worcester,  Mass.; 
Memorial  of  the  3  wars,  at  Palmyra, 
Me.;  Memorial  to  104th  Infantry,  26th 
Div.,  Westfield,  Mass.;  World  War 
Memorial,    Upton,    Mass. 

SAWRIE,  Mrs.  Mary  B.,  710  Russell  St., 
Nashville,  Tenn.;  summer,  Beersheeba, 
Tenn. 

Miniature  P.— Born  Nashville,  Tenn., 
Sept.  22,  1879.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Vander- 
poel,  Arthur  Dow,  F.  A.  Parsons;  and 
Julian   in   Paris. 

SAWTELLE,  A.  Elizabeth,  2102  O  St., 
Washington,  D.  C;  summer,  Ogunquit, 
Me. 

P. — Pupil  of  School  of  Design  for 
Women  and  Drexel  Institute,  Phila. ; 
Corcoran  Art  School,  Washington;  In- 
gram Summer  School,  Cornwall,  Eng.; 
Woodbury.  Member:  Wash.  WCC; 
Wash.  SA;  Providence  WCC;  Wash.  AC. 

SAWTELLE,  Mary  (Mrs.  Charles  G.  Saw- 
telle),  2102  O  St.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.— Born  Washington,  Aug.  24,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Corcoran  School  of  Art  in 
Washington;  Delecluse  Academy  in 
Paris;  Edwin  Scott  in  Paris;  Irving 
Wiles  in  New  York.  Member: 
Wash. WCC;  Wash.SA;   Society  Indp.A. 


SAWYER,  Edith,  Ovington  Bldg.,  246 
Fulton  St.,  Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
summer,  Columbia,  Conn. 
P. — Born  South  Coventry,  Conn.  Pupil 
of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  Pa.  S. 
Min.  P.;  Brooklyn  S.  Min.  P.;  Brooklyn 
AG. 

SAWYER,  Edward  W(arren),  2  Broad- 
field  Rd.,  Folkestone,  England. 
S.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  March  17,  1876. 
Pupil  of  Verlet,  Fremiet  and  Rodin  in 
Paris.  Awards:  Bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp..  1904;  silver  medal.  Inter. 
Exp.,  Ghent,  1913;  hon.  mention,  Salon 
des  Artistes  Frangais,  1914;  bronze  med- 
al for  medals,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work  in  Luxembourg,  Paris;  Ameri- 
can Numismatic  Society,  New  York; 
IT.  S.  Mint.  Philadelphia;  Art  Institute 
of  Chicago;  Mass.  Historical  Society. 
Specialty,   medals. 

SAWYER,    Helen    Alton,    44    Argyle    Ter- 
race,   Yonkers,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Washington  D.  C.  Pupil  of 
Johansen  and  Hawthorne;  NAD.  Mem- 
ber:     Yonkers  AA. 

SAWYER,   Wells    M.,   44    Argyle   Terrace, 
Yonkers,   N.   Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Iowa,  Jan.  31,  1863.  Pupil 
of  AIC;  Wash.  ASL;  Corcoran  Art 
School;  J.  O.  Anderson  and  Howard 
Helmick.  Member:  Wash.  SA., 
Yonkers  AA;   Salma.   C. 

SAX,    Carol    M.,   Art   Dept.,   University   of 
Kentucky,   Lexington,  Ky. 
Des.,  T. — M  ember:  Charcoal  C. 

SAXTON,    John    G(ordon),    Seaford,   Long 
Island,  N.  Y. 

Ldscp.P.— Born  Troy,  N.  Y.,  1860. 
Pupil  of  Lefebvre,  Merson  and  Robert- 
Fleury  in  Paris.  Member:  Lotos  C. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp., 
1900;  hon.  mention,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904. 

SCARPITTA,  G.  S.  Cartaino,  561  Madison 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Palermo,  Italy,  Feb.  28,  1887; 
settled  in  New  York  in  1910.  Studied 
at  Instituto  di  Belli  Arti,  Palermo, 
and  in  Rome.  Member:  NSS;  Allied 
AA;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg. ;  N.  Y.  Numismatic 
Society;  decorated  by  Japanese  and 
Cuban        governments.  Awards  : 

Barnett  prize,  NAD,  1914;  second  men- 
tion, collaborative  competition,  N.  Y. 
Arch.  Lg.,  1913.  Work  in  Milwaukee 
Art  Institute. 

New 
,  .  ...  East  17th  St. 
Brooklvn,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  in  Wisconsin,  Feb.  22,  1869. 
Pupil  of  Shirlaw,  Cox,  Beckwith,  Saint 
Gaudens.  Member:  NSS;  Arch.  Lg. 
of  N.Y.  Work:  Statue  of  General 
Ord,  Vicksburg  National  Military  Park; 
Glendale  Monument  and  Ridgewood 
Monument,   Brooklyn,   N.   Y. 

SCHABELITZ,  R(udolph)   F(rederick),  854 

West  181st  St..  New  York,   N.  Y. 
I. — Born    Stapleton.    S.    I.,    N.    Y..    June 
10,  1884.     Pupil  of  Carl  Marr  in  Munich, 
and    others.      Member:      SI;     Salma. 
C;   Guild  of  Free  Lance  Artists. 


SCHAFF,     Anton,     1931     Broadway, 
York,     N.     Y.;     h.     397     East     17t 


555 


SCHAEFER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


SCHMITT 


SCHAEFER,      William      G.,      95      Madison 

Ave.,    New   York,    N.    Y. 

P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

SCHALL,  Frederick  P.,  North  Pelham, 
N.    Y.    (P.) 

SCHAMBERG,  Morton  L(Ivlngston),  1822 
Chestnut  St.;  h.  Hotel  Lorraine,  Broad 
and  Fairmount  Ave.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Oct.  15,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Wm.  M.  Chase.  Member: 
S.Indp.A. 

SCHELL,     Dorothy     Root,     Middle     City 
Bldg.,    5027    Newhall    St.,    Germantown, 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:   Plastic  C. 

SCHELL,  F.  Cresson,  5215  Archer  St., 
Germantown,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
I.,  W.— Born  Philadelphia,  May  3,  1857. 
Pupil  of  Thomas  Eakins  and  Thomas 
P.  Anshutz.  Member:  Artists'  Aid 
Soc;  Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila.  Alliance; 
Phila.   Sketch  C. 

SCHELL,  Gus  G.,  780  So.  6th  St.,  Colum- 
bus, O. 

Scenic  P. — M  e  m  be  r  :  Pen  and  Pencil 
C,  Columbus. 

SCHENCK,  Edwin.  1007  St.  Paul  St.,  Bal- 
timore,  Md. 
P. — M  ember:  Charcoal  C. 

SCHEVILL,  W(llliam)  V.,  44  West  77th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Port. P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  March  2, 
1864.  Pupil  of  Lofftz,  LIndenschmitt 
and  Gysis  in  Munich.  Member: 
Century  Assoc;  Salma.C;  Kuenstler 
Genossenschaft  Award  :  Bronze 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work: 
"In  Love,"  Cincinnati  Museum,  Cincin- 
nati; portrait  sketch.  Prince  Henry  of 
Prussia,  Herron  Art  Institute,  Indian- 
apolis. 

SCHICK,  Elma  H.,  225  South  38th  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa.      (P.) 

SCHICK,    Fred    G(eorge),    546    Main    St.; 
h.    42   Rohr   St..   Buffalo,   N.   Y. 
P.,     I.— Born    Buffalo,     N.     Y.,     Jan.     31, 
1893.     Pupil   of  Wilcox  and  M.   B.   Cox. 
Member:      Buffalo  AC. 

SCHIFFER,  Ethel  Bennett  (Mrs.  W.  B. 
Schiffer),  357  Elm  St.,  New  Haven, 
Conn. 

I.,E.,Engr. — Born  Brooklyn,  New  York, 
March  10,  1879.  Pupil  of  Yale  School 
of  Fine  Arts;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber: New  Haven  PCC;  S.  Indp.  A.; 
N.  A.  Women  PS. 

SCHILLE,  Alice,  1166  Bryden  Road,  Co- 
lumbus,  O. 

P. — Born  Columbus.  Pupil  of  Colum- 
bus Art  School;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  and  N.Y. 
School  of  Art  under  Chase  and  Cox; 
Prinet,  Collin,  Courtois  and  Colarossl 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  AWCS 
(assoc);  NYWCC;  Boston  WCC;  N.  A. 
Women  PS;  Chicago  WCC;  Phila.  WCC. 
Awards:  Corcoran  prize,  Washington 
WCC  1908;  N.Y. Woman's  AC  prize,  1908 
and  1909;  participant  Fine  Art  Bldg. 
prize,  SWA  1913;  gold  medal  for  water 
colors,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Phila. 
water  color  prize,  PAFA  1915;  first  prize 
($200,  Columbus  AL,  1919;  Stevens  prize. 


Columbus  Art  Lg.,  1920.  Work: 
"The  Melon  Market,"  Herron  Art  In- 
stitute, Indianapolis;  "Mother  and 
Child,"  Art  Club,  Philadelphia;  "The 
Market  Place,"  Columbus  (O.)  Gallery 
of  Fine  Arts. 
SCHILLING,  A(rthur)  O(scar),  93  North 
St.,  Rochester,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  W. — Born  in  Germany,  May  14, 
1882.  Studied  in  Chicago,  Buffalo,  Roch- 
ester, and  Germany.  Member:  Buf- 
falo AC;   Buffalo   SA;   Rochester  AC. 

SCHLADERMUNDT,  Herman  T.,  Law- 
rence Park,  Bronxville,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P. — Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  Oct. 
4,  1863.  Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1893; 
Mural  P.  (ex-sec).  Awards  :  Allied 
Arts  prize,  Arch.Lg. ;  medal,  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago,  1893.  Work:  Mural 
decorations  in  Flagler  Memorial  Church. 
St.  Augustine,  Fla. ;  Emigrants  Indus- 
trial Bank,  New  York;  Mosaic  vaults, 
Congressional  Library,  Washington; 
Grand  Jury  Room,  Court  House,  New- 
ark, N.  J.;  Automobile  Club  of  America, 
New  York;  Museum  of  Thomas  F. 
Ryan.    New  York. 

SCHLEGELL,  Gustav  von,  St.  Louis 
School  of  Fine  Arts;  h.  McMillan  Hall, 
Washington  Univ.,  St.  Louis,  Mo.;  sum- 
mer, 1921  Carrol  St.,  St.  Paul,  Minn. 
P.,  T.— Born  St.  Louis,  Sept.  16,  1877. 
Pupil  of  Robert  Koehler  in  Minneapolis; 
Carl  Marr  in  Munich;  Laurent  and 
Laurens  in  Paris.  Member:  2x4 
Soc.  Work  in:  St.  Louis  Artists' 
Guild. 

SCHLESINGER,  Louis,  51  West  10th  St.. 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

S.— M  ember:   N.Y.Arch.Lg.   1913    (as- 
soc). 

SCHMIDT,     Curt,     601    West     End     Ave., 
New  York,  N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

SCHMIDT,     Karl,     47     Fifth     Ave.,     New 
York,   N.    Y. 
P.,T. — Born  Worcester,   Mass.,   Jan.   11, 

1890.     Self-taught.     Member:   Salma. 
C. 

SCHMIDT,  O.,  3139  Belgrade  St.,  Phila- 
delphia,  Pa.    (L) 

SCHMIDT,    O.    F.,    61    Poplar    St.,    Brook- 
lyn,   N.   Y. 
I.— M  ember:  Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

SCHMIDT,  Theodore  B.  W.,  Box  21,  R.  1, 
Monroe,  Wis.    (P.) 

SCHMITT,  Albert  F(elix),  194  Brattle 
St.,  Cambridge,  Mass. 
P.,  T.— Born  Boston,  1873.  Member: 
Copley  S.;  AWCS;  Boston  GA;  Salma. 
C;  Boston  AC.  Award:  Silver  med- 
al. P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  W  o  r  k  i  n: 
City  Art  Museum,  'St.  Louis;  R.  I. 
School  of  Design,  Providence;  Museum 
of  Fine   Arts,    Boston. 

SCHMITT,  Carl,  R.  D.  43,  Norwalk.  Conn. 
P..  E.— Born  Trumbull  Co.,  O.,  May  6, 
1889.  Pupil  of  NAD  under  Carlsen;  and 
in  Florence,  Italy.  M  e  m  b  e  -  :  Union 
Internationale  des  Beaux-Arts.  Paris. 
Work:  "The  Mill,"  Butler  Art  In- 
stitute,  Youngstown,  O. 


556 


SCHMITZ 


WHO'S   WHO  IIS  ART 


SCHULER 


SCHMITZ,    Elizabeth    Terris,    115    So.    33d 

St.,    Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P. — M  ember:   Fellowship  PAFA. 
SCHNAKENBERG,       Henry       Ernest,      64 

West  9th  S't.;  h.  601  West  End  Ave..  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  New  Brighton, 
S.   I.,   N.   Y. 

P.,  E.— Born  New  Brighton,  N.  Y.,  Sept. 
14.  1892.  Pupil  of  Kenneth  Hayes 
Miller.  Member:  ASL  of  N.  Y. ; 
S.    Indp.   A. 

SCHNEIDER,    Arthur,    939    Eighth    Ave,., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  I.— M  e  m  ber  :  AWCS;  NYWCC; 
Salma.C.  1906.  Awards  :  Morgan 
prize,  Salma.C.  1906;  Inness  prize,  Sal- 
ma.C, 1907;  Isidor  prize  (.$100).  Salma.C. 
1912;   Evans  prize    ($300),   AWCS   1913. 

SCHNEIDER,     Otto     J.,     1259     Thorndale 
Ave.,  Cliicago,  111. 

P.,  I.,  Etcher.— Born  Atlanta,  111.,  1875. 
Member:  Chicago  SA;  Chicago  SE. 
Work:  Etching  in  Art  Institute  of 
Chicago;   Toledo  Museum  of  Art. 

SCHNEIDER,    Theodore,    280    Dartmouth 
St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P. — M  ember:  Boston  AC. 

SCHOEN,    James    D.,    1344    Wilkins    Ave., 
New  York,   N.    Y. 
P. — M  e  m  ber:     S. Indp.  A. 

SCHOENFELD,  Flora  I.,  care  of  The  Art 
Institute,  Chicago,  111. 
P.— Born  Lanark,  111.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;  Chicago  WCC;  Chicago  AC; 
S.  Indp.  A.;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Arts 
Cordon. 

SCHOENFELD,    Lucille,    912    Steiner    St.. 
San    Francisco,    Calif.       (S.) 

SCHOFER,  Carl  T.,  Harris  and  Barr  Ave., 
Crafton,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA, 

SCHOFIELD,  W(alter)  Elmer,  119  East 
19th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Sept.  9, 
1867.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Bouguereau,  Fer- 
rier,  Doucet  and  Aman-Jean  in  Paris. 
Member:  SAA  1904;  ANA  1902,  NA 
1907;  Nat.Inst.A.L.;  ACPhila. ;  Fellow- 
ship PAFA;  Century  Assoc;  NAC; 
Salma.C;  R.S.British  Artists;  Chelsea 
Arts  Club,  London.  Awards:  Hon. 
mention,  ACPhila.  1898;  Webb  prize, 
SAA  1900;  hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp., 
1900;  hon.  mention,  CIPittsburgh,  1900; 
first  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1901;  silver 
medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
Sesnan  gold  medal,  PAFA  1903;  gold 
medal  of  honor  ($1,500),  CIPittsburgh, 
1904;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
Inness  gold  medal,  NAD  1911;  gold 
medal  and  $1,000.  NAC  1913;  Temple 
sold  medal,  PAFA  1914;  medal  of  honor, 
P. -P.  Exp.,  San  Fran.,  1915;  Altman 
prize  ($1,000),  NAD,  1920.  Work: 
"Sand  Dunes  nearLelant,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  "Morning  After 
Snow,"  Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington; 
"Midwinter  Thaw,  Morning,"  and 
"Landing  Stage,  Boulogne,"  Cincin- 
nati Museum;  "Across  the  River,"  Car- 
negie Institute,  Pittsburgh;  "Autumn  in 
Brittany,"  Albright  Art  Gallery,  Buf- 
falo; "Winter,"  Pennsylvania  Academy, 
Philadelphia;  "Old  Mills  on  the  Somme," 


557 


Herron  Art  Inst.,  Indianapolis;  "The 
White  Frost,"  Memorial  Gallery,  Roches- 
ter, N.  Y.;  "The  Coffer  Dam,"  Art  In- 
stitute of  Chicago;  "The  Spring  Thaw," 
National  Arts  Club,  New  York;  "The 
Rapids,"  Brooklyn  Museum. 
SCHONHARDT,  Henri,  21  Audubon  Ave., 
Providence,  R.  I. 

S.,  P.,  T.— Born  Providence,  April  24, 
1877.  Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  under 
Puech,  Dubois  and  Verlet;  Ecole  des 
Arts  Decoratifs  under  David  and  Chevi- 
nard.  Member:  Providence  AC. 
Award  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1908.  Work:  "Elisha  Dyer  Memo- 
rial," St.  Stevens  Church,  Provi- 
dence; "Henry  Harrison  Young  Memo- 
rial," City  Hall  Park,  Providence; 
"Clytie"  and  "Cadmus,"  R.I. School  of 
Design  Museum,  Providence;  "Soldiers' 
and  Sailors'  Monument,"  Bristol,  R.  I.; 
"Col.  Sissons  Monument,"  Little  Comp- 
ton,  R.  I. 

SCHOOK,  F.  De  Forest,  Lombard,  111. 
P..  T.— Born  in  Michigan,  1872.  Pupil  of 
Ai  Chicago;  H.  O.  Tanner,  Menard  and 
Simon  in  Paris.  Member:  Chicago 
■SA;  Chicago  WCC;  Chicago  AG.  In- 
structor of  illustration  and  composition, 
Chicago  Art  Institute. 

SCHOONOVER,  Frank  E(arle),  1616 
Rodney  St.;  h.  2003  Bayard  Ave,,  Wil- 
mington, Del.;  summer.  Bushkill,  Pa. 
1.,  P.— Born  Oxford,  N.  J.,  Aug.  19,  1877. 
Pupil  of  Drexel  Inst.,  Philadelphia, 
under  Howard  Pyle.  Member:  SI 
1905;  Fellowship  PAFA  (assoc).  Spe- 
cialty, American  Indians  and  Canadian 
trappers. 

SCHOULER,  Willard  C,  173  Pleasant  St., 
Arlington,  Mass.;  Canaan,  N.  H. 
P.— Born  Arlington,  Nov.  6,  1852.  Pu- 
pil of  Henry  Day  and  W^illiam  Rimmer. 
Member:  Boston  AC.  Work: 
"Indians  of  Arizona,"  in  Museum  of 
Fine  Arts,  Boston.  Specialty,  Western 
and  Arabian  scenes. 

SCHRADER,     Dorothy    A.    V.,    914    East- 
wood Ave.,   Chicago,   111. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

SCHRAM,  A(braham)  J(ohn),  937  M  St., 
N.  W.,  Washington,  D.  C 
P.— Born  Grand  Rapids,  Mich.,  July  27, 
1891.  Pupil  of  Corcoran  School  of  Art, 
Washington,  D.  C  Member:  S. 
Wash.    A. 

SCHROFF,     Alfred      Hermann,     969     11th 

Ave.;  h.  1043  Alden  St.,  Eugene,  Ore. 
P.,  C— Born  Springfield,  Mass.,  Dec.  26, 
1863.  Member:  Boston  AC;  Boston 
Arch.  C;  Boston  SAC;  Laguna  Beach 
AA.  Award  :  Medal  for  stained 
glass,  Columbian  Exposition,  Chicago, 
1893.  Instructor  of  Fine  Arts,  Univers- 
ity of  Oregon;  Summer  School,  Uni- 
versity of  California. 

SCHULENBERG,  Adele.     See  Mrs.  C.  K. 
Gleeson. 

SCHULER,   Hans,  5  East  Lafayette  Ave., 

Baltimore,   Md. 

S. — Born  Alsace-Lorraine.  Germany, 
May  25,  1874.  Pupil  of  Verlet  in 
Paris.  Member:  NSS  1908;  Charcoal 
C.     Awards:  Rinehart  scholarship  in 


SCHULMAN 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


SCOFIELD 


sculpture,  Baltimore,  1900;  third  class 
medal,  Paris  Salon  1901;  silver  medal, 
St.  I.ouis  Exp.,  1904;  Avery  prize,  N.Y. 
Arch. I. g.  1915.  Work:  "Ariadne," 
Walters  Gallery,  Baltimore;  "Johns 
Hopkins  Monument,"  Baltimore. 

SCHULMAN,  A.  G.,  24  East  59th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P..  T. — Born  Konigsberg,  Germany,  Jan. 
5.  1881.  Pupil  of  S.  J.  Woolf  and  NAD 
in  New  York.  Instructor,  College  of  the 
City  of  New  York. 

SCHULTZ,  George  F.,  4003  Greenview 
Ave.,   Chicago,   111. 

Ldscp.P.— Born  Chicago,  April  17,  1869. 
Award  :  Tuthill  prize,  AIC,  1918. 
Work  :  "By  the  Sea,"  Union  League 
Club,  Chicago;  "Among  the  Birches," 
Cliff  Dwellers,  Chicago;  "Twilight 
Shadows,"  Arche  Club,  Chicago;  "Au- 
tumn Weather,"  City  of  Chicago  Col- 
lection. 

SCHULTZ,     Harry,     834    East    155th     St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  em  b  e  r  :     S.Indp.A. 

SCHULTZ,    Ralph    T.,    746    St.    Nicholas 
Ave.,   New   York,    N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

SCHULTZ,  Susette,  6415  Overbrook  Ave., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

SCHUSTER,  Donna  N.,  1229  West  37th 
Drive,  Dos  Angeles.  Calif. 
P. — Pupil  of  AIC,  Tarbell,  and  Chase. 
M  e  m  I)  e  r  •  Calif.  AC;  S.  Indp.  A.; 
Calif.  AC;  West  Coast  Arts.  Awards: 
Gold  medal,  Minn.  State  Art  Ex.,  1913; 
prize  for  painting  ($100)  Minn.  State 
Art  Ex.,  1914;  silver  medal.  North- 
western exhibition,  St.  Paul  Inst.,  1915; 
silver  medal  for  water  colors,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  silver  medal,  Pan.- 
Calif.  Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915;  first  prize 
for  water  colors.  Phoenix,  Arizona, 
1918  and  1919;  hon.  mention,  Wis.  PS. 
1919;  first  prize  for  oil  painting,  Phoenix, 
Ariz.,  1920. 

SCHWAB,  Edith  Fisher  (Mrs.  C.  Schwab), 
310  Prospect  St.,   New  Haven,   Corn. 
P.— Born    Cincinnati,    C,    Jan.    28,    1862. 
Member:     N.    A.    Women    PS;    New 
Haven  PCC. 

SCHWAB,  Eloise  M  (artinez),  549  West 
113th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  E. — Born  Habana,  Cuba,  July  4, 
1894.  Pupil  of  Kenneth  Hayes  Miller. 
Studied  in  Paris.  Member:  Alli- 
ance. 

SCHWANKOVSKY,  Frederick  J.,  Jr., 
1231  West  76th  St.,  Los  Angeles,  Calif. 
P.,  I.,  L.,  T.— Born  Detroit,  Mich.,  Jan. 
21,  1885.  Pupil  of  PAFA  and  ASL  of 
N.  Y.  Member:  Calif.  AC.  Re- 
search work  for  Metro  Picture  Corpora- 
tion; head  of  Art  Dept.,  Manual  Arts 
High  School,  Los  Angeles. 

SCHWARCZ,  D(orothea)  R.,  (Mrs.  Ed- 
ward S.  Greenbaum),  272  West  90th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Brooklyn,  June  17,  1893.  Pupil 
of  Kenneth  Hayes  Miller,  G.  W.  Haw- 
thorne, Jonas  Lie  and  R.  S.  Bredin. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Lg.  of 
N.   Y.  A. 


SCHWARM,    Wesley    A.,    130    East    19th 
St.,   Brooklyn,   New  York,   N.  Y. 
P.— Born   Lafayette,   Ind.,    Dec.    9,   1883. 
Pupil    of    Pratt    Institute    and    Henri. 
Member:    S.Indp.A. 

SCHWARTZ,  Andrew  (Thomas),  246  Ful- 
ton St.,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P. — Born  Louisville,  Ky.,  Jan.  20, 
1867.  Pupil  of  Duveneck  in  Cincin- 
nati; ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Mowbray. 
Member:  Mural  P.;  N.Y.  Arch. Lg. 
1904;  AWCS;  Circolo  Artistica  of  Rome; 
Union  Inter.des  Beaux-Arts  et  des  Let- 
tres,  Paris;  Allied  AA. ;  Salma.C. 
Award:  Lazarus  scholarship  to  Italy, 
1899-1902.  Work:  "Christ,  the  Good 
Shepherd,"  Baptist  Church,  South  Lon- 
donderry, _  Vt.;  and  in  Cincinnati  Art 
Museum   and   Utica  Public  Library. 

SCHWARTZ,     Charles,     236     So.     Harris 

Ave.,    Columbus,    O. 

P. — M  ember  :  Pen  and  Pencil  C,  Co- 
lumbus. 

SCHWARTZ,  Elizabeth,  3337  North  17th 
St.;  h.  34  So.  17th  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS; 
Plastic  C;   NYWCC. 

SCHWARTZKOPF,       Earl      C,      care      of 
Willys-Overland    Co.,    Toledo,    Ohio. 
P.,   I.,    C— Born   in   Ohio,    May   26,    1888. 
M  e  m  b  er:    Toledo   Tile   Club. 

SCHWARZ,  Amy.  Middle  City  Bldg.,  Phil- 
adelphia, Pa. 
P. — M  ember:   N.   A.   Women   PS. 

SCHWEIZER,  J.  Otto,  2215  West  Ve- 
nango St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
S. — Born  in  Zurich,  Switzerland,  Mar. 
27,  1863.  Pupil  of  Tuiller  in  Paris; 
Royal  Academy,  Dresden;  Schilling  in 
Dresden;  Art  School,  Zurich;  and  in 
Italy.  Member:  NSS.  Works: 
"Gen.  Muhlenberg,"  and  "James  B. 
Nicholson,"  Philadelphia:  "Gen,  Steu- 
ben," Utica,  N.  Y.,  and  Valley  Forge, 
Pa. ;  Abraham  Lincoln  and  Generals 
Humphrey,  Geary,  Hays,  Pleasanton, 
Gregg,  Pa.  State  Memorial;  Gen.  Wells 
Monument  for  State  of  Vermont,  at 
Gettysburg,  Pa.;  Molly  Pitcher  Monu- 
ment for  State  of  Pennsylvania  at  Car- 
lisle, Pa.;  statue  and  relief  work,  "Lin- 
coln," for  the  Union  League  of  Phila- 
delphia; "Senator  Clay,"  Marietta,  Ga. ; 
Joseph  Johns,  fountain,  Johnstown, 
Pa.;  Robert  Schumann,  Jersey  City; 
Melchior  Muhlenberg  with  heroic  size 
relief  groups,  Germantown,  Pa.;  Adj. 
Gen.  Stewart,  Capitol,  Harrisburg,  Pa.; 
equestrian  statue  of  Major  Gen.  F.  W. 
von  Steuben,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 

SCOFIELD,     Edna,     1620     30th     St.,     San 
Diego,  Calif. 
P.— M  ember:   Calif.   AC. 

SCOFIELD,  William  Bacon,  Chase  Bldg., 
42  Front  St.;  h.  Worcester  Club,  Wor- 
cester,  Mass. 

■S.— Born  Hartford,  Conn.,  Feb.  8,  1864. 
Pupil  of  Gutzon  Borglum.  Work: 
"Good  and  Bad  Spirit,"  bronze,  Worces- 
ter Art  Museum.  Author  of  "Verses," 
and  "Poems  of  the  War";  "A  Forgotten 
Idyl";   "Sketches  in  Verse  and  Clay." 


558 


SCOTT 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


SEARS 


SCOTT,  Anna  Page,  1212  Locust  St., 
Dubuque,    la. 

P.,  C,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Dubuque,  la. 
Pupil  of  Anshutz,  Arthur  Dow  and  of 
the  Colarossi  Academy,  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Alumni  AIC;  Fellowship  PAFA. 
Work  :  "The  Shores  of  the  Pacific", 
Carnegie  Stout  Public  Library,  Dubuque. 
Author,  "Art  in  its  Relation  to  Indus- 
try",  etc. 

SCOTT,  Charles  T(homas),  320  So.  Broad 

St..  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  h.  Churchville, 
Bucks    Co.,    Pa. 

P„  S.,  C,  T,— Born  in  Chester  Co.,  Pa., 
Dec.  4,  1876.  Pupil  of  School  of  In- 
dustrial Art  of  the  Pennsylvania  Mu- 
seum. Member:  Eastern  Art  Teach- 
ers' Assoc. ;  "Alumni  Assoc.  Philadelphia 
School  of  Industrial  Art.  Instructor  in 
charge  Depart,  of  Decorative  Sculpture 
Constructive  Design  and  Pottery,  Penn- 
sylvania Museum  School  of  Industrial 
Art. 

SCOTT,  Colin  (Alexander),  College  St., 
South  Hadley,  Mass.;  summer,  Prov- 
incetown,  Mass. 

P.,  T. — Born  Ottawa,  Canada,  Feb.  11, 
1861.     Member:     Providence   AA. 

SCOTT,  Edith  A.,  102  Fenway  Studios, 
Boston;  h.  220  Forest  St.,  Medford, 
Mass. 

P.,  T. — Born  Faulkner,  Mass.  Pupil  of 
Tarbell,  Benson  and  Hale.  Member: 
Copley  S. 

SCOTT,  Jeannette,  1111  East  Genesee  St., 
Syracuse,    N.   Y. 

P.,  T. — Born  Kincardine,  Ont.,  Canada, 
Sept.  26,  1864.  Pupil  of  PAFA  and 
Phila.  School  of  Design  for  Women,  and 
studied  in  Paris.  Member:  College 
AA;  Alliance.  Work  in:  Syracuse 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts.  Professor  of 
painting,  'Syracuse  Univ.  since  1895; 
head  of  dept.   since  1902. 

SCOTT,  John  G(reen),  652  East  Broad 
St.,  Tamaque,  Pa. 

I. — Born  Buck  Mountain,  Pa.,  Nov.  15, 
1887.      Pupil   of  Pa.    School   of   Ind.   Art. 

SCOTT,  Katharine  H(all),  Mason  City, 
Iowa. 

Port,  and  Min,  P. — Born  Burlington,  la., 
Apr.  19,  1871.     Pupil  of  AIC,  Vanderpoel 

and  Chase,  Chicago  School  of  Industrial 
Art.  Member:  Alumni  AIC;  ASL 
of  Chicago;  Chicago  AG;  Western  Arts 
Asso.;  W.  D.  and  M.  T.  Teacher. 
Works  :  "Portrait  Judge  Newman," 
Des  Moines  County  Court  House,  Public 
Library,  Burlington,  la.;  "Portrait 
T.  W.  Barhydt,"  Merchants'  National 
Bank,  and  Parsons  College,  Fairfield, 
la.  Instructor  Art  Dept.,  111.  State  Nor- 
mal  University,    Normal,   111. 

SCOTT,  William  Edouard,  3160  Indiana 
Ave.,  Chicago,  111.;  h.  1124  North  Senate 
Ave..  Indianapolis.  Ind. 
P. — Born  Indianapolis,  1884.  Pupil  of 
AIC:  Julian  and  Colarossi  Academies, 
Paris;  H.  O.  Tanner  in  France. 
Award  :  Municipal  Art.  Lg.  Traveling 
Scholarship.  Represented  by  mural 
decorations     in     Chicago,     Indianapolis 


and  Evanston,  111.;  Herron  Art  Inst., 
Indianapolis;  Fort  Wayne  (Ind.)  Court 
House;  Lafayette  (Ind.)  Court  House; 
Springfield,  111.,  Court  House;  one  paint- 
ing owned  by  the  Argentine  Govern- 
ment. 

SCOTT,    William    J.,    206    West    13th    St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

SCOVEL,    Florence.      See    Mrs.    Shinn. 

SCRYMSER,  Christabel,  34  Lewis  Place, 
Rockville    Center,    N.    Y.      (P.) 

SCUDDER,  (Alice)  Raymond,  1631  Oc- 
tavia  St.,  New  Orleans,  La. 
P.,  C. — Born  New  Orleans,  La.  Pupil 
of  Newcomb  Art  School;  N.  Y.  School 
of  Applied  Design;  Chase  and  Mora. 
Member:   New  Orleans  AA. 

SCUDDER,  Janet,  care  of  Morgan  Harjes, 
Place  Vendome,  Paris,  France;  46 
Washington  Mews,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Terre  Haute,  Ind.,  Oct.  27, 
1873.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy 
under  Rebisso;  Taft  in  Chicago;  Mac- 
monnies  in  Paris.  Member:  NSS 
1904;  N. A.  Women  PS;  NAC.  Awards: 
Medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago.  1893; 
hon.  mention.  Sun  Dial  Competition, 
New  York,  1898;  bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  hon.  mention,  Paris 
Salon,  1911;  sculpture  prize.  N.A.  Wom- 
en PS  1914;  silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915.  First  American  woman  to  have 
work  bought  for  the  Luxembourg,  Paris. 
Work  :  Seal  for  the  Association  of  the 
Bar  of  the  City  of  New  York;  "Japanese 
Art,"  fagade  of  Brooklyn  Institute  Mu- 
seum; "Frog  Fountain,"  Metropolitan 
Museum.  New  York;  "Fighting  Boy 
Fountain,"  Art  Institute.  Chicago,  111.; 
three  medallions  in  gold  and  three  in 
silver.  Art  Association,  Indianapolis, 
Ind.;  portrait  medallions  in  Congres- 
sional Library,  Washington;  Metropoli- 
tan Museum,  New  York;  Musoe  du  T  iix- 
embourg,  Paris;  medal  of  Indiana  Cen- 
tennial, Minneapolis  Institute;  "Medal," 
R.  I.  School  of  Design,  Providence; 
"Tortoise  Fountain,"  Peabody  Institute, 
Baltimore. 

SCULLY,  Mary  M.  M.  (Mrs.  Henry  R. 
Scully),  201  South  Lexington  Ave.,  East 
End.    Pittsburgh,    Pa. 

P.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Sept.  3,  1853. 
Pupil  of  Pittsburgh  School  of  Design  for 
Women.  Member:  Alumnae  Asso. 
Pittsburgh  School  of  Design  for  Women; 
Pittsburgh  AA. 

SEARLE,  Alice  T.,  241  Fenimore  St., 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Min. P. —Born  Troy,  N.  Y.,  Feb.  8,  1869. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Colarossi  Acad- 
emy and  Mme.  Debillemo.;t-Chardon  in 
Paris.  Member:  Brooklyn  A. Guild. 
Award:  Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,    1904. 

SEARS,  Sarah  C(hoate)  (Mrs.  J.  Mont- 
gomery Sears),  12  Arlington  St.,  Bos- 
ton,   Mass. 

P.— Born  Cambridge.  Mass.,  May  5,  1858. 
Pupil  of  Ross  Turner,  Joseph  De  Camp, 
Dennis  M.  Bunker,  Edmund  C.  Tarbell 
and  George  de  Forest  Brush.  M  e  m- 
ber:    NYWCC;    Copley   S.    1891;    NAC; 


559 


SEARS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


SEVERANCE 


Phila.WCC;  Boston  WCC;  Boston  SAC 
(life.)  Awards:  Evans  prize,  AWCS 
1893;  medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago, 
1893;  hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp.,  1900; 
bronze  medal  for  water  color,  Pan-Am. 
Exp..  Buffalo.  1901;  silver  medal  for 
water  color,  Charleston  Exp..  1902;  sil- 
ver medal,  St.   Louis  Exp.,  1904. 

SEARS,  Taber,  96  Fifth  Ave.;  h.  784  Park 
Ave..  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  1870. 
Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School;  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris  under  Constant, 
Laurens  and  Merson.  Member: 
N.Y.Arch.Lg-.  1899;  NYWCC;  AWCS; 
Mural  P.;  A. Aid  S.;  N.Y.Municipal  AS; 
Century  Assoc;  MacD.C.  Award: 
Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 
Work:  "Spirit  of  Niagara,"  Buffalo 
Historical  Soc;  "New  York  Among  the 
Nations."  N.  Y.  City  Hall;  stained  glass 
windows,  Presbyterian  Church,  Plain- 
field,  N.  J.;  painting,  altar-pieces, 
Chapel  of  the  Intercession  and  Grace 
Church  Choir  School,  New  York  City; 
altar-piece.  Trinity  Church,  Buffalo, 
N.  Y.;  reredos  paintings.  First  Presby- 
terian Church;  and  in  Chemical  Na- 
tional Bank,   New  York,  N.  Y. 

SEATON,  C.    H.,  Glencarlyn,   Va. 

P.— Born  Monson,  Mass.,  Aug.  25,  1865. 
Self-taught.  Member:  S. Wash. A.; 
Wash.   Landscp.   C. 

SEAWELL,  H(enry)  W(ashington).  1617 
California  St.,  San  Francisco,  Calif. 
P.,  I.,  T. — Born  San  Francisco.  Pupil 
of  Laurens  and  Constant  in  Paris. 
Member:  Paris  AAA;  Bohemian  C, 
San  Francisco. 

SEE.  Ella  E.,  83  So.  Fitzhugh  St.,  Roches- 
ter, N.  Y. 
P.,   T.— M  ember:  Rochester  AC. 

SEEBOLD,      Marie      M.       See     Mrs.     A. 

Molinary. 
SEIDEL.   Emory   P.,  McClurg  Bldg.,   Chi- 
cago, 111.     (P.) 

SEIDENECK,      George      J(oseph),      Tree 

Studio  Bldg.,  4  East  Ohio  St.,  Chicago, 
111. 

P.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Feb.  4,  1885.  Pu- 
pil of  Walter  Thor  and  von  Marr. 
Member:  Chicago  AC;  Chicago  AG; 
Chicago  SA;  Chicago  Palette  and  Chisel 
C.  Work:  "Portrait  of  Judge  Sea- 
man,"   Federal    Building,    Chicago. 

SEIPP,   Alice,   188   Claremont   Ave.,    New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Mar. 
7,  1889.  Pupil  of  Douglas  Volk,  B.  W. 
Clinedinst  and  Jane  Peterson.  Mem- 
ber: N.  A.  Women  PS;  NYWCC; 
PBC. 

SELDEN,  Miss  Dixie,  715  Race  St.;  h. 
?^46  Bedford  Ave.,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P..  I. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.  Pupil  of 
Cincinnati  Art  Academy  under  Duve- 
neck;  W.  M.  Chase;  H.  B.  Snell. 
Member:  Cincinnati  Woman's  AC; 
N.   A.  Women  PS;   Cincinnati  MacD.   S. 

SELLERS.    Mary   (or   Minnie),   6216  Howe 
St..  Pittsburgh.  Pa. 

P.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Nov.  23,  1869.  Pu- 
pil  of  Alexander  Robinson   and  of   Au- 


gust Hennicott  in  Holland.  Mem- 
ber: Associated  Artists  of  Pittsburgh; 
N.    A.    Women   PS. 

SENAT,     Prosper      L.,    Ye     Old     Tavern, 
Annisquam,    Mass. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

SENEGAL,  Ralph  L.,  Three  Rivers,  Mass. 
P.,  I. — Born  Bolton,  Canada,  Aug.  3, 
1883.       Pupil     of     NAD.       Member: 

Springfield  AC;  Connecticut  SA;  Spring- 
field AL. 

SENSENEY,  George,  55  New  South  St., 
Northampton,  Mass;  1207  Tower  Bldg., 
Chicago,  111. 

P.,  Etcher.— Born  Wheeling,  W.  Va., 
Oct.  11,  1874.  Pupil  of  Corcoran  Art 
School  in  Washington  under  Howard 
Helmick;  Laurens  and  Constant  in 
Paris.  Member:  Chicago  SE;  Salma. 
C;  Soc.des  Graveurs  en  Couleurs. 
Award  :  Silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San 
F.,  1915.  Work  in:  Library  of  Con- 
gress,   Washington,    D.    C. 

SENTERI.    Florio,    1529    59th    St.,    Brook- 
lyn,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

SERRAO,  Mrs.  Luella  Varney,  1875  East 
81st  St.,  Cleveland,  O. 
S.— Born  Angola,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  11,  1865. 
Work:  "An  Archbishop  of  Odessa," 
Roman  Catholic  Cathedral,  Odessa, 
Russia;  "Bust  of  Senator  Rice,"  State 
Capitol  of  Minnesota;  "Bust  of  Arch- 
bishop Wigger,"  Seaton  Hall,  Newark, 
N.  J.;  busts  of  Mark  Twain  and  Mr. 
Brett,  Cleveland  Public  Library;  "Mon- 
ument of  Archbishop  Rappe,"  Catholic 
Cathedral,   Cleveland,   O. 

SERVER,  J(ohn)  William,  43  South  18th 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer,  care  of 
American  Express  Co.,  Paris,  France. 
P.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  May  21, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Deigendesch,  Chase  and 
Coiarbssi.  Member:  Phila.  ASL.; 
TSquareC,    Phila. 

SETON,  Ernest  Thompson,  Greenwich, 
Conn. 

I.,  W.,  L.— Born  South  Shields.  Eng- 
land, Aug.  14,  1860.  Pupil  of  G4r(*>me. 
Bouguereau,  Ferrier  and  Mosler  in  Paris. 
Specialty,  animals.  Author  and  illus- 
trator: "Art  Anatomy  of  Animals," 
"Wild  Animals  I  Have  Known,"  "The 
Biography  of  a  Grizzly,"  "Animal  He- 
roes," "The  Book  of  Woodcraft."  etc. 
Head  of  Bov  Scout  movement  in  Amer- 
ica until  1915;  Chief  of  Woodcraft 
League. 

SEVERANCE,  Julia  G(rldley),  68  South 
Professor  St.,  Oberlin,  O. 
S.,  E.,  T.— Born  Oberlin,  O.,  Jan.  11, 
1877.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber: Cleveland  Woman's  AC.  Work: 
"Rice  Memorial  Tablet,"  Oberlin  Con- 
servatory of  Music,  Oberlin  College,  O. ; 
etching  in  Print  Dept..  Library  of  Con- 
gress, \Vashington,  D.  C;  Cobb  Memo- 
rial Tablet,  Warner  Hall,  Oberlin,  O.; 
Leffingwell  Tablet,  St.  Mary's  School, 
Knoxville,   111. 


560 


SEW  ELL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


SHARPE 


SEWELL     (Lydia)     A(manda),     Brewster 

(Mrs.  Robert  V.  V.  Sewell),  15  West 
67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  "Fleetwood," 
Oyster  Bay,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  North  Elba,  Essex  Co.,  N.  Y., 
Feb.  24,  1859.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
under  Chase;  Julian  Academy  under 
Robert-FIeury  and  Carolus  Duran  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1903;  N.  A. 
Women  PS;  Cosmopolitan  C.  Awards: 
Dodge  prize,  NAD  1888;  bronze  medal, 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  bronze 
medal,  Pan-Am.  Exp..  Buffalo.  1901;  sil- 
ver medal.  Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  Clarke 
prize,  NAD  1903;  bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904. 

SEWELL,  Helen  Moore,  Prospect  Bldg., 
Prospect  St.;  52  Heights  Road,  Ridge- 
wood,  N.  J.;  summer,  Burnt  Hill,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Mare  Island,  Cal.,  June  27, 
1896.  Pupil  of  Frederick  Baker,  Otto 
Beck,  Max  Herrmann,  and  C.  W.  Haw- 
thorne.   Member  :   Alliance;  NYWCC. 

SEWELL,  Robert  V(an)  V(orst),  15  West 
67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  "Fleetwood," 
Oyster  Bay,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P. — Born  New  York,  N.  Y  , 
3  860.  Pupil  of  Lefebvre  and  Boulanger 
in  Paris.  Member:  ANA  1901;  N.Y. 
Arch.Lg.  1899;  Mural  P.;  Century 
Assoc;  Union  League  C. ;  Lotos  C. 
Awards  :  First  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD  1889;  silver  medal,  Boston,  1891; 
silver  medal,  Pan-Am.  Exp..  Buffalo, 
1901;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 
Work:  "The  Canterbury  Pilgrims," 
Georgian  Court,  Lakewood,  N.  J.; 
"Psyche,"  St.  Regis  Hotel,  New  York; 
"A  Silver  Sea,"  Sweat  Memorial,  Port- 
land. Me. 

SEYDEL,    Victor    L.    A.,    86    Haven    Ave.. 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  Terrace  Park.   O. 
P. — Member:     Cincinnati    AC;     Sal- 
ma.   C. 

SEYFFERT,  Helen  F.  (Mrs.  Leopold  G. 
Seyffert),  1730  Chestnut  St.,  Phila.,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Fellowship    PAFA. 

SEYFFERT,  Leopold,  1730  Chestnut  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P. — Born  Colorado  Springs.  Colo. 
Member:  ANA  1916;  Phila.  AC; 
Allied  AA;  Pittsburgh  AA;  Port. P.; 
Salma.  C  Awards:  Fellowship 
prize  ($100),  PAFA,  1913;  hon.  mention, 
CI  Pittsburgh,  1913;  gold  medal,  Phila. 
AC,  1915;  silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San 
F..  1915;  Beck  gold  medal.  PAFA.  1918; 
Altman  prize  ($500),  NAD,  1918;  first 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD,  1918;  Temple 
gold  medal,  PAFA,  1921;  Proctor  prize, 
NAD,    1921. 

SEYMOUR,  Ralph  Fletcher,  410  Michigan 
Blvd.,  Chicago,  111.;  h.  Ravinia,  Lake 
County,   111. 

L,  E.,  T.— Born  Milan,  111.,  Mar.  18, 
1876.  Pupil  of  Nowottny  and  Meakin 
in  Cincinnati.  Studied  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SI.  Work:  Etching 
in  Chicago  Art  Inst. ;  Milwaukee  Art 
Inst.;  Los  Angeles  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts.  Instructor,  decorative  illustra- 
tion,     Chicago   Art    Institute,    1909-1918. 


K.,    2260    Park    Ave., 
Cincinnati     Woman's 


561 


SEYMOUR,    Ralph    Russell,   care  Phoenix 
National  Bank,   Hartford,   Conn. 
P. — M  ember:    Conn.    AFA. 

SEYMS,  Katherlne,  181  Collins  St.,  Hart- 
ford,   Conn. 
P. — M  ember:    Conn.    AFA. 

SHAFER,  L.  A.,  232  Liberty  Ave.,  New 
Rochelle,   N.   Y. 

P., E., I.— Born  Genesco,  III.,  Nov.  17, 
1866.  Pupil  AI  Chicago.  Member:  SI  1911. 
Illustrator  of  "The  Shock  of  Battle," 
by  Vaux;  "The  Road  to  Glory,"  by 
Powell. 

SHAFFER,     Lucy 
Cincinnati,    O. 
P. — M  ember: 
AC. 

SHAND,   Helen,  Naberth,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:   Fellowship  PAFA. 

SHANNON,  Howard  J(ohnson),  73  Union 
Ave.,  Jamaica,  Queens  Borough,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  I. — Born  Jamaica,  N.  Y.,  May  80, 
1876.  Pupil  of  Pratt  Institute  under 
Herbert  Adams  and  F.  V.  Du  Mond. 
Illustrated  nature  and  science  sections, 
Century  Dictionary;  Zoological  Soc. 
Bulletins;  writer  and  Illustrator  of  sci- 
ence articles  in  "St.  Nicholas,"  "Har- 
per's Magazine,"  "Scientific  Monthly" 
and  "Journal  of  the  American  Museum 
of  Natural  History." 

SHARMAN,   John,  Winchester,   Mass. 
P. — M  ember:    Phila.    AC. 

SHARP,  J(oseph)  H(enry),  winter,  Crow 
Agency,  Montana;  summer.  Taos,  N. 
M. ;  permanent,  care  of  Art  Museum, 
Cincinnati,    O. 

P.,  L,  T.— Born  Bridgeport,  O.,  Sept.  27, 
1859.  Pupil  of  Royal  Academy  in  Mu- 
nich and  under  Marr;  Julian  Acad.  In 
Paris  under  Laurens  and  Benjamin- 
Constant;  Verlat  in  Antwerp;  Duve- 
neck  in  Spain.  Member:  Cincin- 
nati AC;  Calif. AC;  Salma.C;  Chicago 
AG;  Taos  Soc.  of  Artists;  Calif.P.M. 
Ten  years  on  faculty,  Cincinnati  Art 
Academy.      Awards:     Silver    medal, 

.  Dept.  of  Ethnology,  Pan-Am. Exp..  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  first  portrait  prize,  Cincin- 
nati AC  1901;  gold  medal,  Pan.-Cal.- 
Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915.  Specialtv,  types 
of  Indians.  Work:  "Harvest  Dance- 
Pueblo  Indians,"  "Old  Dog— Crow  In- 
dian Chief."  and  "Strikes  His  Enemy 
Pretty,"  Cincinnati  Mus.;  "Chief  Flat 
Iron,"  Herron  Art  Inst.,  Indianapolis; 
"The  Great  Sleep."  and  nearly  one  hun- 
dred portraits  of  Indians  and  Indian  pic- 
tures, University  of  California;  eleven 
Indian  portraits,  Smithsonian  Institu- 
tion, Washington;  "1920  Ration  Day  on 
the  Reservation,"  "A  Young  Chief's 
Mission,"  Butler  Art  Inst.;  "The  Stoic," 
Museum  of  Santa  Fe. 

SHARP,    W.    A.,    114    North    Spring    St., 
Los  Angeles,   Cal. 
P.— M  ember:    Cal.    AC. 

SHARPE,  H.  Percy,  315  2nd  Ave.,  North, 
Seattle,  Wash.  (P.) 


SHARPE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


SHERMAN 


SHARPE.  Julia  Graydon,  1314  North  Dela- 
ware St.;  1704  North  Pennsylvania  St., 
Indianapolis,  Ind.;  summer,  Idylwilde, 
Harbor  Springs,  Mich. 
P.,  D.^ — Born  Indianapolis,  Ind.  Pupil 
of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  W.  M.  Chase,  Indiana 
School  of  Art;  J.  Otis  Adams;  William 
Forsyth;  H.  Siddons  Mowbray;  Saint 
Gaudens.  Member:  ASL  of  N.  Y. ; 
Indiana   SA. 

SHATTUCK,  A(aron)  D(raper),  Granby, 
Conn. 

Ldscp.P. — Born  Francestown,  N.  H., 
March  9,  1832.  Pupil  of  Alexander  Ran- 
som in  Boston;  NAD  in  New  York. 
Member:  ANA  1856,  NA  1861. 
Work:  "Down  in  the  Meadows,"  Al- 
bright  Art   Gallery,    Buffalo,    N.    Y. 

SHAVER,  J.  R.,  131  West  23d  St..  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  I. — Born  Evening  Shade,  Ark.,  Mar. 
27.  1867.  Pupil  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine 
Arts.  Member:  SI  1910.  Weekly 
illustrations  in  "Life."  Author  of 
"Little  Shavers,"  a  book  of  numerous 
drawings   of  child   life. 

SHAW,  Russell  H.,  155  Cypress  St.,  Prov- 
idence,  R.   I. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence   AC. 

SHAW,  Sydney  Dale,  432  West  34th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  1824  Morton  Ave., 
Pasadena,    Cal. 

P.,  C. — Born  Walkley,  England,  Aug. 
16,  1879.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Acad- 
emie  Colarossi  and  Ecole  des  Beaux- 
Arts  in  Paris.  Member:  Calif.  AC; 
AWCS.  A  w  a  r  u  s  :  Silver  medal,  Pan- 
Calif.  Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915;  hon.  men- 
tion, Los  Angeles,  1916;  Hudnut  prize, 
AWCS,    New   York.    1917. 

SHEAFER,  Frances  B(urwell)  (,Mrs. 
Samuel  Waxman),  46  Avon  Hill  St., 
Cambridge,    Mass. 

P..  C.  W. — Born  in  Pennsylvania.  Pupil 
of  PAFA;  Phila.  School  of  Design  for 
Women,  and  William  Sartain.  Mem- 
ber: Plastic  C;  Copley  S.  Award: 
Special  silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904. 

SHEAFER,  Frank  W.,  3900  Walnut  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P.— Born  Pottsville,  Pa.,  April  1,  1867. 
Pupil  of  PAFA. 

SHEAN,  Charles  M.,  51  West  10th  St., 
Manhattan;  h.  75  Van  Buren  St.,  Brook- 
lyn, New  York,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P.— Born  Brooklyn.  Pupil  of  ASL 
in  New  York;  Cabanel  in  Paris.  M  e  m- 
ber:  Mural  P.;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1887; 
Salma.C.  Award  :  Bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,   1904. 

SHEELER,  Charles  R.,  Jr.,  33  West  67th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Doyles- 
town,  Bucks  Co.,  Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  July  16,  1883. 
Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Chase. 

SHEERER,  Mary  G.,  1404  Broadway, 
South,  New  Orleans,  La. ;  summer, 
Ogunquit,   Me. 

P.,  C,  T. — Born  Covington,  Ky.  Pupil 
of    Cincinnati    Art    Academy;     PAFA; 


ASL  of  N.  Y.     M  e  m  b  e  r  :  N.  O.  AA; 

La.  Art  Teachers'  A;  New  Orleans 
Arts  and  Crafts  C. 

SHEFFER,  Glen  C,  59  East  Van  Buren 
St.;  h.  737  North  Michigan  Blvd.,  Chi- 
cago,  111. 

I. — Born  Angola,  Ind.,  in  1881.  Pupil 
of  AIC  and  Chicago  Academy  of  Fine 
Arts.  Member:  Palette  and  Chisel 
C. 

SHELDEN,  C.  G.,  1431  Grand  Ave.,  Ev- 
eritt.   Wash.    (P.) 

SHELDON,    Walter    G.,    49    Westminster 
St.,    Providence,    R.    I. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence  AC. 

SHELTON,   George   F.,   33   West   21st   St., 
New   York,    N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:    AWCS. 

SHELTON,    William     H.,    47    Fifth    Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

SHEPHERD,  Chester  George,  731  Ply- 
mouth Ct.;  h.  1258  Columbia  Ave.,  Chi- 
cago,  111. 

I. — Born  Lathrop,  Mich.,  in  1894.  Pupil 
of  AIC.  Member:  Palette  and 
Chisel  C;   Alumni  Asso.   of  AIC. 

SHEPHERD,    Clinton,   Leonia,   N.   J. 
I. — M  ember:     SI. 

SHEPHERD,  J.  C,  611  Lincoln  Arcade, 
1947   Broadway,   New   York,   N.   Y.    (I.) 

SHERIDAN,   Frank  J.,  Jr.,  care  of  Sheri- 
dan,   Shawhan    and    Sheridan,    30    East 
34th   St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
I. — M  e  m  b  e  r  :     SI. 

SHERIDAN,   John    E.,   119   East   34th   St.; 
30  East  34th  St.,   New  York.  N.   Y. 
I.— Member:   SI  1912;   Salma. C. 

SHERIFF,  Daisy,  526  Herron  Ave.,  Pitts- 
burgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

SHERINYAN,  Elizabeth,  1  Francis  St., 
Worcester,  Mass.;  summer,  Claremont, 
N.    H. 

P.,  C,  T. — Born  in  Armenia.  Pupil  of 
Hale,  H.  D.  Murphy,  Major,  Greenwood, 
Worcester  Museum  School  and  Mass. 
Normal  Art  School.  Member:  Wor- 
cester Art  Students'  Club;  Claremont 
(N.    H.)    AC,    Hartford   ACC. 

SHERIVIAN,  C.   H.,  45  East  59th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Salma.C. 

SHERMAN,  Ella  Bennett.  (Mrs.  John 
Sherman),  500  Powers  Bl.,  Rochester, 
N.  Y. ;  2700  Connecticut  Ave.,  Washing- 
ton, D.  C. 

P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
Douglas  Volk.  W.  M.  Chase,  and  Robert 
Henri.  Member:  Wash.  WCC; 
Wash.   S.A. 

SHERMAN,  Gail.  See  Mrs.  H.  W.  Cor- 
bett. 

SHERMAN,    Harry    K.,   Butler,    Pa. 
P. — M  ember:      Pitts.  AA. 


562 


SHERMAN 


WHO^S  WHO  IN  ART 


SHRADY 


SHERMAN,     Heyman,    15    East    14th    St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

SHERMAN.    Stowell     B.,    7    Thomas    St., 
Providence,   R,   I. 
P. — M  ember:      Providence   AC. 

SHERWOOD,  Mary  Clare,  All  Saints  Col- 
lege. Vicksburg,  Miss. 
P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Lyons,  May  18,  1868. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Weir, 
Chase  and  Cox;  Conrad  Fehr  and  Curt 
Hermanns  in  Berlin;  F.  Edwin  Scott 
in  I'aris.  Member:  N.  A.  Women 
PS. 

SHERWOOD,  Rosina  Emmet  (Mrs.  Ar- 
thur M.  Sherwood),  77  East  89th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  "Skene 
Wood,"  Westport,  on  Lake  Champlain, 
N.   Y. 

P.— Born  New  York,  Dec.  13,  1854.  Pu- 
pil of  Chase  in  New  York;  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  SAA 
1886;  ANA  1906;  NYWCC;  AWCS 
Awards  :  Silver  medal  for  drawing, 
Paris  Exp.,  1889;  medal.  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  bronze  medals  for 
water  color  and  for  drawings,  Pan -Am. 
Exr).,  Buffalo.  1901;  silver  medal,  St. 
Louis   Exp.,    1904. 

SHERWOOD,  Ruth,  Art  Institute  of  Chi- 
cago; h.  3146  Lake  Park  Ave.,  Chicago, 
111.;    summer,    Chautauqua,    N.    Y. 
S.,  T.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Dec.  21,  1889. 
Pupil  of  Mulligan  and  Polasek. 

SHERWOOD,      William       (Anderson),      33 

Rue  Rembrandt,  Antwerp,  Belgium. 
P.,  E.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Feb.  13, 
1875.  Member:  Societe  Royale  des 
Beaux- Arts  Beige;  Societ6  Royale  des 
Aqua-Fortists  de  Belgique;  Chicago 
SE.  Work:  Etchings  owned  by  Queen 
of  Belgium;  etchings  in  Royal  Library 
at  Brussels,  Musee  Plantin-Moretus, 
Antwerp,  and  Library  of  Congress  at 
Washington;  Cleveland  Public  Library; 
Detroit  Public  Library,  Worcester  Free 
Library. 

SHILLARD-SMITH,     Georglne     Wetherill 

(Mrs.     C.     Shillard-Smith),     Edgewater 

Park.    N.   J. 

P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

SHILLING,  Alexander,  939  Eighth  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Leonia,  N.  J. 
Ldscp.P.,  Etcher. — Born  Chicago,  111. 
Pupil  of  G.  S.  Collis.  Member: 
AWCS;  N.Y.Etching  C;  Salma.C.  1887; 
Awards  :  Gold  medal.  ACPhila.  1901; 
silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Shaw 
etching  prize,  Salma.C.  1913.  Repre- 
sented by  painting  in  Metropolitan 
Museum  of  Art. 

SHIMIZU,   Toshi,   46  West   15th   St.,    New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  e  m  b  e  r  :     S.Indp.A. 

SHINN.  Everett,  Catskill,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P. — Born  Woodstown,  N.  J.,  Nov. 
6,  1876.  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Award  : 
Bronze  medal,  Charleston  Exp.,  1902. 
Work:  Mural  decorations  for  Belasco 
Theatre,  New  York;  "Steel  Wire  In- 
dustry," and  "Pottery  Industry,"  Coun- 


cil Chamber,  City  Hall,  Newark,  N.  J.; 
Painting,  "London  Music  Hall,"  Metro- 
politan Museum  of  Art.  Director  and 
designer  of  Art  Sets,  Goldwyn  Moving 
Picture  Co. 

SHINN,  Florence  Scovel,  136  East  49th 
■St..  New  York.   N.   Y. 

I.— Born  Camden,  N.  J.  Pupil  of  PAFA. 
Illustrated  "Lovey  Mary,"  "Mrs.  Wigga 
of  the  Cabbage  Patch,"  "Coniston," 
etc. 

SHIRAS,    George    E.,   Los   Gatos,    Cal. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

SHIRK,   Jeannette   C,   Glenshaw,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:      Pitts.  AA. 

SHISLER,  Clare  Shepard,  1605  East  Madi- 
son  St.,    Seattle,   Wash. 
Min.    P.— M  ember:      Pa.    S.    Min,    P. 

SHONNARD,  Eugenie  F(rederica),  108  W. 

54th  St.,   New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.,    P.,    T.— Born   Yonkers,    N.    Y.,    Apr. 
29,  1886.     Pupil  of  Bourdelle  and  Rodin. 
Member:  Alliance. 

SHORE,  Henry  B(rengle),  28  East  21st 
St.;  h.  40  West  59th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

E.,  Arch. — Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Oct.  1, 
1862.  Pupil  of  Preissig,  W.  R.  Ware, 
R.  M.  Hunt,  and  Satterlee.  Member: 
N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.;  Chicago  SE;  Brooklvn 
SE.  Etchings  in  New  York  Public 
Library. 

SHORE,  Henrietta  M.,  152  West  57th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  1960  High- 
land Ave.,  Hollywood,  Cal. 
P.,  T. — Born  Toronto,  Canada.  Pupil 
of  Henri,  Chase,  Hayes  Miller  in  New 
York;  studied  in  London.  Member: 
S.  Indp.  A;  Lg.  of  N.  Y.  A;  N.  A. 
Women  PS.  Awards  :  Silver  medal. 
Pan. -Cal.  Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915;  silver 
medal,  Panama-Cal.  Exp.,  San  Diego, 
1916.  Work  :  "Negro  Woman  and 
Children,"  National  GaUery  of  Canada. 
Ottawa. 

SHOREY.  George  H.,  31  West  55th  St., 
New  York.  N.  Y. :  h.  Grantwood,  N.  J.; 
summer.  Burnt  Hills,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Hoosick  Falls,  N.  Y., 
Sept.  9,  1870.  Pupil  of  Walter  Shirlaw. 
Director.  Artist-Artisan  Institute,  1898- 
1903.  Work:  Illustrations:  "Cathedral 
of  St.  John  the  Divine";  "New  York 
Parks";  "Old  Kingston,"  etc.;  "The  As- 
cension," mural  painting  in  Trinity 
JDpiscopal  Church,  Grantwood.  N.  J. 
Director,  Art  Denartment,  Browning 
School.    New   York,    N.    Y. 

SHRADER,    E(dwin)    Roscoe,    1927    High- 
land  Ave.,    Hollywood,    Calif. 
P.,  I.,  L.,  T.— Born  Quincy,  111.,  Dec.  14, 
1879.     Pupil   of   AIG   and   Howard   Pyle. 
Member:    Calif.    AC. 

SHRADY,  Henry  M(erw!n),  Elmsford, 
N.    Y. 

S.— Born  New  York.  N.  Y..  Oct.  24. 
1871.  Pupil  of  Columbia  University. 
Member  :  ANA  1909;  NSS  1902;  N.  Y. 
Arch.  Lg.  1902;  Nat.  Inst.  AL.  Work  : 
Equestrian.  "Washington,"  Brooklyn, 
New  York;    "Grant  Memorial."     Wash- 


563 


SHRAMM 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


SILVERBERG 


Ington;  equestrian,  "William  the  Si- 
lent," for  Holland  Society:  "Gen.  Wil- 
liams." Detroit;  "Gen.  Lee,"  Charlottes- 
ville,  Va;    "Jay   Cooke,"    Duluth,    Minn. 

SHRAMM,     Paul     H.,     671    Auburn    Ave., 
Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

S.,  P.,  I.,  C,  T,.— Born  Heidenheim,  Ger- 
many. Dec.  22,  1867.  Pupil  of  Claudinso, 
Schrandolph  and  Jacob  Grunenwald  in 
Stuttgart;  MacNeil  at  Pratt  Inst., 
Brooklyn.  Member:  N.Y.  Soc.  C. 
Specialty,  jewelry. 

SHROPSHIRE,  George   E.,  70  Fifth  Ave., 
New   York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

SHRYOCK,  Lucy  W.,  439  So.  Rebecca  St.. 
Pittsburgh.  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA. 

SHULL,  Delia  F.,  18a  East  34th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    N.   A.   Women   PS. 

SHULZ,  Ada  Walter  (Mrs.  Adolph  R. 
Shulz),  Nashville,  Brown  Co.,  Ind. 
P.,  T.— Born  Terre  Haute,  Ind.,  Oct.  21. 
1870.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Vitti  Academy  in 
Paris.  Member:  Chicago  SA;  Wis. 
PS;  Chicago  AG;  Chicago  Cordon  C. 
Work:  "Motherhood,"  Milwaukee  Art 
Institute;  "Mother  and  Child,"  Art  In- 
stitute  of  Chicago.     Specialty,   children. 

SHULZ,      Adolph       R(obert),      Nashville, 
Brown   Co.,   Ind. 

Ldscp.P.,  T.— Born  Delavan,  Wis.,  June 
12,  1869.  Pupil  of  AIC;  ASL  of  N.  Y.; 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under  Le- 
febvre.  Constant  and  Laurens.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SA;  Chicago  AG; 
Wis.  PS.  Awards  :  Young  Fort- 
nightly prize,  AIC  1900;  Grower  prize, 
AIC  1908;  Municipal  A.  Lg.  purchase, 
AIC  1904;  Milwaukee  Art  Inst,  medal, 
1918.  Work:  "Frost  and  Fog,"  Art 
Institute   of   Chicago. 

SHURTLEFF,     Elizabeth,    2    Christopher 
St.,   New    York     N.    Y. 
P.,    C— Born    Ooncord,    N.    H.,    Sept.    3, 
1890.     Pupil  Boston   Museum    School   of 
Fine  Arts 

SHUSTER,  William  Howard,  Camino 
del  Monte  Sol,  Sante  Fe,  N.  M. 
P.,  E.,  C. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Nov. 
26,  1893.  Pupil  of  J.  William  Server, 
John  Sloan.  Member:  S.Indp.A.; 
Los  Cinco  Pintores;  Santa  Fe  Arts  Club. 

SHUTTLEWORTH,  Claire,  370  Elmwood 
Ave.,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  "Mingle- 
streams,"  Chippawa,  Ont.,  Canada. 
P.,  T.— Born  Buffalo.  Pupil  of  Buffalo 
ASL;  Du  Mond  and  Bridgman;  Merson, 
Collin  and  Leroy  in  Paris.  Member: 
Buffalo  SA;  N.  A.  Women  PS.  Award: 
Fellowship  prize,  Buffalo  SA.  1910. 
Work:  "The  Horse  Shoe  Falls  from 
Table  Rock,"  Arnot  Art  Gallery,  El- 
mira,  N.   Y. 

SICHEL,    Harold    M.,    424   West    20th    St., 
New   York,   N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

SIEBERN,    E.,   99   Sixth  Ave.,   New   York, 
N.   Y.    (P.) 

SIEBERT,    Anne    W.    S.,    182    West    10th 
Ave..   Columbus.   O.    (Min.  P.) 


SIEBERT,     Edward     S(elmar),     37    East 

Ave.,   Rochester,   N.   Y. 

P.,    E.,    T.— Born    Washington,    D.    C, 

July  1,  1856.  Pupil  of  Baur  in  Weimar, 
Carl  Hoff  in  Karlsruhe,  William  von 
Diez  in  Munich.  Award:  Hon.  men- 
tion and  one  prize,  Rochester,  N.  Y. 
Work:  "Flute  Player,"  Corcoran  Gal- 
lery  of  Art,   Washington,   D.    C. 

SIEMSEN,  Frederick  F.,  23  West  12th 
St.,   New  York,   N.  Y.    (L) 

SIEVERS,  F(rederick)  William,  Forest 
Hill,   Richmond,   Va. 

S.— Born  Fort  Wayne,  Ind.,  Oct.  26, 
1872.  Studied  in  Richmond,  Va.;  Royal 
Academy  of  Fine  Arts  in  Rome  under 
Ferrari;  and  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Work:  Equestrian  statute  of  Gen. 
Lee  and  group  at  Gettysburg,  Pa.; 
equestrian  statute  of  Stonewall  Jack- 
son,  Richmond,   Va. 

SIEVERS,     Mrs.    Lucille    Scott,    66    Gris- 
wold   St.,  Delaware,   Ohio. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

SILEIKA,  Jonas,  Juodagoniu  K.  Lekeciu 
v.,  Pastas  Sakiai,  Lithuania. 
P.,  T.— Born  Lithuania,  June  25,  1883. 
Studied  at  AIC  and  Royal  Academy, 
Munich.  Member:  Chicago  SA;  Art 
Society  of  Lithuania.  Award  :  Joseph 
N.  Eisendrath  prize,  AIC,  1920.  Work: 
"My  Home,"  Gallery  of  Vilna,  Lithu- 
ania. Specialty,  portraits  and  land- 
scapes. 

SILSBEE,   Martha,  82  Chestnut  St.,  Bos- 
ton,  Mass.;  h.  Monadnock,  N.  H. 
P.— Born      Salem,      Mass,      Nov.,      1858. 
Member:     Boston  WCC. 

SILVA,  William  P.,  Carmel-by-the-Sea, 
Calif. 

P. — Born  Savannah,  Ga.  Pupil  of  Ju- 
lian Academy  in  Paris  under  Laurens 
and  Royer;  Chauncey  Ryder  at  Eta- 
ples,  France.  Member:  S.  Wash.  A.: 
Miss.  AA.  Awards  :  Silver  medal, 
Appalachian  Exp.,  Knoxville,  1913;  sil- 
ver medal,  Pan.-Cal.Exp.,  San  Diego, 
1915;  gold  medal,  Mississippi  Art  Asso- 
ciation, 1916;  second  prize,  Calif.  State 
Fair.  Sacramento,  1920.  Work:  "Pines 
of  "Picardy,"  Carnegie  Public  Library, 
Chattanooga.  Tenn. :  "Pine  and  Its 
Shadow,"  Gibbes  Gallery,  Charleston, 
S.  C. ;  "Fog  Coming  In — Ogunquit,"  and 
ten  sketches  around  Fort  Worth,  Fort 
Worth  (Tex.)  Art  Association;  "Ponlars 
at  Twilight,"  Brooks  Memorial  Mus., 
Memphis.  Tenn.;  "Foggy  Day.  Ogun- 
quit," Delgado  Museum,  New  Orleans, 
La.;  "A  Street  in  Carmel,"  Public  Li- 
brary, Palo  Alto,  Cal.;  "Afternoon, 
Venice,"  Huntington  Club,  Savannah, 
Ga. ;  "Into  the  Mist,"  Janesville  vWis.) 
Art  League;  "Springtime  in  the  South," 
Mississippi  Art  Gallery,  Jackson,  Miss. 

SILVERBERG.  E.  Myer,  58  West  57th 
St.;  h.  71  East  92nd  St.,  New  York. 
N.   Y. 

Port.  P. — Born  in  Russia,  May  10. 
1876.  Studied  in  Royal  Academy  of 
Fine  Arts,  Munich.  Member:  Pitts- 
burgh AA.  Work  in  High  Schools 
and  other  public  institutions,  Pittsburgh, 


564 


SILVERMAN 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


SKINNER 


SILVERMAN,     Adolph,    2044    Pacific     St., 
Brooklyn,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

SIMBOLI,  Raymond,  163  Reiter  St.,  Pitts- 
burgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA. 

SIMKINS,    Martha,   Woodstock.    N.    Y. 
P.— Born  Texas.     Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
and  Chase.     Member:     N.  A.  Women 
PS;   PBC. 

SIMMONS,  Edward,  16  Gramercy  Park, 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Mural  P.,  C. — Born  Concord,  Mass.,  Oct. 
27,  1852.  Pupil  of  Boulanger  and  I>e- 
febvre  in  Paris.  Member:  Ten 
Am. P.;  Nat. Inst. AL.  Awards:  Hon. 
mention,  Paris  Salon,  1882;  bronze 
medal,  Paiis  Exp.,  1889;  gold  medal, 
Pan- Am. "Exp..  Buffalo,  1901;  collabora- 
tive prize.  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1912.  Work: 
"The  Battle  of  Concord"  and  "Restora- 
tion of  Battle  Flags,"  Massachusetts 
State  House,  Boston;  "The  Muses," 
nine  panels.  Library  of  Congress,  Wash- 
ington; "Justice,"  "The  Fates"  and 
"Liberty.  Fnual:"ty,  Fraternity."  Crim- 
inal Court,  New  York;  four  pendentives, 
dome,  Minnesota  State  Capitol,  St. 
Paul;  decorations  in  Capitol,  Pierre,  S. 
Dak.;  and  in  Court  House,  Mercer,  Pa.; 
Astor  Gallery,  Astoria,  New  York; 
Court  House,  Des  Moines,  la.;  Appellate 
Court,  New  York;  Memorial  Hall,  Har- 
vard College. 

SIMMONS,     F.    Ronald,    65    Prospect    St., 
Providence.   R.   I. 
P. — M  ember:  Providence  WCC. 

SIMMONS,  Will.  1.37  East  57th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  Roxbury,  Conn. 
P.,  I..  E.,  S.— Born  Elche,  Spain,  June 
4,  1884.  Pupil  of  Julian  Academy, 
Lefebvre  and  Alexander  Harrison  In 
Paris.  Member:  Chicago  SE;  P-G; 
Brooklyn  SE.  Represented  in  New 
York  Public  Library. 

SIMON,  Eugene  J.,  665  East  242nd  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Woodstock, 
N.  Y. 

P.— Born  in  Hungary,  May  8.  1889. 
Pupil  of  Kenneth  Hayes  Miller.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :    S.Indp.A.;  Foodstock  AA. 

SIMON,    Marie   Ethalind,  1235   South  58tli 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:   Fellowship  PAFA. 

SIMONS,  Amory  C(offin),  207  East  17th 
St.,  New  York.  N.  Y. 

S.— Born  Charleston,  S.  C,  1869.  Pupil 
of  PAFA;  Dampt  and  Puech  in  Paris, 
Member:  Paris  AAA.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  hon. 
mention,  Pan- Am. Exp.,  Buffalo.  1901; 
silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  hon. 
mention.  Paris  Salon.  1906;  hon.  men- 
tion, P.-P.Exp.,  San  F..  1915. 

SIMPSON,  C.  Helen.  939  8th  Ave.. 
New  York.  N.  Y.;  h.  Greenacre  Ave., 
Hartsdale,    N.    Y. 

P.— Member:  N.  Y.  WCC;  N.  A. 
Women  PS. 

SIMPSON,  Mrs.  Clara  D(avidson),  3  Park 
St.,  Norwalk,  Conn. 

P..  I. — Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  Jan.  16, 
1874.  Pupil  of  ASL  and  Dow  in  New 
York;    Blanche    and    Mucha    In    Paris. 


Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Conn. 
AFA;  Conn.  SA.  Work  in  :  Art  Mu- 
seum,   Rockford,    111. 

SIMPSON,  Mrs.  Edna  Huestis.  211  South 
Parsons  Ave.,  Flushing.  N.  Y. 
Mln.P.— Born  Troy.  N.  Y..  Nov.  26.  1882. 
Pupil  of  Emma  Willard  Art  School; 
Cornell  Univ.:  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber: Pa.Soc.Min.P. 

SIMPSON,    M(axwell)    Stewart,   431  Madi- 
son Ave.,   Elizabeth,   N.   .T. 
P..   E.— Born  Elizabeth,   N.   J.,   Sept.   11, 
1896. 

SIMPSON,  Samuel,  Jolland,  Conn. 
P.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Centerville.   Mich., 
Nov.   24,    1868.      Pupil   of  ASL   of   N.    T. 

SIMS.    Ralph.    Delphi,    Ind. 

S.— M  ember:     Ind.   SS. 
SINCLAIR,     Gerrit    V.     (W.),     333     Third 

St.,  Milwaukee.  Wis. 

P.,   T. — Born  Grand  Haven,   Mich.,   May 

1,   1890.     Pupil  of  Chicago  Art  Institute. 

SINDELAR,  Thomas  A.,  15  Maiden  Lane, 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Elmhurst,  L.  I.. 
N.   Y. 

T. — Born  Cleveland.  O..  Feb.  3.  1867. 
Pupil  of  Carl  Hecker,  Alphonse  M. 
Mucha.  Member:  Salma.C.  1898; 
Lotos    C;    A. Fund    S. 

SINGER,  William  H..  Jr.,  104  West  57th 
St.,   New  York,  N.  Y. 

P — Born  Pittsburgh.  Pa..  .July  5.  1868. 
Member:  Pittsburgh  AS;  Allied  AA; 
ANA  1916;  St.  Lucas  Soc.  of  Art,  Am- 
sterdam. Holland.  Awards:  Silver 
medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915:  Cahn 
hon.  mention,  AIC.  1916.  Represented 
in  the  Portland  Museum  and  in  the 
Hispanic   Museum,    New   York   City. 

SINGERMAN,  Gertrude  Sterne.  1222 
Summit  Ave.,    Seattle,   Wash.    (P.) 

SKELTON,  Leslie  J(ames),  1225  North 
Teion  St..  Colorado  Springs.  Colo. 
Ldscp.P.,  I. — Born  Montreal.  CaTiada. 
April  27.  1848.  Pupil  of  Twill  In  Paris. 
Member:  Colorado  Springs  AS. 
Work  in  National  Art  Gallery  of  Can- 
ada, Ottawa.  Canada;  Perkins  Art  Gal- 
lery.   Colorado   College. 

SKEMP.  Mrs.  Olive  H.,  702  Arthur  Ave.. 
Scottdale,    Pa. 

P. — M  ember:  S.Indp.A.;  Pittsburgh, 
Pa. 

SKIDMORE,  Lewis  Palmer,  214  Clermont 
Ave.,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Port 
Jefferson,  L.  L,  N.  Y. 
P.,  E.,  T.— Born  Bridgeport.  Conn., 
Sept.  3.  1877.  Pupil  of  J.  H.  Niemeyer; 
Laurens  and  Bonnat  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Brooklvn  SA;  Brooklyn  WCC; 
New-   Haven  PCC. 

SKIDMORE.  Thornton   D.,  548  West  188th 
St.,    New  York.    N.    Y. 
I.— Me  m  b  er  :    SI   1914. 

SKINNER.  Dewitt  A.  146  Arbordale  Ave.. 
Rochester,    N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Gates,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  4,  1880. 
Pupil  of  Aim6  Leon  Meyvis. 

SKINNER,  Orin  E.,  188  Federal  St.,  Roch- 
ester,  N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember  :    Rochester  AC. 


565 


SKONVERE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


SMALL 


SKONVERE,      Harold,      707— 11th      Ave., 
Astoria,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

SKOOG,  Karl  F(redrick),  34  Boylston  St., 
Cambridge,    Mass. 

P.,  S.— Born  Sweden,  Nov.  3,  1878.  Pu- 
pil of  Bela  L.  Pratt.  Member:  Conn. 
AFA.  Awards  :  Prize,  Rochester, 
N.  Y.,  1908;  hon.  mention,  AIC,  1912; 
hon.  mention.  Conn.  A  PA,  1915,  1918; 
first  prize,  AIC,  1918;  hon.  mention, 
Chicago  SE,  1920.  Work:  Bust  of 
John  Ericsson  in  K.  of  P.  Bldg.,  Brock- 
ton, Mass. ;  bronze  tablet  in  Home  for 
Aged  Swedish  People,  West  Newton, 
Mass. ;  Perry  Monument,  Forest  Dale 
Cemetery,  relief,  J.  A.  Powers,  Elks 
Bldg.,  Maiden,  Mass.;  medallion,  R.  W. 
Emerson,  Museum  of  Numismatic  So- 
ciety, New  York. 

SLADE,  C.  Arnold,  Rue  d'Assas,  Paris, 
France;  Provincetown,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Acushnet,  Mass.,  Aug.  2,  1882. 
Pupil  of  F.  V.  Du  Mond,  Laurens, 
Schomer  and  Bachet.  Member:  Phila. 
AC;  Paris  AA;  Allied  A.  of  London; 
Grand  Rapids  AC;  Springfield  (111.)  AC; 
New  Bedford  AA;  Phila.  Sketch  C. 
Work:  "Sardine  Boats,  Brittany," 
Springfield  (111.)  Art  Club;  "Venice," 
Philadelphia  Art  Club;  "The  Reapers," 
Attleboro  (Mass.)  Public  Collection; 
"Village  of  Etaples,"  Fenway  Court 
Collection;  "Sea  Waifs,"  New  Bedford 
(Mass.)  Public  Library;  "Vender  of  Co- 
coa Water,"  Milwaukee  Art  Institute; 
"Christ  on  the  Mountain,"  Bethany 
Church,    Philadelphia,    Pa. 

SLADE,  Cora  L.   (Mrs.  Abbott  E.  Slade), 
863    High    St.,    Fall   River,    Mass, 
P. — Pupil  of  Robert  S.  Dunning.    M  e  m- 
ber:     Providence     AC;     Boston     AG; 
Newport  AA;  Fall  River  AC. 

SLAFTER,  Theodore  S.,  Readville,  Mass. 
P.— Member:  Copley  S.  1890;  Boston 
AC. 

SLATER,  Edwin  C(rowther),  118  East 
59th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  1040  Pel- 
hamdale  Ave.,  Pelham  Manor,  N.  Y. 
P.,  C— Born  New  Jersey,  Dec.  22,  1884. 
Pupil  of  William  Chase,  Cecilia  Beaux, 
Thomas  P.  Anshutz,  Hugh  Brecken- 
ridge,  Birge  Harrison,  Charles  Grafly, 
Herman  D.  Murphy,  Henry  R.  Poore. 
Member:  Salma.  C;  Copley  S.; 
Fellowship  PAFA. 

SLEETH,  L.  MacD.  (Mrs.  Francis  V. 
Sleeth),  Dawson  Terrace,  Rural  Route 
No.  1,  Va.;  h.  Cathedral  School  for 
Girls,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.,  S.,  T. — Born  Croton,  Iowa,  Oct.  24, 
1864.  Pupil  of  Whistler,  MacMonnies 
and  Emil  Carlsen.  Member:  San 
F.  AA;  Wash.  WCC.  Work:  Por- 
trait busts  in  marble  of  "Brig.  Gen'l 
John  M.  Wilson,"  Corcoran  Gallery  of 
Art;  "Martha  Washington,"  Memorial 
Continental  Hall,  and  "Rt  Rev.  Bishop 
Henry  T.  Satterlee,"  Cathedral  Foun- 
dation, all  in  Washington,  D.  C. 

SLEETH,  R.  L.,  Jr.,  301  South  Lang  Ave., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 


SLOAN,  J(ames)  Blanding,  17  East  14th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  120  North 
15th  St.,  Corsicana,  Tex. 
P.,  L,  E.,  C,  W.,  T.— Born  Corsicana, 
Sept.  19,  1886.  Pupil  of  Chicago  Acad- 
emy of  Fine  Arts;  B.  J.  O.  Norfeldt; 
George  Senseney.  Member  :  Chicago 
SE. 

SLOAN,    John,    88   Washington   PI.,    New 

York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  I.,  Etcher. — Born    Lock    Haven,    Pa., 

Aug.  2,  1871.    Member:  P-G.;  S.  Indp. 

A.  Awards:  Honorable  mention,  CI 
Pittsburgh,  1905;  bronze  medal  for 
etching,  P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work  in:  New  York  Public  Library; 
Newark  (N.  J.)  Public  Library:  Cincin- 
nati Museum  of  Art;  Carnegie  Insti- 
tute. Pittsburgh,  Metropolitan  Museum 
of  Art. 

SLOAN,  Marianna,  524  Walnut  SL,  Phil- 
adelphia, Pa.;  h.  44  Queen  Lane,  Ger- 
mantown,   Pa. 

Ldscp.P.,  Mural  P. — Born  Lock  Haven. 
Pa.  Pupil  of  Robert  Henri  and  Elliott 
Daingerfield  in  Philadelphia.  Mem- 
ber: NYWCC;  Fellowship  PAFA 
1916;  S.Indp.A.  Award:  Bronze 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work: 
"Landscape,"  St.  Louis  Club;  "Rocky 
Beach,"  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the 
Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia;  mural  decora- 
tions. Church  of  the  Annunciation.  Phil- 
adelphia; mural  decoration,  St.  Thomas 
Church,    Whitemarsh,    Pa. 

SLOAN E,  George,  162  Newbury  St.,   Bos- 
ton, Mass. 
P.— M  ember:  Providence  AC. 

SLOMAN,  Joseph,  300  Fifth  St.,  Union 
Hill,   N.    J. 

P.,  S.,  I.,  C— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa., 
Dec.    30.    1879.       Pupil    of    Howard   Pyle, 

B.  W.  Clinedinst  and  Clifford  Grayson. 
Works  :  Art  Dome,  Town  Hall,  West 
New  York,  N.  J.;  "Martin  Luther", 
Church  of  St.  John.  West  New  York.  N. 
J.,  stained  glass  memorial  in  Hoboken, 
N.  J.,  Temple;  work  in  Synagogue  at 
Athens,  Ga. ;  Public  Library,  Hoboken, 
N.  J. 

SLOPER,  Norma  (Wright),  104  Lake 
St.,  New  Britain,  Conn. 
P. — Born  New  Haven,  Conn.,  Jan.  12, 
1892.  Pupil  of  A.  E.  Jones;  Lucien 
Simon  and  Rene  Menard  in  Paris. 
Member:  Soc.  Conn.  P.;  Conn. 
AFA. 

SLOTNICK,  Mack,  107  West  47th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.   (P.) 

SLUSSER,  J(ean)   Paul,  344  East  57th  St., 
New  York,    N.    Y. ;    h.   Wheaton,   111. 
P..    C,    T.^ — Born   Wauseon,    O..    Dec.    15, 
1886.     Pupil  of  Paxton,  Hale  and  Carlson. 
Member:       Chicago    SA. 

SLUTZ,  Helen  Beatrice,  7320  Paxton  Ave., 

Chicago,   111. 

P.— Born  Cleveland,  O.,  Apr.  15,  1886. 
Pupil  of  Cleveland  School  of  Art. 
Member:  Chicago  S.Min.P.;  Chicago 
AC;  Cleveland  Woman's  AC. 
SMALL,  F.  W.,  464  74th  St.,  Brooklyn, 
N.    Y.    (L) 


566 


SMALL 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


SMITH 


SMALL,    Hazel,   769    Lincoln   St.,    Denver, 
Colo. 
P.,T. — M  ember:     Denver  AA, 

SMALLEY,  Janet,  223  East  Washington 
Sq.,    Philadelphia,    Pa.    (P.) 

SMEDLEY,   Will    Larymore,   Chautauqua- 

on-the-Lake,    N.    Y. 

P.,  I.,  W.,  L.— Born  in  Ohio,  1871.     Self 

taught. 

SMILLIE,  George  F(rederlck  Cumming), 
1961  Biltmore  St.,  N.  W.,  Washington, 
D.    C. 

Engr.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Nov.  22, 
1854.  Pupil  of  NAD  and  of  his  uncle, 
James  D.  Smillie,  in  Am. Bank  Note  Co. 
Principal  engraver,  U.  S.  Bureau  of 
Engraving  since  1894;  chief  work,  the 
so-called  "picture  notes"  {%2  and  |5 
silver  certificates  of  1895);  back  of  $100 
Federal  Reserve  notes;  large  portraits 
of  Presidents  Grant,  McKinley,  Roose- 
velt,  Taft  and   Wilson. 

SMILLIE,  Helen  (Nellie)  Sheldon  Jacobs 
(Mrs.  George  H.  Smillie),  156  East  36th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Bronxville, 
N.    Y. 

P.— Born  New  York,  Sept.  14,  1854.  Pu- 
pil of  J.  O.  Eaton  and  James  D.  Smillie. 
Member:    AWCS. 

SMITH,    Albert    Alexander,    23    Blvd.    des 
Batignolles,   Paris,   France. 
P.,    E.— Born    New    York,    N.    Y.,    Sept. 
17,  1896.     Pupil  of  NAD. 

SMITH,  Albert  A.,  229  East  75th  St., 
New  Y'ork,  N.  Y.   (P.) 

SMITH,    Albert    D(elmont),    58  West   57th 
St.,    New    York,    N.    Y.;    summer,    East 
Hampton,   L.  I.,  N.   Y. 
P.— Born    New    York,    N.    Y.,    Feb.    14, 
1886.      Pupil    of    DuMond    and    Chase. 

SMITH,  Albert  E.,  "Chenyledge,"  Cos 
Cob,   Conn. 

P.,  I.,  C. — Born  Waterbury,  Conn.,  Aug. 
15,  1862.  Pupil  of  Yale  School  of  Fine 
Arts. 

SMITH,   Alice    R.    Huger,   8   Atlantic    St.; 
h.  69  Church  St.,  Charleston,  S.  C. 
P.,    Engr.,    E. — Born    Charleston,    S.    C, 
July,  1876. 

SMITH.  Alfred  E.,  294  Boylston  St.,  Bos- 
ton, Mass.;  h.  18  Middle  St.,  Concord, 
Mass.;  summer,  Riverview,  Gloucester, 
Mass. 

Port.  P. — Born  Lynn,  Mass.,  May  27, 
1863.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School; 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under  Bou- 
langer,  Lefebvre,  Constant  and  Doucet. 
Member:   Copley   S. 

SMITH,  Anita  M(iller),  Shady,  Ulster  Co., 
N.  Y.;  h.  123  East  53rd  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

P..  C. — Born  Torresdale,  Pa.,  Oct.  20, 
1893.  Pupil  of  Carlson  and  N.  Y.  ASL. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Al- 
liance; ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Lg.  of  N.  Y.  A.; 
Provincetown  AA;  Woodstock  AA. 
Work:  "Houses  in  the  Dunes," 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine 
Arts. 

SMITH,  Anne  Fry,  106  Oakdale  Ave., 
Glenside,   Pa. 

P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Jan.  25, 
1890,     Pupil  of  Fred  Wagner.      Mem 


ber:     •   Plastic      C;      Phila.      Alliance. 

Work:      "The    Covered    Bridge,"    Pa. 

State  College. 
SMITH,     Belle     Patterson,    720    21st    St., 

N.    W.,   Washington,    D.   C. 

P.— M  ember:    Wash.    WCC. 
SMITH,  Charles  Moore,  172  Elm  Ave.,  Mt. 

Vernon.    N.    Y. 

P. — M  ember:  Salma.C. 

SMITH,  Mrs.  C.  W.,  1129  E.  Colorado 
Blvd.,    Glendale,    Calif.    (P.) 

SMITH,  Dan,  care  of  "N.  Y.  World,"  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
I.— M  ember:    SI   1912. 

SMITH,    De    Cost,    146   West   55th    St.;    h. 
144  West  73d  St.,  New  York,  N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:    Salma.C.    1891. 

SMITH,  Duncan,  42  Washington  Sq.,  New 
York.    N.   Y. 

Mural  P..  I..  T. — Born  in  Virginia,  Oct. 
21.  1877.  Pupil  of  Brush.  Blum,  Cox, 
Twachtman,  De  Camp.  Member: 
Mural  P.;  Alumni  Am.  Academy  In 
Rome;  Salma.  C.  Instructor,  ASL  of 
N.   Y.,   1913-14. 

SMITH,  E.  Galusha,  (Mrs.  William  Haw- 
ley  Smith),  2039  Knoxville  Ave.,  Peoria, 
111. 

P.,  T.— Born  Morris,  111.,  Oct.  24,  1849. 
Pupil  of  Chataine,  Margaret  Pullman, 
F.  C.  Peyraud.  Member:  Peoria 
AL;  Peoria  AA.  Awards:  Two  first 
prizes,  Fine  Arts  Dept.,  National  Imple- 
ment Asso.,  1920.  Work  in  Shirley- 
Savoy  Hotel,   Denver,   Colo. 

SMITH,     (Edward)     Gregory,    Old    Lyme, 

Conn. 

P. — Born   Grand   Rapids,   Mich.,   May  2, 

1880.      Member:      Salma.C. 
SMITH,    Eileen    A.,    159   North    Sandusky 

St.,   Delaware,   Ohio. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

SMITH,   Eliza   Lloyd,  Bluemont,  Va. 
P.— Born    Urbana,    Ohio,    July    21,    1872. 
Pupil  of  Corcoran  Art  School,  Washing- 
ton, D.  C.     Member:  Wash.  WCC. 

SMITH,  E(lmer)  Boyd,  Wilton,  Conn. 
L— Born  St.  John,  N.  B..  Canada, 
May  31.  1860.  Member:  Boston  AC. 
Author  and  illustrator:  "The  Story  of 
Noah's  Ark";  "The  Chicken  World"; 
"Pochontas  and  Captain  John  Smith"; 
"The  Story  of  Our  Country,"   etc. 

SMITH,     Emma     J.,     2000     Sixteenth     St., 
Washington,    D.    C. 
P.— M  ember:     Wash.  WCC. 

SMITH,    Ernest    Browning,   247    So.   Bixel 

St.,    Los   Angeles,    Cal. 

P.— Born  Brimfield,  Mass.,  Nov.  30,  1868. 

Member:  Cal.  AC. 

SMITH,  F.  Carl,  3  Westmoreland  PL, 
Pasadena,    Cal. 

Port. P. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Sept.  7, 
1868.  Pupil  of  Bouguereau,  Ferrier  and 
Constant  in  Paris.  Member:  S. 
Wash.  A.;  Wash.  WCC;  Paris  AAA; 
Calif.  AC;  Pasadena  Fine  Arts  C. 
Award:  Hon.  mention  for  water 
color,  AAS  1902.  Work:  "Mrs. 
Charles  W,  Fairbanks"  and  "Mrs.  John 
Ewing   Walker,"    D.    A.    R.    Continental 


567 


SMITH 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


SMITH 


Hall,  Washington;  Former  speaker 
"Joseph  Cannon,"  Public  Library,  Min- 
neapolis; "Samuel  P.  Langley,"  Alle- 
gheny (Pa.)  Observatory;  "Governor 
Shafroth,"  The  Capitol,  Denver;  por- 
traits of  Gov.  Willis  of  Ohio  in  Capitol, 
Columbus,  and  Speaker  Clark,  The  Cap- 
itol, Washington,  D.  C. 
SMITH,  F(rancis)  Berkeley,  16  Place  de 
la  Madeleine,  Paris.  France. 
1.,  W.— Born  Astoria,  L.  I.,  N.  Y.,  Aug. 
24,  1868;  son  of  F.  Hopkinson  Smith. 
Studied  architecture  at  Columbia  Univ. 
and  practiced  until  1896.  Author  and 
illustrator:  "The  Real  Latin  Quarter," 
"Budapest,  the  City  of  the  Magyars," 
etc. 

SMITH,    Francis    Drexel.   531    North    Cas- 
cade  Ave.,    Colorado    Springs,    Colo. 
P. — Born  Chicago,  111.  Member:  Colo. 
Springs  AS;   Denver  AA. 

SMITH,   Mrs.   Francis  S.     See  Ingham. 

SMITH,  George  W(ashington),  17  Mesa 
Rd.,  Santa  Barbara,  Calif. 
P.,  Arch. — Born  East  Liberty,  Pa.,  Feb. 
22,  1879.  Studied  in  Paris  and  Rome; 
Harvard  Fine  Arts  School.  Member: 
Paris  AAA;  NACj  Calif.  AC. 

SMITH.   Gladys   Keyser,   5219  Walnut  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 
P. — M  ember:        Fellowship    PAFA. 

SMITH,    Harriet   F(rances),   120   Glenville 

Ave.,   Allston,   Mass. 

P.— Born  Worcester,  July  28,  1873. 
Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art  School,  Den- 
man  W.  Ross,  E.  W.  D.  Hamilton, 
Henry  B.  Snell,  C.  H.  Woodbury,  Philip 
Hale.  Member:  Worcester  Art 
Students  C;  Copley  S.;  Eastern  Art 
Assoc;   NYWCC. 

SMITH,     Harry     Knox,    601    West    151st 
St.,    New   York,    N.    Y. 
P.,  C— Born  Philadelphia,  Apr.  24,  1879. 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  ASL  of  N.  Y.     Mem- 
ber:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1910. 

SMITH,  Holmes,  Washington  University; 
h.  5440  Maple  Ave.,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 
P.,  T.,  W..  L.— Born  Keighley,  England, 
May  9,  1863.  Member:  St.  Louis 
AG  (pres.  1911-12);  College  AA  (pres. 
1912-14);  2  X  4  S.  Professor  of  drawing 
and  history  of  art,  Washington  Univ., 
St.r  Louis.     Specialty,  water  colors. 

SMITH,  Hope,  165  Hope  St.,  Providence, 
R.    I. 

P.— Born  Providence,  R.  I.,  May  10, 
1879.  Pupil  of  Woodbury,  Chase,  Wm. 
C.  Loring.     Member  :  Prov.  AC. 

SMITH,  Howard,  Fenway  Studios.  30 
Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  summer, 
Rockport,  Mass. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  West  Windham,  N.  H.. 
April  27,  1885.  Pupil  of  Howard  Pvle 
and  E.  C.  Tarbell.  Member:  ANA, 
1921;  AWCS;  Boston  GA.  Awards: 
Paige  Traveling  Scholarship  School  of 
the  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Boston; 
bronze  medal  for  painting,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  first  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD,  1917;  Isidor  Medal,  1921.  Work: 
"Portrait  of  Col.  ^W.  H.  Osborn," 
Treasury  Bldg.,  Washington.  Instructor, 
Rhode  Island   School  of  Design. 


SMITH,    Ira    J.,    1201    Chamber    of    Com- 
merce Bldg.,  Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

SMITH,  Isabel  E.  (Mrs.  F.  Carl  Smith), 
3  Westmoreland  PJ.,  Pasadena,  Cahf. 
Min.P. — Born  Smith's  Landing,  near 
Cincinnati,  O.  Pupil  of  L'hermitte,  De- 
lance  and  Callot  in  Paris.  Member: 
Paris  Woman's  AC;  Pasadena  Fine 
Arts    C. 

SMITH,     Ishmael,     260    Riverside     Drive, 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  'S.,  I. — Born  Barcelona,  Spain,  July 
16,  1886.  Member:  Salma.  C. 
Works:  Monument  to  Pablo  Torull, 
Caja  de  Ahorros  de  Sabadell,  Cata- 
lunya;  Portrait  of  Mila  Y  Fontanals, 
Institut  des  estudie  Catalans;  Portrait 
of  Alphonse  Maseras  and  group  in 
sculpture.  Museum  of  Barcelona,   Spain. 

SMITH,    J.    Andre,    411    West    End    Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

E.,  P.— Member:  Salma.  C;  P-G. 
Award:  Gold  medal  for  etching,  P. -P. 
Exp.,    San    F.,    1915. 

SMITH,    J.    Francis.   342   North   Main    St., 
Los   Angeles,    Calif. 
P.— M  ember:      Calif.   AC. 

SMITH,  Jack  W.,  602  South  Alvarado  St., 
Los    Angeles,    Cal. 

P.— Born  Paterson,  N.  J..  1873.  Studied 
at  Cincinnati  Art  Academy  and  AIC. 
Member:  Calif.  A.C;  Calif.  WCS. 
Awards  :  Silver  medal,  San  Diego 
Exp.,  1915;  bronze  medal,  San  Diego 
Exp.,  1916;  silver  medals,  Sacramento 
Exp.,  1917  and  1918;  first  prize,  Los 
Angeles  Liberty  Exp.,  1918;  Black  prize, 
Calif.  A.  C,  1919;  gold  and  bronze 
medals,  Sacramento  Exp.,  1919;  second 
prize,    Phoenix,    Ariz.,    Exp.,    1920. 

SMITH,  Jessie  Willcox,  "Cogshill,"  Allen 
Lane,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
I.,  P.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of 
PAFA;  Drexel  Inst,  under  Howard  Pyle. 
Member:  Plastic  C;  Phlla.WCC; 
Fellowship  PAFA;  SI  1904  (assoc); 
NYWCC.  Awards  :  Bronze  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  Mary  Smith 
prize,  PAFA  1903;  silver  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Beck  prize,  Phlla. 
WCC  1911;  silver  medal,  water  colors, 
P. -P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Specialty, 
paintings  and   illustrations  of  children. 

SMITH,  Jo-seph  Lindon.  102  Chestnut  St., 
Boston,  Mass.;  summer.  Dublin,  N.  H. 
P.,  L.,  T.— Born  Pawtucket,  R.  I., 
Oct.  11,  1863.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum 
School  under  Crowninshield  and  Grund- 
mann;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under 
Boulanger  and  Lefebvre.  Member: 
Mural  P.;  Boston  SAC;  Copley  S.  1882; 
Century  Assoc.  Award  :  Beck  prize, 
Phila.  WCC  1905.  Work:  Mural 
paintings  in  Boston  Public  Library  and 
Horticultural  Hall,  Philadelphia.  Made 
copies  in  Italy,  Egypt,  Turkey.  Mexico, 
Guatamala,  Java,  India,  China  and 
Japan  for  Museums.  Represented  in 
Corcoran  Gallery  and  Smithsonian  In- 
stitution, Washington;  Chicago  Art  In- 
stitute; Boston  Museum;  Harvard  Uni- 
versity; Rhode  Island  School  of  Design; 
Gardner  Collection,  Boston. 


568 


SMITH 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


SHELL 


SMITH,   Judson,  Birmingham,  Mich.    (P.) 

SMITH,  J.  Calvert,  880  West  181st  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.— Me  m  b  e  r  :  Salma.  C;  Guild  of 
Free  Lance  Artists. 

SMITH,  Marcella  (Claudia  Heber),  3 
Porthmeor  Studios.  St.  Ives,  Cc-n- 
wall,  England;  h.  1320  New  Hampshire 
Ave.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.,  T. — Born  East  Molesey,  Surrey, 
England,  Mar.  6,  1887.  Pupil  of  Dele- 
cluse  in  Paris;  Fred  Milner  at  Royal 
British  Academy  in  London;  Corcoran 
School  of  Art,  Washington;  Phila.  School 
of  Design.  Member:  A.  R.  B,  A. 
S.  Wash.  A. 

SMITH,  Oliver  Phelps,  550  East  Lincoln 
Ave.,  Mt.  Vernon,  N.  Y.;  summer  Con- 
necticut Valley,  Middlesex  Co.,  Conn. 
P.— Born  Hartford,  Conn.,  Dec.  18,  1867. 
Pupil  of  NAD.  Member:  NYWCC. 
Specialty,  stained  glass  and  mural  dec- 
oration. 

SMITH,  Rosamond  Lombard,  405  Fenway 
Studios,  30  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P.— M  ember:  Boston  GA.  Award: 
Bronze   medal.   P.-P.Exp.,    San  F.,   1915. 

SMITH,   Sarah    K.,   343   Washington   Ave., 
Wheaton,    111. 
P.— M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

SMITH,  Sarah   R.,  122  East  59th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:    N.    A.    Women    PS. 

SMITH,  Sherman,  723  Liberty  Ave.,  Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

SMITH,    Sibley   C,   107  Westminster   St., 
Providence,    R.    I. 
P. — M  ember:    Providence   AC. 

SMITH,  Twigg,  122  Bates  St.,  Honolulu, 
Hawaii. 

P.— Born  Nelson,  New  Zealand,  Nov.  2, 
1882.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Harry  M.  Walcott. 
Member:  Hawaiian  SA;  Chicago 
ASL. 

SMITH,  W(alter)  Granville,  96  Fifth  Ave.; 
h.  211  East  11th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
and  Bellport,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.— Born  S.  Granville,  N.  Y.,  Jan. 
26.  1870.  Pupil  of  Walter  Satterlee  and 
ASL  of  N.  Y.;  studied  in  Europe. 
Member:  ANA  1908,  NA  1915;  AWCS; 
Salma.C.  1898.  Awards:  Third  Hall- 
garten  prize,  NAD  1900;  bronze  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  Evans  prize, 
AWCS  1905;  first  prize,  Worcester.  1906; 
hon.  mention,  C.I.Pittsburgh,  1907;  In- 
ness  gold  medal,  NAD  1908;  bronze 
medal,  Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910;  Vezln 
prize.  Salma.C.  1911:  Shaw  purchase 
prize  ($500),  Salma.C.  1913;  Hudnut 
prize  ($200),  AWCS,  1916;  Isidor  prize, 
Salma.  C,  1918.  Work:  "Grey  Day," 
Smithsonian  Institution,  Washington, 
D.  C. 

SMITH,  W.  Linford,  5029  Amberson  Place, 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 

P.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Dec.  31,  1869. 
Pupil  of  Chris  Walters.  Member: 
Pittsburgh    AA. 

SMITH,  William  H.,  21  Lincoln  St.,  Hart- 
ford,   Conn. 
P.— M  ember:  Conn.  AFA. 


SMITH,  Wuanita,  1823  Walnut  St..  Phila- 
delphia,   Pa. 

I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Jan.  1,  1866. 
Pupil  of  PAFA;  Phila.  School  of  Design 
for  Women  and  Howard  Pyle.  M  e  m  - 
be  r  :  Plastic  Cr;  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Alliance.  Award:  Hon.  mention, 
Wilmington  AA.  Illustrated:  "The  Four 
Corner  Series,"  "The  Admiral's  Grand- 
daughter,"  "Grimm's  Fairy  Tales,"  etc. 

SMYTH,  S(amuel)  Gordon,  1430  S.  Penn. 
Sq.;  h.  1216  E.  18th  St.,  Philadelphia, 
Pa.;  summer,  Conshohocken,  Pa. 
P.,  I.,  C. — Born  Holmesburg,  Philadel- 
phia, Pa.,  Nov.  21,  1891.  Pupil  of  Harry 
Lachman,  Walter  H.  Everett.  Work: 
Series  of  historical  paintings,  in  Na- 
tional Shawmut  Bank,  Boston;  illustra- 
tions for  "Saturday  Evening  Post," 
"Collier's,"    "Everybody's." 

SMYTH  E,     Eugene     L.,     care     of     Tilden 

Thurber  Co.,  Providence,   R.   I. 

P. — M  ember  :       Providence    AC. 
SNAPP,    Frank,    care    of    George    Baker, 

The  Charles  E.  Johnson  Co.,  State  Lake 

Bldg.,   Chicago,  111. 

I.— M  ember:   SI  1910. 

SNEAD,  Louise  W(lllls)  (Mrs.  Harry 
Vairin  Snead),  "Ye  Olde  King's  High- 
way," Noroton,  Conn. 
Min.P.,  I..  W..  L.— Born  Charleston, 
S.  C.  Pupil  of  Chase;  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
under  Theodora  Thayer.  Awards  : 
Hon.  mention,  Charleston  Exp.,  1902; 
prize  for  seal  for  a  South  Carolina  city 
in  1915;  first  prize  for  miniatures  at 
Mineola,  L.  I.,  1911  and  1912.  Lectures 
on  Oriental  rugs  and  point  lace.  Author 
and  illustrator  of  "History  of  Stamford, 
Conn.";  "Silver  and  Gold,"  for  Stam- 
ford Trust  Co.  Illustrator  of  "Suburban 
Life  of  Stamford"  for  Stamford  Cham- 
ber of  Commerce,   1919. 

SNELL,  Florence  Francis  (Mrs.  Henry 
B.  Snell),  253  West  42d  St..  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P. — Born  London,  England.  Pupil  of 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  NYWCC; 
AWCS  (assoc. '•  N.  A.  Women  PS;  NAC. 
Awards  :  McMillin  landscape  prize, 
N.  A.  Women  PS,  1913;  NAC  prize,  N. 
A.  Women  PS.   1915. 

SNELL,  Henry  B(ayley),  253  West  42d 
St..   New  York,   N.   Y. 

Marine  P.,  T.— Born  Richmond.  Eng- 
land, Sept.  29,  1858.  Pupil  of  ASL  of 
N.  Y.  Member:  NYWCC  (pres.); 
AWCS;  ANA  1902;  NA  1906;  SAA  1905; 
Salma.C.  1903;  Lotos  C;  Fellowship 
PAFA  1916  (assoc);  NAC.  Awards: 
Gold  medal,  ACPhila.  1896;  first  prize, 
Nashville  Exp.,  1897;  hon.  mention, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal,  Pan- 
Am. Exp..  Buffalo.  1901;  silver  medal.  St. 
Louis  Exp..  1904;  first  prize  ($300). 
Worcester  Museum,  1905;  Beal  prize, 
NYWCC  1905;  silver  medal  for  oil  paint- 
ing and  gold  medal  for  water  colors, 
P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F..  1915;  hon.  mention, 
Phila.  AC,  1916;  Shaw  Purchase  Prize, 
Salma.  C,  1918.  Assistant  director 
of  Fine  Arts,  U.  S.  Comm..  Paris  Exp.. 
1000.  Work:  "The  Citadel  at  Quebec." 
Albright    Art     Gallery.     Buffalo;     "En- 


569 


SNYDER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


SOUTHWICK 


trance  to  the  Harbor  of  Polperro," 
Worcester  Museum;  "Nightfall,"  Her- 
ron  Art  Institute,  Indianapolis;  "Lake 
Como,"    Metropolitan   Mus.,    New  York. 

SNYDER,   Annie    F.,  305   Hazelwood  Ter- 
race, Rochester,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember  :  Rochester  AC. 

SNYDER,  Corydon  G.,  1161  South  Ridge- 
land  Ave.,  Oak  Park,  111. 
P.,  S.,  I.,  E.,  W.,  T.— Born  Atchison, 
Kan.,  Feb.  24,  1879.  Author  of  course 
in  fashion  illustration  published  by  Fed- 
eral Schools  of  Minneapolis;  "Modern 
Advertising  Arrangement,"  pub.  by 
Myer  Booth  College,  Chicago;  "Re- 
touching Not  Difficult. " 

SODERSTON,  Herman,  840  Chapel  St.; 
h.  464  Whallay  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 
P.— Born  Sweden,  July  12,  1862.  Pupil 
of  Royal  Academy  of  Fine  Arts,  Stock- 
holm. Member:  New  Haven  PCC; 
S.  Indp.  A.  Represented  in  Memorial 
Hall,  Hartford;  Sheffield  Scientific  Hall, 
New  Haven,  Conn. 

SOHIER,  Alice  Ruggles,  Concord,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Quincy,  Mass.,  Oct.  21,  1880. 
Studied  in  Buffalo;  School  of  Boston 
Museum  of  Fine  Arts  under  Tarbell; 
and  in  Europe.  Member:  Boston 
GA.  Award  :  Bronze  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,    San  F.,    1915. 

SOKOLSKY,    Sulamith,    2103    Vyse    Ave., 
Bronx,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  New  York,  July  22,  1889.     Pu- 
pil of  Cooper  Union  and  NAD. 

SOLLOIVI,    Vincent    P.,    4504    Fifth    Ave., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh  AA. 

SOLOMON,  Harry,  39  West  67th  St.; 
summer,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P. — Born  San  Francisco,  June  5,  1873. 
Studied  in  Paris.  Member:  Salma. 
C.  Work  :  "Portrait  of  Dr.  Ben- 
nett Mitchell,"  Capitol  Bldg.,  Des 
Moines;  also  at  Morningside  University, 
Sioux   City. 

SOLOMONS,  Aline  E..  1604  K  St.,  N.  W., 
Washington,   D.   C. 

P. — Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  Wash- 
ington ASL. 

SOMEREST,    Frances    M.,    117    East    27th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp.  A. 

SOMMER,  Julius  G.,  461  Fourth  Ave., 
"To-day's  Magazine,"  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.  I. — M  ember:  AT  Graphic  A. 

SONN,  Albert  H.,  282  Parker  St.,  Newark, 
N.   J. 

P.,  I.— Born  Newark,  N.  J.,  Feb.  7,  1867. 
Pupil  of  Cooper  Institute  and  NAD. 
Member:  Salma.  C,  1900;  AWCS; 
A.   Fund  S;   NYWCC. 

SON  NECK,    S.,     23    East    26th    St.,    New 
York,  N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp.  A. 

SONNICHSEN,  Yngvar,  P.  O.  Box  813; 
h.  1441  Lakeside  Dr.,  Seattle,  Wash. 
P.,  I.,  E.,  T. — Born  Christiania,  Nor- 
way, March  9,  1875.  Studied  in  Ant- 
werp, Brussels;  at  Julian's  under 
Bouguereau    and     Constant     in     Paris. 


Member:  Board  of  Fine  Arts,  Chris- 
tiania, Norway;  Seattle  Fine  Arts  Soc. 
Awards  :  1st  prize.  International 
Exhibition,  St.  John,  N.  B.,  Canada, 
1906;  Gold  and  Silver  Medals,  Alaska- 
Yukon-Pacific  Exp.,  Seattle,  1909;  hon. 
mention,  Northwest  Artists'  Annual 
Exp.,  Seattle,  1920.  Decorations  for 
Norway  Hall,  Seattle;  portraits  in 
municipal^  galleries  of  Christiania,  Ar- 
endal,  and  Laurvik,  Norway;  Free 
Mason's  Lodge,  St.  John,  N.  B.,  Can- 
ada; Elk's  Club,  Seattle,  A\rash.;  Nor- 
wegian Club,   Brooklyn,   N.  Y. 

SOPER,    J(ames)     H(amlin)    Gardner,    12 

Gramercy   Park,    New    York,    N.    Y. 
P.— Born     Flint,    Mich.,     July    17,     1877. 
Award  :      Bronze     Medal,     Louisiana 
Purchase  Exp.,   St.   Louis,   1904. 

SORENSON-DIEMAN,      Clara       Leonard, 

1800  Second  Ave.,  Cedar  Rapids,  Iowa. 
S.,  L.,  T. — Born  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  Nov. 
29,  1877.  Pupil  of  Lorado  Taft,  Victor 
Brenner.  Member:  Chicago  SA; 
Indiana  Soc.  of  Artists;  Alumnae  Chi- 
cago Art  Institute.  Work:  "Memo- 
rial Tablet,"  Shortridge  High  School, 
Indianapolis;  Memorial  Tablet,  Y.  M. 
C.  A.,  Cedar  Rapids;  Memorial  Tablet, 
Art  Association,  Cedar  Rapids. 

SOTER,  John,  211  4th  Ave.,  North,  Seat- 
tle, Wash.    (P.) 

SOTTEK,   Frank,  381   South  Detroit  Ave., 
Toledo,    O. 

P.,  I.,  E.,  W.— Born  Toledo,  O.,  Oct. 
10,  1874.  Member:  Artklan;  Toledo 
Federation   of  Art   Societies. 

SOTTER,  Elizabeth,  113  Allen  Ave.,  Pitts- 
burgh,  Pa, 
P. — M  ember  :    Pittsburgh  AA. 

SOTTER,    George    W.,    Holicong,    Bucks 
Pa. 

P.,  C— Born  Pittsburgh,  Sept.  25,  1879. 
Pupil  of  Chase,  Anshutz,  Redfield. 
Member:  Pittsburgh  AA.  Awards: 
Silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915; 
first  prize,  Pittsburgh  Asso.  Artists, 
1917;  art  society  prize,  Pittsburgh  Asso. 
Artists,  1920;  hon.  mention.  Conn.  AFA, 
1921.  Works:  "The  Hill  Road," 
Reading  Museum;  "Pennsylvania  Coun- 
try,"   State    College,    State   College,   Pa. 

SOUTHWICK,    Albert   A.,    47    Fifth   Ave., 
New   York,   N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

SOUTHWICK,    Jeanie    Lea,    6    Home    St., 
Worcester,   Mass. 

P.,  T.,  W.,  L. — Born  Worcester.  Pupil 
of  Shurtleff,  Ross  Turner,  Woodbury 
and  Chase;  Carmine  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  Worcester  Art  Museum; 
Art  Students  C.  (hon.).  Lecturer  on 
Arts  and  Crafts  of  Japan,  Java,  etc. 
Specialty,    water    colors. 

SOUTHWICK,  Katherine,  224  West  11th 
St.,  New  York.  N.  Y. ;  summer,  646 
Church  St..  Stevens  Point,  Wis. 
P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Buxton,  Me.,  Jan  9, 
1887.  Pupil  of  Chicago  Academy  of 
FA;  AIC;  PAFA.  Member:  Fellow- 
ship PAFA.  -V.  w  a  r  d  s  :  Cresson  travel- 
ing  scholarship,    PAFA.    1911-1913. 


570 


S  PACKMAN 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


SPENCER 


SPACKMAN,  Cyril  (Saunders),  63  Bal- 
foui"  Road,  Highbury.  New  Park,  Lon- 
don,  England. 

P.,  E.,  Arch. — Born  Cleveland,  Ohio; 
Aug.  15,  1887.  Pupil  of  Henry  A.  Keller 
in  Cleveland;  Kings  College  Architect- 
ural Studio,  London.  Member: 
R.S.B.A.;  R.M.S.;  South  Wales  AS; 
Chicago  SE;  S.  Canadian  P.-E.;  Print 
Soc.  (Eng-.);  Fine  Art  Trade  Guild; 
British  WCS.  Represented  in  Cleve- 
land Museum;  Chicago  Art  Institute; 
Chicago  SE;  and  British  WCS.  De- 
signed medal  of  Masonic  Million  Me- 
morial. 

SPADER,  W.  E.,  32  Union  Sq.,  New  York. 
N.  Y.;  261  Clifton  PI..  Brooklyn,  New 
York,   N.   Y.    (P.,   I.) 

SPAETH,  Marie  Houghton,  32  Edgehill 
St.,   Princeton,  N.  J. 

P. — Born  Hanover,  N.  H.  Pupil  of  PA 
FA;  Pa.  School  of  Design;  studied  in 
Spain,  France  and  Italy.  Member: 
Plastic  C.  Specialty,  portraits  of  chil- 
dren. Work:  "Apennine  Village," 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine 
Arts. 

SPAFARD,  Myra  B.,  447  Hulbert  Ave., 
Detroit,  Mich.;  and  Manchester,  Mich. 
P.,  T. — Born  Manchester.  Pupil  of 
ASL.,  Teachers  College,  and  Mrs,  E. 
M.  Scott  in  New  York.  Member: 
N.   A.  ^Vomen  PS. 

SPALDING,  Elisabeth,  853  Washington 
St.,    Denver,    Colo. 

Ldscp.P.— Born  Erie,  Pa.  Pupil  of  ASL 
of  N.  Y. ;  PAFA.  Member:  Denver 
AA;  Wash.  WCC;  NYWCC;  Erie  AC; 
Providence  WCC.  Awards  :  First 
prize,  Erie  Art  C,  1900;  C.  E.  Kremer 
prize  for  water  color,  AIC,  1921.  Work: 
"The  Docks — Erie"  and  "Rain,"  Erie 
(Pa.)  Art  Club;  "Twilight 'Shower,  Man- 
oach,"  Denver  Art  Association. 

SPALLER,  Gertrude,  6332  Glenwood  Ave., 
Chicago,   111. 
P. — M  ember:     Chicago  SA. 

SPANUTH,  Lillian,  114  East  91st  Street, 
New   York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  C. — Born  in  New  York  City.  Pupil 
of  Cooper  Institute,  NAD  (under  Emil 
Carlsen)).  Member:  Whitney  Studio 
Club;  Wolfe  Club;   S.Indp.A. 

SPARHAWK-JONES,  Elizabeth,  1104 
Spruce  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P. — M  e  m  6  e  r  :  Fellowship  PAFA. 
Awards:  Mary  Smith  prize,  PAFA 
1908  and  1912;  honorable  mention,  CI 
Pittsburgh,  1909;  Mary  Smith  prize, 
PAFA  1912.  Work:  "Shop  Girls,"  Art 
Institute  of  Chicago. 

SPARKS,  Arthur  W.,  5539  Beeler  St., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

P. — Member:  Pittsburgh  A  A.  Awards: 
Second  prize,  Pittsburgh  AA  1913;  bronze 
medal,   P.-P.Exp.,   San  F.,  1915. 

SPARKS,   H.   L.,  National  Park  Bank,  214 

Broadway,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

I. — M  ember:     SI. 
SPARKS,  Will,  163  Sutter  St.,  Room  408, 

San  Francisco,   Cal. 

P.,    E.,    W.,    L. — Born    St.    Louis,    Mo., 

Feb.  7,  1862.     Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School 


FA,  and  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  Bohemian  C,  San  F. 
Work:  Murals:  "The  Beginning," 
Memorial  Chapel,  Pacific  Grove,  Cal.; 
"The  Home,"  Bohemian  Club,  San  F.; 
"Delores,"  Plaza  Hotel,  San  F. ;  "Cy- 
presses," Plaza  Hotel,  San  F. ;  "Stormy 
Day."  Golden  Gate  Park  Museum,  San 
Francisco;  oil  paintings:  "A  Christmas 
Allegory."  Bohemian  Club,  San  F. ; 
"Soledad  Mission,"  Toledo  Art  Museum; 
"The  Rocket,"  Minneapolis  Art  Museum; 
a   portrait  in   St.   Louis   Museum. 

SPAULDING,  Henry  P(lympton).  110 
Tremont  St.,  Boston;  h.  32  Salisbury 
Road,  Brookline,  Mass. ;  summer.  Grape- 
vine Road,  East  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Cambridge,  Mass.,  Sept,  18, 
1868.  Pupil  of  Ross  Turner  and  Blum- 
mers.  Member:  Boston  AC;  Copley 
•S. 

SPEAKMAN,  Anna  (Mrs.  T.  Henry 
Speakman),  524  Walnut  St.,  Philadel- 
phia,  Pa. 

I. — Member:  Fellowship      PAFA; 

Plastic  C:   N.  A.  Women  PS. 

SPEAR,  Arthur  P(rince),  Fenway  Studios, 
30  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  156 
Winchester  St.,  Brookline,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Washington,  D.  C,  1879. 
Pupil  of  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member: 
ANA;  St.  Botolph  C;  Allied  AA;  Boston 
GA.  Award:  Silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,    San   F.,    1915. 

SPEER,  Will  W.,  1400  Pennsylvania  Ave., 
N.    S.,    Pittsburgh,    Pa, 
P, — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

8PEICHER,  Eugene  E.,  253  West  42d  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.,  and  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y„  Apr.  5,  1888. 
Studied  in  Buffalo,  New  York  and 
Europe.  Member:  ANA  1912;  Port. 
P.;  NAC;  Contemporary.  Awards: 
Proctor  prize,  NAD,  1911;  Isidor  portrait 
prize,  Salma.  C,  1913;  third  Hallgarten 
prize,  NAD,  1914;  first  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD,  1915;  silver  medal,  P.-P.  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  Beck  gold  medal,  PAFA, 
1920;  third  class  medal,  Carnegie  In- 
stitute, 1921.  Work:  "Morning 
Light,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  "Mountain  Landscape,"  Art 
League,  Galveston,  Tex.;  "Portrait  of 
an  Old  Lady"  Decatur   (111.)   Museum. 

SPENCER,  Edna  Isbester,  Studio  Bldg., 
110  Tremont  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  17 
Linden  Ave.,  Belmont,  Mass.;  summer, 
Spencerian  Farm,  Norwell,  Mass. 
P.,  S.,  I.— Born  St.  John,  N.  B.,  Canada, 
Nov.  12,  1883.  Pupil  of  Bela  Pratt, 
Robert  Aitken. 

SPENCER,  Elizabeth  C,  care  of  Guaranty 
Trust    Co.,     Fifth    Ave.     and     43rd     St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:  N.  A.  Women  PS. 

SPENCER,  Guy  Raymond,  1922  Locust 
St.,   Omaha,   Neb. 

Cartoonist. — Born  Jasper  Co.,  Mo.,  Sept, 
1,  1878.  On  staff  Omaha  "World- 
Herald"  since  1899,  and  Lincoln  "Com- 
moner" 1902-1910. 


571 


SPENCER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


SPRINGER 


SPENCER,  Howard  B(onnell),  1947 
Broadway;  h.  1292  Madison  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Sound  Beach, 
Conn. 

P.— Born  Plainfield,  N.  J.  Pupil  of  F. 
V.  DuMond  and  Walt  Kuhn,  Mem- 
ber:    Lg-.  of  N.Y.A. 

SPENCER,    Hugh,   Chester,   Conn. 

I.,  C— Born  St.  Cloud,  Minn.,  July  19, 
1887.  Pupil  of  Charles  S.  Chapman, 
Harvey  Dunn,  Arthur  Covey.  Mem- 
ber: N.Y.  Soc.  C;  Boston  SAC; 
Detroit  SAC;  Phila.  Alliance. 

SPENCER,  J.  S.,   Deep  River,   Conn. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

SPENCER,  Margaret  F(ulton)   (Mrs.  Rob- 
ert  Spencer),    New   Hope,   Pa. 
P.— Born    Philadelphia,     Sept.     26,     1882. 
Pupil  of  Robert  Spencer, 

SPENCER,  Mary,  1062A  Sterling  Place, 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T. — Born  Fitchburg,  Mass.  Pupil 
of  Herbert  Adams,  Henry  B.  Snell,  Ar- 
thur Dow,  and  Richard  Miller;  Pratt 
Institute.  Member:  N.  A.  Women 
PS;  Alliance;  Brooklyn  SA;  Brooklyn 
WCC. 

SPENCER,  Mary,  3612  Woodbridge  Place, 
Cincinnati,    O. 

P.— Born  Springfield.  O..  1835.  Pupil  of 
C.  T.  Webber  in  Cincinnati.  Member: 
Cincinnati  Woman's  AC.  Work: 
"Fruit,"   Cincinnati  Museum. 

SPENCER,  Robert,  New  Hope,  Bucks 
Co.,   Pa. 

P.— Born  Harvard,  Neb.,  Dec.  1,  1879. 
Pupil  of  Chase,  Du  Mond,  Henri  and 
Garber.  Member:  ANA  1914;  NA 
1920;  Salma.  C;  NAC  (life);  Allied  AA; 
Lg.  of  N.  Y.  A.  Awards:  Second 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1913;  hon.  men- 
tion, Phila.  A.C.  1913;  Sesnan  gold 
medal,  PAFA  1914;  Inness  gold  medal, 
NAD  1914;  Boston  AC  medal  and  pur- 
chase prize  ($1,000),  1915;  gold  medal, 
P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Norman  Wait 
Harris  bronze  medal,  AIC,  1919;  Altman 
prize  ($500),  NAD,  1920  and  1921; 
Members'  Purchase  Prize,  Salma.  C, 
1921;  Mrs.  W^illiam  K.  Dupont  prize 
($100),  Wilmington  SFA,  1921.  Work: 
"Repairing  the  Bridge,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  "The  Two  Shores." 
Boston  Art  Club;  "Along  the  Canal, 
New  Hope,"  Detroit  Institute  of  Arts: 
"The  Huckster  Cart,"  Art  Institute  of 
Chicago;  "Melting  Snow,"  National 
Arts  Club,  New  York;  "The  Red  Boat," 
Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington;  "The 
White  Mill,"  Pittsburgh  Athletic  Asso. ; 
"One  o'clock,"  "Salmagundi  Club;  "The 
Courtyard,"  Brooks  Memorial  Art  Gal- 
lery, Memphis,  Tenn. ;  "Across  the 
River,"   National  Academy  of  Design. 

SPERLING,     George    J.,     34     Climax    St., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:      Pitts.  AA. 

SPERO,  M.  J..  15  West  67th  St.,  New 
York,    N.   Y.    (I.,  P.) 

SPICER-SIMSON.      Theodore,      57      West 
57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;   3  rue  Cam- 
pagne  Premiere,  Paris,  France. 
P..     S. — Born    Havre,    France,    June    25, 
1871.     Member:     Assoc.   Soc.   Nat. 


des  Beaux-Arts,  1901;  Century  Assoc; 
NSS,  1911.  Awards  :  Highest  award 
for  medals,  Brussels  Exp.,  1911;  and 
Ghent  Exp.,  1915;  bronze  medal  for 
medals,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work  in:  Metropolitan  Museum,  and 
Numismatic  Museum,  New  York;  Chi- 
cago Art  Institute;  Detroit  Inst.;  Minne- 
apolis Museum  of  Art;  City  Museum  of 
Art,  St.  Louis;  the  Luxembourg,  Paris; 
Victoria  and  Albert  Museum,  London;  in 
Holland,  Belgium.  Germany  and  Aus- 
tria-Hungary. 

SPICUZZA,  Francesco  J.,  432  Broadway; 
h.  500  31st  Ave.,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 
P.— Born  in  Sicily,  July  23,  1883.  Mem- 
ber: NYWCC;  Painter  Group  of  the 
Middle  West.  Awards  :  Bronze 
medal,  St.  Paul  Inst.,  1915;  silver  medal, 
St.  Paul  Inst.,  1917;  Snyder  prize,  Wis. 
PS,  1919.  Represented  ia.  S't.  Paul 
(Minn.)  Inst.;  Milwaukee  (Wis.)  Art. 
Inst. 

SPIERS,    Harry,  150   Cedar   St.,    Dedham, 

Mass. 

P. — Born  Selsea,   Sussex,   England,   Oct. 

15,   1869.     Pupil  of  Julian  Academie  in 

Paris.       Member:        Boston     SWCP. 

Work:        "As    the    Sunlight    Bursts," 

Boston  Museum   of  Fine  Arts;    "At  the 

Trough"    and    "Passing   of    an    Autumn 

Day,"      Ontario      Government     Gallery, 

Toronto. 
SPIN  ETTA,  Fred,  150  West  35th  St.,  New 

York,   N.   Y. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 
SPINGARN,   Amy    (Mrs.   J.   E.   Spingarn), 

9    West    73rd    St.,    New    York,    N.    Y.; 

summer,   America,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born    in    New    York,    Jan.    29,    1883. 

Pupil    of    K.    H.    Miller.      Member: 

S.Indp.A. 
SPOFFORD,    Edward    W.,    114   East    13th 

St.,   New  York,   N.  Y. 

P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 
SPRA*DLING,      Frank,     Buttermere     and 

Westra  Sts.,   Interlaken,   N.  J.    (I.) 

SPRAGUE,  Amelia,  344  West  Ave.,  Buf- 
falo,   N.    Y.    (P.,  T.) 

SPRAGUE-SMITH,  isabelle  Dwight  (Mrs. 
Charles  Sprague-Smith),  The  Veltin 
School,  160  West  74th  St.;  h.  29  West 
68th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T.— Born  Clinton,  N.  Y.,  Nov.  11,  1861., 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  studied  in  PariSi 
Member:  Barnard  C;  MacD.C.  Prin- 
cipal, Veltin  School  since  1900. 

SPREEN,  Fred  A.,  55  South  7th  St.,  S.  S., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:      Pitts.  AA. 

SPRENKLE,      A.      G.,      435      Penn     Ave., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:      Pitts.  AA. 

SPRINGER,  Carl,  Punta  Gorda,  Fla. 
P.— Born  Fultonhain.  O.,  Nov.  4,  1874. 
Member:  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Pen  and 
Pencil  C.  of  Columbus.  Award  :  First 
prize  Columbus  Art  League,  1920.  Rep- 
resented in  Columbus  Gallery  of  Fine 
Arts. 

SPRINGER,  Eva,  The  Dresden,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C. ;  h.  East  Las  Vegas,  N.  M. 
P. — Born  Cimarron,  N.  M.     Pupil  of  W. 


572 


SPROUT 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


STANSON 


H.  Foote,  and  Richard  Miller  in  New 
York;  Delecluse  and  Mme.  La  Forge 
in  Paris.  Member:  Wash.  WCG; 
S.  Wash.  A. 

SPROUT,  Donald  A.,  Picture  Rocks,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

SQUIRE,  Maud  H(unt),  34  Rue  St.  Louis, 
\'ernon,  Eure,  France. 
I,,  Etcher,  P. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.  Pu- 
pil of  Cincinnati  AC.  Member:  NY 
WCC;  Chicago  SE;  Soci6t6  du  Salon 
d'AutCmne  and  Society  des  Dessinateurs 
Humoristes,  Paris.  Work:  "Concar- 
neau  Fisherman"  and  "At  the  Well." 
Herron  Art  Inst.,  Indianapolis;  South 
Kensington  Museum.  London;  Corcoran 
Gallery.  Washington,  D.  C. 

SQUIRES,  C.  Clyde.  51  West  37th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer.  Little 
Neck,    L.    L,    N.    Y. 

I.— Born  Salt  Lake  City,  Aug.  29,  1882. 
Pupil  of  Henri,  Miller,  DuMond,  Mora 
and  Pyle.  Member:  Guild  of  Free 
Lance  A.;   SI  1911. 

STACEY,  Anna  Lee  (Mrs.  John  F.  Sta- 
cey),  Studio  Bldg.,  Ohio  and  State  Sts., 
Chicago,  111. 

P. — Born  Glasgow,  Mo.  Pupil  of  AIC. 
Member:  Chicago  SA;  Chicago  WCC. 
Awards  :  Young  Fortnightly  prize, 
AIC  1902;  Cahn  prize,  AIC  1902;  $200 
prize.  Field  Exhibition,  1907;  Carr  land- 
scape prize,  Chicago  SA  1912;  Logan 
bronze  medal,  AIC,  1921.  Work: 
"A  Spanking  Breeze,"  Chicago  Woman's 
Club;  "Moonlight  in  the  Guidecca — 
Venice,"  Kenwood  Club,  Chicago;  "Tro- 
phies of  the  Fields,"  Union  League 
Club,  Chicago;  Chicago  Art  Commis- 
sion purchase,  1914. 

STACEY,  J.  George,   Geneva,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Rochester  AC. 

STACEY,  John  F.,  Studio  Bldg.,  Ohio  and 
State  Sts.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  T.— Born  Biddeford,  Me.,  1859. 
Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  School  in  Bos- 
ton; Boulanger,  Lefebvre  and  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;  Cliff  Dwellers.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  $100 
prize.  Field  Exhibition,  1907;  bronze 
medal,  Buenos  Aires,  1910;  Grower 
prize,  AIC  1911.  Work:  "Church 
Spires  of  a  New  England  Village,"  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts,  Santiago,  Chile; 
"Across  the  Hills,"  Union  League  Club, 
Chicago;  "Valley  of  the  Darro,  Gra- 
nada, Spain,"  Herron  Art  Institute,  In- 
dianapolis,  Ind. 

STACK,    Charles   J.,   314    45th    St.,    Pitts- 
burgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

STACKPOLE,  Ralph,  712  Montgomery  St.; 
h.  314  Filbert  St.,  San  Francisco,  Calif. 
S.,  E.,  C,  T. — Born  WiUiams,  Ore., 
May  1,  1885.  Pupil  of  Arthur  Putnam 
and  G.  Piazzoni  and  Ecole  des  Beaux- 
Arts,  Paris.  Member:  Calif.  SE. 
Awards  :  Hon  mention,  P. -P.,  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  gold  medal,  'San  F.  AA. 
1918.  Work  :  "Portrait  bust  of  Prof. 
Hilgard".  Univ.  of  California;  "Portrait 
bust  of  Prof.  Fliigel."  Stanford  Univer- 
sity, Calif.-  "Portrait  bust  of  Judge 
Seawell",    City   Hall,    San    Francisco. 


STADELMAN,  Henryette  Leech,  1616 
Rodney  St.;  h.  1313  Gilpin  Ave.,  Wil- 
mington,   Del. 

P.,  T. — Born  Brownsville,  Pa.,  Dec.  5, 
1891.  Pupil  of  Hugh  Breckenridge  and 
PAFA.  Member:  Plastic  C. ;  Wil- 
mington   SFA;    Fellowship   PAFA. 

STAFFORD,    B.    E.   -D.,    Vanadium    Bldg., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA, 

STAFFORD,    P.    S(cott),    1947    Broadway; 

h.  162  Madison  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Pupil  of  Robert  Henri.  Member  : 
Pen   and  Pencil   C.    of   Columbus,    O. 

STAGG.  Jessie  A.,  1215  Madison  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y.   (S.) 

STAHL,  M.  Louise,  Ohio  University, 
Athens,  O. 

P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.  Pupil  of  Cin- 
cinnati Art  Academy  under  Meakin  and 
Nowottny;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Volk, 
Mowbray  and  Blum;  also  of  Chase  in 
N.  Y.  and  Spain,  and  Hawthorne  and 
Webster  in  Provincetown,  Mass.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :  Cincinnati  Woman's  AC;  Prov- 
incetown  AA. 

STAHR,  Fred  C,  care  of  Academy  In 
Rome  Alumni,  101  Park  Avenue,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P. — M  ember:  Alumni  Academy  in 
Rome;  Mural  P.  Award:  Lazarus 
scholarship.    1911-14. 

STAHR,  Paul  C,  362  Audubon  Ave.,  New 

York.  N.  Y.;  summer,  Long  Beach,  West 
End.   L.   I.,   N.   Y. 

I.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  8,  1883. 
Pupil  of  John  Ward  and  NAD.  Mem- 
ber: SI;  Authors'  League  of  America; 
Guild  of  Free  Lance  A.  Work:  Illus- 
trations for  "Life,"  "Colliers'  Weekly," 
"American  Magazine,"  "Harpers'  Ba- 
zaar" and  "Woman's  Home  Companion. 
Illustrated  "The  Horner,"  "The  Mask," 
"The  Sear,"   etc. 

STAMATO,  Frank,  1316  South  Warnock 
St.,   Philadelphia,   Pa.    (S.) 

STANFIELD,     Marion    Baar,    150    Broad- 
way, New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

STANCE,      Emiie,      North      Hackensack, 
N.  J. 
P. — M  ember:    Salma.C.    1903, 

STANLAWS,  Penrhyn  (Penrhvn  Stanley 
Adamson),  1  West  67th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

I.,  P. — Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  and 
of  Benjamin-Constant  and  Laurens  in 
Paris.     Member:  SI  1913. 

STANLEY,  Frederic,  57  Lawton  St.,  New 
Rochelle,  N.  Y.   (P.,  I.) 

STANLEY,  Jane  C.  Mahon  (Mrs.  Louis 
Crandall  Stanley),  49  Seward  Ave.,  De- 
troit,  Mich. 

P.— Born  Detroit,  July  21,  1863.  Pupil 
of  Chas.  Sanderson,  S.  P.  Triscott  and  H. 
A.  Hallett.  Member:  Detroit  Soc. 
of  Women  Painters. 

STANSON,  George  C(urtin),  5653  La  Ml- 
rada  Ave.,   Los  Angeles,   Cal.;   summer, 
Santa  Fe,   N.  M. 
P.,    S. — Born    Brisout,    France,    Apr.    2, 


573 


STANTON 


WHO'S  WHO  tN  ART 


STEELE 


1885.  Member:  Archaeological  Inst, 
of  Am.;  Cal.  AC.  Work:  Four  mu- 
rals in  the  Biological  Museum  of  the 
Univ.  of  Cal.,  La  Jolla,  Cal.;  "After 
the  Rain"  (mural),  in  Golden  Gate 
Park  Museum,  San  F. ;  "On  the  Trail," 
Museum  of  Archaeology,  Santa  Fe,  N.  M. 

STANTON,  Elizabeth  C(ady),  Gains- 
borough Studios,  222  West  59th  St. ;  h.  45 
West  11th  'St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  sum- 
mer,    Silver    Beach,     North    Falmouth, 

JVTq  gg 

p.,  t'.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Dec.  31, 
1894.  Pupil  of  F.  Luis  Mora,  Geo. 
Bridgeman  and  Cecilia  Beaux. 

STANTON,  Gideon  Townsend,  822  Com- 
mon St.,  New  Orleans,  La, 
, P.— Born  Morris,  Minn.,  July  14,  1885. 
Member  :  New  Orleans  Art  Assoc. 
Award  :  Silver  medal,  New  Orleans 
Art  Assoc.  1911. 

STANTON,  Lucy  May,  552  Cobb  St., 
Athens,  Ga. ;  82  Chestnut  St.,  Boston, 
Mass.;  summer,  Ogunquit,  Me. 
Port.P.,  T.— Born  Atlanta,  Ga.,  May  22, 
1875.  Pupil  of  Colarossi  Academy, 
Simon,  Blanche,  Gandara  and  A.  Koop- 
man  in  Paris.  Member  :  Pa.S.Min.P.; 
Am.  S.  Min.  P.;  N.  A.  Women  PS.; 
Wash.  WCC;  Boston  GA.  Award: 
Medal  of  honor,  PAFA,  1917.  Repre- 
sented by  oil  painting  in  Capitol,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C. 

STANWOOD,  Gertrude,  1015  Cathedral 
St.,  Baltimore,  Md.;  summer.  Folly 
Cove,  Lanesville,  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P.,  T. — Born  West  Newbury,  Mass., 
Mar.  2,  1874.  Pupil  of  Joseph  De  Camp, 
Ernest  Major  and  Lasar.  Member: 
S.Indp.A. 

STARK,  Otto,  1722  N.  Delaware  St.,  In- 
dianapolis,  Ind. 

P.,  I.,  C. — Born  Indianapolis,  Jan.  29, 
1859.  Pupil  of  Lefebvre,  Boulanger  and 
Cormon  in  Paris.  Member:  Inter. 
Soc.  A,L.  Award  :  First  Holcomb 
prize,  Herron  Art  Inst.  1915.  In  charge 
of  Art  Dept.,  Manual  Training  High 
School,  and  art  department.  Technical 
High  School;  instructor,  Herron  Art 
School,  Indianapolis.  Ind.  Work: 
"Two  Boys,"  and  "The  Indian  Trail," 
Herron  Art  Inst.,  Indianapolis;  "River, 
Valley  and  Hill,"  Cincinnati  Art  Mu- 
seum; mural  decoration,  City  Hospital, 
Indianapolis-  and  mural  decorations  in 
the  public  schools  of  Indianapolis;  "Por- 
trait of  Gen.  George  Rogers  Clark."  In- 
diana State  House. 

STARKWEATHER.     William      E.     B..      47 

Washington  Sq..  S.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P., W.— Born  Edinburgh,  Scotland,  1879. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;Colarossi  Acad- 
emy in  Paris;  Sorolla  in  Madrid,  fol- 
lowed by  three  years'  study  in  Italy. 
Member:  New  Haven  PCC;  His- 
panic S.  of  America  (cor.);  AWCS; 
Salma.  C,  NYWCC.  Author  of  "Paint- 
ings and  Drawings  by  Francisco  Goya 
in  the  Collection  of  the  Hispanic  Society 
of  America,   1916." 

STARR,    Loraine    Webster,    Hope    House, 
Easton,  Md.     (P.) 


STARR,  Sidney,  256  West  85th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Lawrence,  L.  I., 
N.    Y. 

P. — Born  Kingston-upon-Hull,  York-* 
shire,  England,  June  10,  1857.  Pupil  of 
Poynter,  Legros.  Award  :  Bronze 
medal.  Universal  Exp.,  Paris,  1889. 
Work:  Mural  decorations,  Grace 
Chapel,  New  York  City;  24  figures  in 
Congressional  Library,  Washington, 
D.    C. 

STAUBEL,    William,    59    St.    Clair    Ave., 
Rutherford,  N.  J. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

STEA,  Caesar,  189  East  115th  St.;  h.  245 
East  118th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— Born  Bari,  Italy,  Aug.  17,  1893. 
Pupil  of  Herman  MacNeil,  Victor  Sal- 
vatore.  Award  :  Medal  from  Beaux- 
Arts  for  relief  in  Educational  Bldg., 
San.    F.,    1915. 

STEADIVIAN.   iVIrs.  IVIarcia  Hunt,  Mission- 
ary Ridge,   Chattanooga,   Tenn. 
P. — Member:  Cincinnati  Woman's  AC. 

STEARNS,      Neiison       (Mrs.      Traphagen 
Stearns),    138    Joralemon    St.,    Brooklyn, 
New    York.    N.    Y. 
S. — M  ember:       N.    A.    Women    PS. 

STEBBINS,  Roland  S(tewart),  192  Dart- 
mouth St.,  Boston,  Mass;  52  Cummings 
Rd.,  Brookline,  Mass. 

P.,  I.,  C,  T.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  May 
22,  1883.  Pupil  of  De  Camp  in  Boston. 
Hachl  in  Munich.  Member  :  Boston 
AC.  Illustrator  of  "At  the  King's 
Pleasure". 


Brandt    (Theodore),    811    East 
Woodruff     Place,     Indianapolis, 


STEELE, 

Drive, 
Ind. 

P.,  Arch. — Born  Battle  Creek,  Mich.,  Nov. 
16,  1870.  Pupil  of  his  father,  T.  C. 
Steele;  Aman-Jean  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: Indianapolis  Arch.  Assoc. ;  In- 
diana AC.     Instructor,  Herron  Art  Inst. 


Frederic     Dorr,     care    of     The 
16  Gramercy  Park;  New  York, 


STEELE, 

Players, 
N.   Y. 

I. — Born  Marquette,  Mich.,  Aug.  6,  1873. 
Pupil  of  NAD  and  ASL  in  New  York. 
Member:  SI  1902.  Award  :  Bronze 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Illustrated: 
"The  Consul,"  by  Richard  Harding 
Davis;  "Wards  of  Liberty,"  by  Myra 
Kelly,;  books  for  Mark  Twain,  F.  R. 
Stockton,  R.  Kipling,  Arnold  Bennett, 
B.  Tarkington,  etc. 

STEELE,  T(heodore)   C(lenfient),  Bloom- 
ington,  Ind. 

P.— Born  Owen  Co.,  Ind.,  Dec.  11,  1847. 
Pupil  of  Royal  Academy  in  Munich 
under  Benczur  and  Loefftz.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1914.  Awards:  Hon- 
orable mention,  Paris  Exp.,  1900; 
Fine  Arts  Corporation  prize,  SWA, 
1910.  Work:  "Gordon  Hill,"  Cincin- 
nati Museum;  "Oaks  at  Vernon,"  "Por- 
trait of  Rev.  N.  A.  Hyde,"  "The  River, 
"Winter  Sunlight,"  Herron  Art  Insti- 
tute, Indianapolis;  "Landscape."  St. 
Louis  Museum;  "Whitewater  Valley," 
Richmond   (Ind.)   Art  Association. 


574 


STEELE 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


STEVENS 


STEELE,    Mrs.    Z.    De    L.,    New   Milford, 

Conn. 

P.,    I. — M  ember:    N.    A.    Women    PS. 
STEELE,  Zulma,  Woodstock,  Ulster  Co., 

N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Appleton,  Wis.,  July  7,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Pratt  Institute,  Brooklyn;  ASL 
of  N.  Y.  Member:  N.  A.  Women 
PS;  Wash.  AC;  S.  Indp.  A. 

STEICHEN,  Eduard  J.,  care  of  Knoedler, 
556  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Milwaukee.  Wis.,  1879. 
Member:  Photo  Secession;  Salon 
d'Automne,  Paris.  Work:  "Nocturne, 
Temple  d'Amour,"  Metropolitan  Mu- 
seum, New  York;  "Across  Marshes," 
Toledo  Museum;  mural  decorations  for 
the  Luxembourg,  Paris;  Chief  of  Photo- 
"ranhic  Section,  Air  'Service,  A.  E.  F., 
in   World   War. 

STEIN,    Modest,    7    West    47th    St.,    New 
York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

STEINBERG,    N.    P.,    1231    North    Maple- 
wood    Ave.,    Chicago,    111. 
Port.   P. — Born  in  Arabia  in  1894.   Pupil 
of    AIC.        Member:       Palette      and 
Chisel  C. 

STELLAR,  Hermine  J(osephine).  1508 
East  Marquette  Rd.,  Chicago,  111. 
P. — Born  in  Austria.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
Sorolla  in  Spain.  Member:  S.  Indp. 
A.  Award:  Traveling  scholarship 
from  Tuesday  Art  and  Travel  Club,  1911. 

STENGEL,      G.      J.,      Philipsburg      Bldg., 
446  Warburton  Ave.,  Yonkers,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma  C. 

STENGEL,   Hans,  48  West  90th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Sheboygan,  Wis.,  Feb.,  1895. 
Member:     S. Indp. A. 

STEPHAN,  Elmer  A.,  234  Main  St.,  Pitts- 
burgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

STEPHENS,  Alice  Barber  (Mrs.  Charles 
H.  Stephens),  Moylan,  Pa. 
I.,  Wood  Engr.,  T. — Born  near  Salem, 
N.  J.,  July  1,  1858.  Pupil  of  PAFA; 
Phila.  School  of  Design  for  Women; 
Julian  and  Colarossi  academies  in 
Paris.  Member:  Plastic  C:  FpIIow- 
ship  PAFA.  Awards  :  Mary  Smith 
prize,  PAFA  3  890;  bronze  medal,  Atlanta 
Exp.,  1895;  gold  medal,  London,  1902. 
Numerous  illustrations  for  "Harper's" 
and  "Century,"  and  wood  engravings 
for    "Scribner's." 

STEPHENS,  Miss  C.  J.,  12  Mulkey  Bldg., 
Portland,    Oregon.      (P.) 

STEPHENS.  George  Frank,  Arden,  Del. 
S..  C— Born  Rahwav,  N.  J.,  Dec.  28, 
1859.  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila.Sketch  C; 
ACPhila.;  NAC. 

STEPHENS,  Owen,  Moylan,  Pa. 

P.— M  ember:     Fellowship  PAFA. 

STERBA,  Antonin,  1549  East  57th  St.; 
h.  6329  Stewart  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  T.- — Born  Hermanec.  Moravia.  Feb. 
11,  1875.  Pupil  AIC;  of  Laurens  and 
Constant  in  Paris.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SA;  Chicago  WCC;  Chicago  AC; 
Chicago  AG.     Instructor  at  AIC. 


STERCHI,  Eda  (Elizabeth)  214  Fair  St., 
OIney,    III. 

P.— Born  Olney,  111.,  May  24,  1885.  Pu- 
pil of  AIC;  Lucien  Simon,  M6nard  and 
Prinet  in  Paris.  Member:  Chicago 
SA;    Chicago    AC. 

STERLING,  Mrs.  Lindsey  Morris,  Edge- 
water,  N.  J.;  summer,  Jay,  Essex  Co. 
(Adirondack  Mts.),  N.  Y. 
S. — Born  Mauch-Chunk,  Pa.,  Nov.  8, 
1876.  Pupil  of  George  Brewster  and 
Jas.  Eraser;  Bourdelle  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: NSS;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  New 
Haven  PCC;  Allied  AA.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal.  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915; 
prize,    N.   A.   Women   PS,    1916. 

STERN,  Ethel  Louise,  735  West  Delavan 
Ave.,   Buffalo,   N.   Y. 

P.,  E.,  T.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Dec. 
5,  1880.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  Buffalo,  and 
ASL   of   N.Y. 

STERN,  Mildred  B.  See  Mrs.  M.  B. 
Miller. 

STERNE,  Maurice,  care  of  Duncan  School, 
Tarrytown,   N.   Y. 

P.,  E.,  S.— Born  at  Libau,  Russia,  1877; 
came  to  New  York  at  age  of  12.  Pu- 
pil of  NAD  and  other  schools  in  New 
York.  Traveled  extensively  in  Europe; 
special  study  of  the  people  of  Bali, 
one  of  the  East  Indian  Islands.  Work 
in:  Carnegie  Institute.  Pittsburgh;  R.  I. 
School  of  Design  Providence;  Metro- 
politan Museum,  New  York;  Boston  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts;  Kaiser  Friedrich 
Museum,   Berlin. 

STERNER,  Albert,  1  Lexington  Ave.;  h. 
145  East  36th  St.,  New  York.  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  T. — Born  London,  England, 
March  8,  1863,  of  American  parents. 
Studied  at  Birmingham,  England;  pupil 
of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under  Bou- 
langer,  Lefebvre  and  G^rome.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1910;  AWCS;  SI  1901  (pres. 
1907-9);  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1913  (assoc):  Lo- 
tos C;  P-G.  Awards:  Hon.  men- 
tion, Paris  Salon,  1891;  bronze  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal  for 
water  color  and  bronze  medal  for  draw- 
ings, Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  gold 
medal,  Munich,  1905.  Illustrated:  "Prue 
and  I,"  by  George  W.  Curtis;  "Fen- 
wick's  Career,"  by  Mrs.  Ward,  etc. 
Work:  "Portrait  of  Martin  Birn- 
baum,"  Carnegie  Inst..  Pittsburgh;  "The 
Blue  Stocking."  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York;  "The  Gray  Cape,"  Toronto 
Museum   of  Fine  Arts. 

STERNFELS,     Edna,    11    Claremont    PL, 
Mt.  Vernon,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp.  A. 

STETSON,  Katherine  Beecher,  223  South 
Catalina  Ave..  Pasadena,  Calif. 
P.,  S.,  T. — Born  Providence,  R.  I.,  Mar. 
23,  1885.  Pupil  of  da  Pozzo,  Sabate, 
Noel  and  Breck  in  Rome;  PAFA  under 
Chase,  Kendall  and  Beaux.  Mem- 
ber: McDowell  Memorial  Assn.;  Chi- 
cago GA;  Fine  Arts  Club,   Pasadena. 

STETTHEIMER,     Florine,    80    West    40th 
St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

STEVENS,   Beatrice,  Pomfret,  Conn. 
P.— Born  New  York,   N.  Y.,   Sept.,  1876. 


575 


STEVENS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


STITT 


STEVENS,     Dalton,     13     West     29th     St., 
New  York.  N.  Y. ;  h.  Metuchen,   N.  J. 
I. — Born    Goochland    Co..     Va.,     Dec.     6, 
1878.     Pupil   of  AIC;    Blanche   and   Cot- 
tet    in    Paris.      Member:    SI. 

STEVENS,  Dorothy,  2  Spadina  Gardens; 
145  West  Wellington  'St.,  Toronto. 
Canada. 

E.,  P.— Born  Toronto,  1888.  Pupil  of 
Slade  School  in  London.  Member: 
Chicago  SE;  P-G.  Award:  Silver 
medal  for  etching.  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  P.. 
1915. 

STEVENS,   E.   D.,  13  West  29th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
I.— M  ember:   SI  1910. 

STEVENS,  Edith  Barretto.  See  Mrs. 
Parsons. 

STEVENS,   Esther  (Mrs.  Walter  T.  Bar- 
ney),  Pt.  Loma,   San  Diego,  Calif. 
P. — Born  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  January  6. 
1885.      Pupil   of   Robert   Henri;   ASL.    of 
N.  Y. 

STEVENS,  George  W(ashington),  Mu- 
seum of  Art;  h.  Scott  Place,  Toledo,  O. 
P.,  W„  L.— Born  Utica,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  16, 
1866.  Pupil  of  J.  Francis  Murphy  In  New 
York.  Member:  Salma.  C;  Asso. 
Museum  Directors.  Director,  Toledo  Mu- 
seum  of   Art   since   1903. 

STEVENS,  Helen  B.  (Mrs.  T.  W.  Ste- 
vens), 5542  Pocussett  St.,  Pittsburgh, 
Pa 

Etcher.— Born  Chicago,  Feb.  8.  1878. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  Frank  Brangwyn  In 
England.  Member:  Chicago  SE. 
Award:  Bronze  medal,  P. -P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915.  Instructor  in  etching  and 
Assistant  Curator  of  Prints,  Art  Insti- 
tute  of  Chicago,   1909-1912. 

STEVENS,  John  Calvin,  187  Middle  St.; 
h.  31  Craigie  St.,  Portland,  Me. 
P  ,  A. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Oct.  8, 
1855.  Member:  AIA;  Boston  S. 
Arch.;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.;  Portland  SA; 
Salma.    C. 

STEVENS,   Marion,   1628   16th   St.,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C. 
P. — M  ember:  Wash.SA. 

STEVENS,  Thomas  Wood,  5542  Pocussett 
St..   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 

Mural  P.,  Etcher,  W.— Born  Daysville, 
111  Jan.  26,  1880.  Pupil  of  Armour  Inst. 
of  Tech..  Chicago;  Frank  Brangwyn  in 
London;  Sorolla  y  Bastida.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SE  (ex-pres.);  Pitts- 
burgh AA.  Professor  in  charge  of  drama, 
Carnegie  Inst,  of  Tech.,  Pittsburgh. 

STEVENS,  Wdlllam)  D(odge),  13  West 
29th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Me- 
tuchen     N     J. 

I— Born  Tidioute,  Pa.,  Sept.  13,  1870. 
Pupil  of  AIC  under  Vanderpoel  and 
Grover.  Member:  SI  1903.  Aw  a  r  d  : 
First   prize,    SI  1903. 

STEVENS,  Will  Henry,  Newcomb  School 
of  Art,  Tulane  University,  New  Orleans, 

P  D  Potter — Born  Vevay,  Ind.,  Nov. 
28*  1881.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Academy 
nrider  Caroline  Lord.  Nowottny  and 
Meakin;  Jonas  Lie  and  A^an  Dearing 
Perrine     in     New     York.     Member" 


Inter.  Soc.  AL;  Cincinnati  AC. 
Award  :  Foulke  prize,  Richmond, 
Ind.,  1914.  Decorator  at  Rookwood 
Pottery, 

STEVENS,  William  Lester,  8a  Holbrook 
St.,   Rockport,  Mass. 

P.,  T.— Born  Rockport,  June  16,  1888. 
Pupil  of  Parker  S.  Perkins,  Boston 
Museum  School.  Member:  Boston 
AC;  Boston  WCC;  NYWCC;  Brush  and 
Chisel  Club,  Boston.  Works:  "Win- 
ter Gray  Day,"  Boston  Art  Club; 
"Winding   Road,"   Boston   City   Club. 

STEVENSON,     Beulah      Elsie,     Ovington 

Bldg.,  246  Fulton  St.;  h.  178  Emerson 
Place,  Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T.— Borji  in  Brooklyn.  Pupil  of 
Joseph  Boston,  Kenyon  Cox,  Kenneth 
Hayes  Miller,  John  Sloan.  Member: 
N.   A.   Women   PS;   Brooklyn   SA. 

STEVENSON,  Gordon,   The  City  Club,   55 
West   44th  St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.— Born  Chicago,   Feb.   28,   1892.     Pupil 
of   Sorolla. 

STEWART,  Catherine,  816  Oak  St., 
Columbus,    O.    (P.) 

STEWART,  Le  Conte,  Cardston,  Alta., 
Canada. 

P.,  I.— Born  Glenwood,  Utah,  Apr.  15, 
1891.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  and  Carl- 
son. Awards  :  Second  prize,  land- 
scape, Utah  State  Fair,  1914;  first  prize, 
landscape,  Utah  State  Fair,  1915. 
Work:  "Twilight  on  the  Deserted 
Ranch."  Utah  State  Collection;  mural 
decorations  in  the  Hawaiian  Temple 
at  Laie;  Cardston  Temple,  Cardston, 
Alta.,   Canada. 

STEWART,     Robert    W.,    550    West    53rd 

St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.   (L) 
STILSON.    Ethel    M.,    1962    East    79th    St.. 
2Z59  Cedar  Ave.,   Cleveland,   O. 
P. — M  ember:     N.  A.  Women  PS. 

STIMSON,  Anna  K(atharine),  3400  Pearl 
St.,  h.  3401  Powelton  Ave.,  Philadel- 
phia, Pa. ;  summer,  Bolton  Landing, 
N.    Y. 

S.— Born  New  York  City,  Nov,  14,  1892. 
Pupil  of  Charles  Grafly.  Member: 
Phila.  Alhance;  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Phila.   WCC. 

STIMSON,  John  Ward,  Corona,  Calif. 
P.,  I.,  T.,  W.,  L. — Born  Paterson,  N.  J., 
Dec.  16,  1850.  Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux- 
Arts  in  Paris  under  Cabanel  and  Jac- 
quesson  de  la  Chevreuse.  Studied  in 
Italy,  Holland,  England.  Director 
Metropolitan  Museum  School,  New  York, 
for  four  years  and  founder  of  Artist- 
Artisan  Inst.,  New  York;  and  of  the 
School  of  Fine  and  Industrial  Arts, 
Trenton.  Author  of  "The  Gate  Beauti- 
ful." 

STITT,  H.  D.,  Sudbrook,  Pikesville,  Mary- 
land. 

Ldscp.,  P.— Born  Hot  Springs,  Ark..  18Sn 
Pupil  of  Howard  Pyle,  Robert  Spencer 
and  Fred  Wagner  at  PAFA.  Mem- 
ber: Charcoal  C,  Baltimore.  Work: 
"Lyric,"  Wilmington  Society  of  Fine 
Arts. 


576 


STOCKBRIDGE 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


STOTTER 


STOCKBRIDGE,  Dana  W.,  46  Middle  St.; 
h.   190   Pine   St.,   Lowell,   Mass. 
P.— Born  Haverhill,  Mass.,  Jan.  29,  1881. 
Pupil   of   Fine   Arts    School    of   Harvard 
University  and  Eric  Pape  School  of  Art. 

STOCKMAN,   Mrs.    Helen   Park,  Sherwood 
Place,  Englewood,  N.  J. 
P.— Born   Oct.   16,   1896.     Pupil  of  Jonas 
Lie,  Louis  Mora,  Robert  Henri.     M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :      S.Indp.A. 

STODDARD,  Alice  Kent,  1603  Walnut 
St.;  h.  7930  Crefield  St.,  St.  Martin's, 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P. — Born  Watertown,  Conn.  Pupil  of 
PAFA.  Member:  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Plastic  C.  Awards:  Mary  Smith 
prize,  PAFA  1911  and  1913;  hon.  men- 
tion, Phila.  AC.  1913;  Fellowship  prize, 
PAFA  1916;  gold  medal,  Philadelphia 
AC,  1916;  Isidor  medal,  NAD,  1917. 
Work  :  "Elizabeth  Sparhawk- Jones," 
Pennsylvania  Academy,  Philadelphia; 
Delgado  Museum,  New  Orleans,  La. 

STODDARD,  Frederick  L(incoln),  Emer- 
son Hill,  Stapleton,  Staten  Island,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P.,  I.— Born  Coaticook,  P.  Q., 
Canada,  March  7,  1861.  Pupil  of  St. 
Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts;  Constant 
and  Laurens  in  Paris.  Member:  St. 
Louis  AG;  Mural  P.;  Salma.C;  N.T. 
Arch.Lg.  1911.  Award  :  Silver  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work:  Mural 
paintings:  City  Hall,  St.  Louis;  High 
School,  St.  Louis;  Hebrew  Technical 
School  for  Girls,  New  York;  "Birth 
and  Development  of  Education,"  East- 
ern District  High  School,  New  York; 
"The  Transfiguration,"  Memorial 
Church,  Baltimore,  Md. 

STOHR,  Julia  Collins  (Mrs.  Peter  C. 
Stohr),  86  Durand  Road,  Maplewood, 
N.  J.;  summer  "Cedarcrest."  Lambert- 
ville,  N.  J. 

P.— Born  Toledo,  O.,  Sept.  2,  1866. 
Pupil  of  Cooper  Union  and  ASL  in 
New  York  under  Beckwith.  Chase,  J. 
Alden  Weir,  Freer  and  W.  L.  Lathrop, 
and  in  Paris.  Member:  Art  Work- 
ers' Guild  of  St.  Paul;  Minnesota  State 
Art  Soc;  Chicago  WCC;  N.  A.  Women 
PS. 

STOKES,  Frank  W(ilbert),  3  Washington 
Square,  N.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  S.— Born  Nashville,  Tenn.  Pupil  of 
PAFA  under  Thomas  Eakins;  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts  in  Paris  under  Gerome; 
ColarossI  Academy  under  Collin;  Ju- 
lian Academy  under  Boulanger  and  Le- 
febvre.  Specialty,  arctic  and  antarctic 
scenes;  member  Pearv  Greenland  Ex- 
pedition 1892  and  1893-94.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA.  Work:  Mural 
decorations,  Museum  of  Natural  His- 
tory,   New   York. 

STOLTENBERG,    Hans,    490    Fifth    Ave., 
Wauwatosa,    Milwaukee.    Wis. 
P.— M  ember:     Wis.  PS. 

STONE.    Frank  F(rederlck),  1036  S.   Bon- 
nie Brae  St.,  Los  Angeles,  Cal. 
S. — Born    London.    England,    March    2 
1863.      Pupil    of    Richard    Belt.      Mem 
b  e  r  :       American       Numismatic       Soc 
Awards  :    First    prize    for    sculpture 
San    Antonio    State    Fair;    gold    medal 


Alaska-Yukon-Pacific  Exp.,  1909. 

Work:  "Gladstone,"  from  life,  Treas- 
ury Office,  London;  "Mark  Twain,  Me- 
dallion,"  Sacramento  State  Library. 

STONE,  Helen  Loasley,  Welland,  Ontario, 
Canada, 
P. — M  ember:  Buffalo  SA. 

STONE,  Leona,  39  West  67th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

P.— M  ember:  SPNY;  N.  A.  Women 
PS. 

STONE,  Vera,  Art  Institute.  Chicago,  111. 
P.— M  ember:  Chicago  WCC. 

STONE,  Walter  King,  Cornell  University, 
Forest     Home,     Ithaca,     N.     Y.;     "Twin 
Doors,"   Falls  Village,  Conn. 
I.,    P. — Born    Barnard,    N.    Y.,    March    2, 

1875.  Pupil  of  Pratt  Inst.,  Brooklyn, 
New  York,  under  Arthur  Dow.  Mem- 
ber: Salma.C.  Work:  "The  Water 
Garden,"  Memorial  Gallery,  Rochester. 
N.  Y.  Assistant  professor  of  painting 
Cornell  University. 

STONER,  Harry,  18  West  37th  St..  New 
York,    N.   Y. 

Mural  P.,  I. — Born  Springfield,  O.,  Jan. 
21,  1880.  Work  :  Design  for  glass 
mosaic  curtain,  executed  by  Tiffany 
Studios  for  the  National  Theatre, 
Mexico  City. 

STONEY,    Eleanor    E.,    15   West   67th    St., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:      Pittsburgh  AA. 

STOOPS,  Herbert  M.,  3  Vandam  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y.    (I.) 

STORM,  Anna  Alfrida,  University  of 
Washington,   Seattle,  Wash.   (P.) 

STORRS,  Frances  Hudson  (Mrs.  William 
M.  Storrs),  1034  Prospect  St.,  Hart- 
ford.   Conn. 

P. — Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  Chase 
and  Hale.  Member:  Conn,  AFA; 
Conn.^  ACS. 

STORRS,  John,  109  rue  du  Cherche  Midi, 
Paris.   France. 

S.,  E.— Born  Chicago,  June  29.  1885. 
Pupil  of  Rodin.  Member:  Chicago 
SE.  W  o  r  k  in:  Chicago  Art  Insti- 
tute. 

STORY,  George  H(enry),  230  West  59th 
St.,   New  York,   N.  Y. 

P. — Born  New  Haven,  Conn.,  Jan.  22, 
1835.  Pupil  of  Charles  Hine  in  New 
Haven;  studied  in  Europe.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1875;  Lotos  C;  A.  Fund  S. 
Awards:  Maine  State  medal.  1859; 
medal.     Centennial     Exp.,     Philadelphia, 

1876.  Curator  of  Paintings,  Metropoli- 
tan Museu-.n,  1889-1906,  acting  director 
1904-5;  curator  emeritus  since  1906. 
Director  Art  Dept.,  Wadsworth  Athe- 
nrpum.  Hartford,  since  1899.  Work: 
"The  Young  Mother,"  "Alexander  S. 
Murray"  and  "Self  Portrait."  Metro- 
politan Museum,  New  York:   "Lincoln," 

.    National      Art      Gallery,      Washington, 

D.  C. 
STOTLER,    Ilka    Marie,    611    Penn    Ave., 

Wilkinsburg,   Pa. 

P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 
STOTTER.  Charles  C,  639  Massachusetts 

Ave..   Washington,   D.   C. 

P.— M  ember:     S.   Wash.   A. 


577 


STOUFFER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


STUBBS 


STOUFFER,  J.  Edgar,  106  East  Saratoga 
St.,   Baltimore,   Md. 
S. — M  ember:   Charcoal  C. 

STOUT,  Ida  McClelland,  5344  Kenmore 
Ave. ;  summer,  Art  Institute,  Chicago,  111. 
S.,  T.— Born  Decatur,  111.  Pupil  of  Al- 
bin  Polasek.  Member  :  Chicago  AG. 
W  o  r  k  :  "Goose  Girl  Fountain,"  Mary 
W.  French  School,  Decatur,  111;  "Prin- 
cess Badoura,"  Hillyer  Gallery,  Smith 
College. 

STOVER,  Allan  James,  Corvallis,  Oregon. 
P.,  I.— Born  West  Point,  Miss.,  Oct.  9, 
1887.     Pupil  of  Cleveland  School  of  Art. 

STOWELL,  M.  Louise,  714  Ins.  Bldg., 
Main  St.;  h.  29  Atkinson  St.,  Rochester, 
N.    Y. 

P.,  I.,  C,  T. — Born  Rochester.  Pupil  of 
ASL.  of  N.  Y.  and  Arthur  W.  Dow. 
Member:  Rochester  Soc.of  Arts  and 
Crafts,  NYWCC.  Specialty,  water 
colors. 

STRAHAN,  Alfred  W(infield),  214  Cham- 
ber of  Commerce  Bldg.;  h.  2127  Chelsea 
Ave.,  Baltimore,  Md. 

P.,  I. — Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  June  24, 
1886.  Pupil  of  S.  Edwin  Whiteman,  and 
Harper  Pennington.  Member:  Char- 
coal  Club. 

STRAIN,  Daniel  J.,  278  Boylston  St.,  Bos- 
ton,   Mass. 
Port.P. — M  ember:  Boston  AC. 

STRAIN,     Frances,     88     Washington     PL, 
New   York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

STRAUS.  Mitteldorfer,  96  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
fork.  N.  Y.;  and  1809  Park  Ave.,  Rich- 
mond, Va. 

P.,  I.— Born  Richmond,  Va.,  Jan.  21, 
1880.  Pupil  of  ASL.  of  Washington; 
studied  in  Europe  and  Africa.  Mem- 
ber: Paris  AAA;  NYWCC.  S.  Indp. 
A;  Alliance.  Award:  Scholarship, 
ASL  of  Wash.,  to  Pratt  Institute.  De- 
signer of  toys. 

STRAWBRIDGE,  Anne  W(est),  6711  Wis- 
sahickon  Ave. ;  h.  Mt.  Airy,  Philadel- 
phia, Pa.;  summer,  Belfast  Rd.,  Cam- 
den,  Maine. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  March  20, 
1883.  Pupil  of  W.  M.  Chase.  Mem- 
ber:    Fellowship  PAFA;   Plastic  C. 

STREAN,  Maria  Judson,  140  West  57th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Washington,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
ASL.  of  N.  Y.  under  Cox  and  J.  Alden 
Weir;  Prinet  and  Dauchez  in  Paris. 
Member:  NYWCC;  Am.  S.  Min.  P.; 
Pa.  Soc.  Min.  P.;  Allied  AA;  N.  A. 
Women  PS;  SPNY.  Award:  Hon. 
mention,    Pan-Am.    Exp.,    Buffalo.    1901. 

STREATFEILD,  Josephine,  Wynthrope, 
Sydenham,  London,  S.  E.,  England. 
Port.  P. — Born  London,  England,  May 
31,  1882.  Pupil  of  Slade  School  in  Lon- 
don, under  Fred  Brown.  Member: 
Phila.  PC;  Soc.  Women  Artists,  Lon- 
don; Ontario  SA.  Specialty,  pastel  por- 
traits  of   children. 

STREATOR,  Harold  A.,  Box  345,  Morris- 
town,    N.    J. 

P.— Born  Cleveland,  O.  Pupil  of  ASL 
of  N.  Y.  Boston  Museum  School. 
Member:    Salma,    C   1906. 


STREET,  Frank,  Leonia,  N.  J.   (I.) 
STRETCH,    Lillian    R.,   1163   Sunset  Ave., 

S.  W.,  Seattle,  Wash.  (P.) 
STRINGFIELD,  Vivian  F.,  229  South 
Normandie  Ave.,  Los  Angeles,  Calif. 
P.,  L,  C,  T.— Born  California.  Pupil  of 
Pratt  Inst.;  Douglas  Donaldson  and 
Ralph  H.  Johonnot.  Member:  South- 
ern Calif.  Art  Teachers  Asso.  Award: 
Bronze  medal,  Panama-Calif.  Exp.,  San 
Diego,    1915. 

STROHL,  Clifford   (Harrison),  416  Avenue 
E.,   Bethlehem,   Pa. 

P.— Born  South  Bethlehem,  Pa.,  Oct. 
8,  1893.  Pupil  of  Jules  Dieudonne,  Or- 
lando G.  Wales;  PAFA.  Member: 
Salma.   C. 

STROTHMAN,    Fred,  562  West  190th  St.; 
412   Audubon   Ave.,   New   York,   N.   Y. 
I.— M  ember:   SI  1913. 

STROUD.  Clara,  61  Poplar  St.,   Brooklyn, 
New  York.   N.   Y. 

P.,  I.,  C,  T.— Bom  New  Orleans,  La., 
Nov.  4,  1890.  Pupil  of  Cimiotti,  Mary 
Lantry,  Otto  W.  Beck,  Ethel  F.  Shaur- 
man  and  Ralph  Johonnot.  Member: 
S.  Indp.  A.;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Brook- 
lyn SA;  Brooklyn  WCC. 

STROUD,  (Mrs.)  Ida  Wells,  10  West  17th 
St.,  East  Orange,  N.  J. 
P.,  D. — Born  New  Orleans,  La.,  Oct.  19, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Pratt  Institute;  ASL  of 
N.  Y.;  Chase,  Linde,  Cimiotti.  Mem- 
ber: N.  A.  Women  PS;  NYWCC. 
Instructor,  painting,  drawing  and  de- 
sign, Fawcett  School  of  Industrial  Art, 
Newark. 

STRUNK,  Herbert,  Shakopee,  Minn. 
S.— Born  Shakopee,  Minn.,  Apr.  9,  1891. 
Pupil  of  St.  Paul  Inst.  School  of  Art. 
Member:  St.  Paul  AS.  Award  : 
Silver  medal,  St.  Paul  Inst.,  1915. 
Work:  "Chief  Shakopee,"  model  in 
St.   Paul  Institute   Gallery. 

STUART,  James  E(verett),  239  Geary  St., 
San  Francisco,   Cal. 

P. — Born  near  Dover,  Me.,  Mar.  24,  1852. 
Pupil  of  Virgil  Williams  and  R.  D.  Yel- 

land  in  San  Francisco.  Member:  S. 
Indp.  A.;  NAC.  Work:  "Summer 
Glow,  Mt.  Takoma"  and  "Sacramento 
River,"  Kalamazoo  (Mich.)  Art  Asso.; 
"Sunset  Glow,  Mt.  Hood,"  Michigan 
State  Library, Lansing;  "Showers  Among 
the  Trees,  New  Jersey"  and  "Sunset 
Glow,  Mt.  Jefferson,"  Omaha  Public 
Library;  "Suriset,  Sacramento  River," 
Reno  Arts  and  Crafts  Club;  "Showers, 
Napa  Valley,"  Oakdale  Public  Library; 
"Morning,  Mt.  Hood,"  Los  Angeles  Mu- 
seum of  History,  Science  and  Art;  "Mt. 
Tallac,  Lake  Tahoe,"  Otis  Art  Insti- 
tute, Los  Angeles.  Originator  of  a  new 
method  of  painting  on  aluminum  and 
wood. 

STUBBS,    Mary    H(elen),   4429   Ellis  Ave., 
Chicago,   111. 

P.,  I..  C,  T.— Born  Greenville,  O.,  Oct. 
31.  1867.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art 
Academy;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  Cincinnati  Woman's  AC; 
Cincinnati  Ceramic  C.  Award:  Hon. 
mention,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893. 


578 


STUBBS 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


SWAIN 


STUBBS,    Mary,    Henrietta    Bldg.,    West 
4th    St.,    Cincinnati,    O. 
P. — M  ember:     Cincinnati     Woir'an's 
AC. 

STUEVER,  Celia  M.,  3444  Russell  Ave., 
St.    Louis,    Mo. 

E.,  P.— Born  St.  Louis.  Pupil  of  St. 
Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts;  Julian  Acad- 
emy in  Paris  under  Bouguereau  and 
Farrier;  studied  in  Vienna  and  Munich. 
Member:  Chicago  SE;  Cal.  SE; 
N.Y.SE.;  Calif.  P.M.  Work  in:  City 
Art  Museum,  St.  Louis;  Library  of  Con- 
gress, Washington,  D.  C;  New  York 
Public  Library. 

STURGEON,  Ruth  (Barnett),  115  Pearl 
St.,  Council  Bluffs,  la.;  summer.  Ster- 
ling, Kan. 

P.,  E.,  C,  T.— Born  Sterling,  Kan.  Oct. 
21,  188.3.  Pupil  of  Louisa  Card  Catlin, 
George  Senseney.  Henry  B.  Snell. 
Member:    Western    Arts   Association. 

STURGES,  Dwight  C,  Melrose,  Mass. 
P.,  E. — Born  Boston,  Mass.  Pupil  of 
Cowles  Art  School  in  Boston.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  SE;  Boston  SE;  Cana- 
dian SE.  Award  :  Lamont  prize 
($25),  Chicago  SE.  1915;  silver  medal  for 
etching,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work  in:  Boston  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts;  Chicago  Art  Institute;  Oakland 
(Cal.)  Museum;  Library  of  Congress, 
Washington;   New  York  Public  Library. 

STURGES,   Lee,  Elmhurst,  111. 

E.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Aug.,  1865.  Pupil 
of  AIC,  PAFA.  Member:  Chicago 
SE;   Calif.   P.M.;   Brooklyn   SE. 

STURGIS,   Mabel    R.,   63  Beacon   St.,   Bos- 
ton,   Mass. 
P. — M  ember:  Copley  S.  1889. 

STURTEVANT,  Helena,  Newport,  R.  L 
P.— Born  Middletown,  R.  I.,  Aug.  9,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School  under 
Tarbell;  Colarossi  Academy  in  Paris  un- 
der Blanche  and  Simon.  Member: 
Inter.  See.  AL.  Director  School  of  Art 
Association,    Newport,   R.   I. 

STURTEVANT,  Louisa  C(lark),  Second 
Beach  Road,  Newport,  R.  I. 
P.,  D.— Born  Paris,  France,  Feb.  2, 
1870.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  School 
under  Tarbell;  Collin  and  Simon  In 
Paris.  Member:  Newport  AA. 
Award:  Silver  medal,  P. -P.  Exp., 
San  Francisco,   1915. 

SUCH,    Marion,    4143    Windsor    St.,    Pitts- 
burgh,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

SUHR,  Frederic  J.,  381  Fourth  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  Bayside,  L.  I., 
N.    Y. 

I.— Born  New  York,  Feb.  15,  1885.  Pupil 
Bridgman,  Fogarty,  Dufner.  Mem- 
ber: Salma.  C;  SI;  Art  Directors 
Club. 

SULLIVAN,    Arthur    B.,    Flatiron    Bldg., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

SULLIVAN.  James  Amory,  98  Chestnut 
St.;  h.  148  Mt.  Vernon  St.,  Boston, 
Mass. ;  summer,  Ashfield,  Mass. 
P..  T.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Aug.  17. 
1875.  Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Alexander 
Harrison. 


SULLIVANT,    T(homas)    S(tarling),    1911 
Pine  St.,    Philadelphia,   Pa. 
I.— Born    Columbus,    O.,    Nov.    4,    1854. 
Pupil  of  PAFA,  Bensell,  Moran.    Mem- 
ber:  SI;   Phila.   Sketch  C. 

SULLY,      Kate,     393      Westminster     Rd., 

Rochester,   N.  Y. 

P. — M  ember:    Rochester    AC. 

SUMMA,  Mrs.  E(mily)  B.,  Route  32, 
Ferguson,   Mo. 

P. — Born  Mannheim,  Germany,  Sept. 
20,  1875.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  FA; 
Bissell;  Dawson-Watson.  Member: 
St.  Louis  AG;  St.  Louis  A.  Lg. 
Awards  :  Frederick  Oakes  Sylvester 
prize  for  landscape,  St.  Louis  Artists' 
Guild    Exh.,    1917. 

SUMMER,   Mrs.   Laura,  Englewood,  N.  J. ; 
summer,   Raquette  Lake,  N.   Y. 
P. — Born    Middletown,    Conn.      Pupil    of 
Van      Deering      Perrine.        Member: 
Palisade  Art   Asso. ;   S.Indp.A. 

SUMMERS,  Dudley  Gloyme,  143  East  21st 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Wood- 
stock, Ulster  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P.,. I. — Born  Birmingham,  England,  Oct. 
12,  1892.  Pupil  of  D.  J.  Connoh,  Charles 
Chapman,  George  Bridgman,  F.  R. 
Gruger.  Member  :  Guild  of  Free 
Lance   Artists. 

SUMMERS,   Ivan   F.,  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
P.,    I. — Born    Mt.    Vernon,    111.       Mem- 
ber:    Salma.  C;  St.  Louis  AG.;  Wood- 
stock  AA.      Award  :      Ives   landscape 
prize,  St.  Louis  AG,  1916. 

SUSAN,  Robert,  1520  Chestnut  St.,  Phila- 
delphia,  Pa. 

P. — M  ember:  Fellowship      PAFA; 

Calif.   AC. 

SUTHERLAND,  Minnie,  2011  North  80th 
St.,   Seattle,  Wash.    (P.) 

SUTTON,  Mrs.  Frank,  1522  44th  St.,  S. 
W.,    Seattle,   Wash.    (P.) 

SVENDSEN,  Charles  C,  P.  O.  Box  609; 
h.  555  Elberon  Ave.,  Price  Hill,  Cincin- 
nati. O. 

P.— Born  Cincinnati,  Dec.  7,  1871.  Pupil 
of  Bouguereau,  Ferrier  and  Colarossi 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  Cincin- 
nati AC.  Award  :  Bronze  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Specialty,  figure 
and  pastoral  scenes. 

SVENSSON,   C.   W.,  1440   Broadway,   New 
York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember  :     Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

SVOBODA,    Vincent   A.,    Elmhurst,    L.    L, 

N.  Y. 

P.— M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

SWAIN,  Francis  W(illiam),  Selves  Bldg., 
127  East  3d  St.;  h.  802  Oak  St.,  Cin- 
cinnati, O.;  summer,  2799  Clay  St.,  San 
Francisco,    Cal. 

P.,  E. — Born  Oakland,  Cal.,  Mar.  24, 
1892.  Pupil  of  Frank  Duveneck  and 
F.  Van  Sloun.  Member:  Cincinnati 
AC;  Cal.  SE.  Work:  Decoration  In 
Westwood  School,  Cincinnati,  O. 

SWAIN,   P(hilip)   S(tarbuck),  3133  Broad- 
wav.    New   York,    N.    Y. 
P..    T.— Born    Nantucket,   Mass.,   Apl.    1, 
1838.    Specialty,    marines. 


579 


SWAN 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


TACK 


SWAN,    Emma    L.,    385   TNTestminster    St., 
Providence,   R.   I. 
P, — M  ember:    Providence  AC. 

SWAN,  Florence  (Wellington),  11  Mason 
St.,  Cambridge,  Mass.;  summer,  Dan- 
bury,   N.   H. 

D.,  T. — Born  Cambridge,  Mass.,  July 
13,  1876.  Pupil  of  Amy  M.  Sacker. 
Member:  Boston  SAC;  Am.  Book- 
plate Soc.  Work:  Memorial  tablets 
in  Beneficent  Congressional  Church, 
Providence;    St.   James'   Church,    Salem. 

SWEENEY,    William    K.,    854    S.    Eutaw 
St.,   Baltimore,   Md. 
P.,    I. — M  ember:    Charcoal    C. 

SWETT,  William  Otis,  Jr.,  154  West  55th 
St.;  care  of  Salmagundi  Club,  47  Fifth 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  and  Deer- 
field,   Mass. 

Ldscp.P. — Born  Worcester,  Mass.  Pu- 
pil of  Whistler,  H.  G.  Dearth;  studied 
in  Munich,  Paris,  Belgium  and  Holland. 
Member:  Salma.C.  1903 ;  Chicago 
AG;  S.Indp.A.  Specialty,  marines  and 
landscapes. 

SWIFT,  Ivan,  Chippewa  Cove  Woods, 
Harbor  Springs,  Mich. 
P.,  E.,  C,  W.,  L. — Born  Wayne,  Mich., 
June  24,  1873.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Freer. 
Von  Suiza,  Ochtman  and  Chase.  Mem- 
ber: NAC.  Work:  "A  Michigan 
Home,"  Detroit  Institute  of  Arts;  "In- 
dian Summer",  DufReld  Branch,  Detroit 
Library;  "Toward  the  Light,"  and  "In 
the  Shadow  of  the  Hill,"  Detroit 
Library.  Author  of  books  of  verse, 
"Fagots  of  Cedar"  and  "The  Blue  Crane 
and   Shore   Songs". 

SWIFT,  Ted  S(tephen),  220  Franklin  St., 
Napa;  summer,  Monticello,  Napa  Co., 
Calif. 

I.,  E.— Born  Monticello,  Apl.  2,  1900. 
Pupil  of  Pedro  J.  Lemos  and  Lorenzo 
P.  Latimer.  Member:  Calif.  PM. 
Represented  in  Thomas  W.  Sanford 
Gallery;  Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  Los 
Angeles  Museum.  Contributor  to  School 
Arts  Magazine. 

SWISHER,  P.  M.,  5504  Media  St.,  Phila- 
delphia,  Pa.    (I.) 

SWOPE,  H.  Vance,  Van  Dyck  Studios, 
939  Eighth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
Ogunquit,  Me. 

P. — Born  southern  Indiana,  March,  1879. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under 
Constant.  Member:  MacD.C;  Circle 
of  American  PS.;  Salma.  C;  N.  Y.  Arch. 
Lg.  Work  in:  Public  Library,  Sey- 
mour, Ind. 

SWOPE,  Mrs.  Kate  F.,  939  Eighth  Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Louisville,  Ky.  Pupil  of  NAD 
in  New  York.  Award  :  Gold  medal. 
Southern  Art  League,  1895;  highest 
award,  Louisville  AL.  1897.  Mem- 
ber:  Louisville  AL. 

SWOPE,     Virginia     Vance,     939     Eighth 

Ave.;    h.    33    East    61st    St.,    New    York, 

N.  Y. ;  summer,  Leonardo,  N.  J. 

P. — Born   Loui.sville.    Ky.      Pupil   of   Du 

Mond,     Mora,     Carlson,     Penfield     and 

Bridgman. 


SYKES,  Mrs.  Annie  G.,  3007  Vernon 
Place,  Vernonville,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P. — Born  Brookline,  Mass.  Pupil  of 
Bo&ton  Museum  School;  Cincinnati  Art 
Academy  under  Duveneck.  Mem- 
ber: Cincinnati  Woman's  AC;  N.  A. 
Women  PS. 

SYKES,  Charles  Henry,  care  of  Evening 
Public  Ledger,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  h.  130 
Upland  Terrace,  Bala,  Pa. 
Cartoonist — Born  Athens,  Ala.,  Nov.  12, 
1882.  Pupil  of  B.  West  Chnedinst, 
Drexel  Inst,  of  Phila.  Member: 
Phila.    Sketch   C. 

SYIVIONS,  (George)  Gardner,  Arts  Club 
Bldg.,  119  East  19th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  1863.  Pupil  of 
AIC;  studied  in  Paris,  Munich  and  Lon- 
don. Member:  ANA  1910,  NA  1911; 
Royal  Soc.British  Artists;  Union  Inter, 
des  Beaux- Arts  et  des  Lettres;  Salma. 
C.  1909;  NAC  (life),  Chicago  SA;  Cen- 
tury Assoc;  Cal.  AC;  Inst.  Arts  and 
Letters.  Awards:  Carnegie  prize, 
NAD  1909;  Evans  prize,  Salma.  C.  1910; 
bronze  medal,  Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910; 
NAC  prize  and  gold  medal,  1912;  third 
W.  A.  Clark  prize  ($1,000)  and  bronze 
Corcoran  medal,  1912;  Saltus,  medal 
NAD,  1913;  Altman  prize  ($500),  NAD, 
1919.  Work:  "The  Opalescent  River," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York:  "Snow 
Clouds,"  Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington; 
"Sorrow,"  Cincinnati  Museum;  "Snow 
Clad  Fields  in  Morning  Light,"  Toledo 
Museum;  "The  Top  of  the  Hill  and 
Beyond"  and  "The  Winter  Sun,"  Art 
Institute  of  Chicago;  "Through  Snow- 
Clad  Hills  and  Valley."  City  Art  Mu- 
seum, St.  Louis;  "Through  Wooded 
Hills,"  Art  Association,  Dallas,  Tex.; 
"Deerfield  River,"  Brooklyn  Institute 
Museum;  "River  in  Winter,"  Minneap- 
olis Institute  of  Arts;  "November, 
Dachau,  Germany."  Carnegie  Institute. 
Pittsburgh;  "Sunlight  in  the  Woods," 
Fort  Worth  (Tex.)  Museum;  also  repre- 
sented in  National  Arts  Club,  New 
York;  Des  Moines  Art  Asso.;  Lincoln 
Art  Asso.,  Nebr. ;  Cedar  Rapids  Art 
Asso.,  Iowa;  Museum  of  Art,  Erie,  Pa.; 
Rochelle  Art  Asso.,  Ind. ;  Union  Lg.  Club, 
Chicago;  Los  Angeles  Museum  of  Art,  i 
Calif.;    Hyde   Park  Art  Asso.,    Chicago.    | 

TAAKE.  Daisy.  Midway  Studios,  6016  - 
Ellis  Ave.,  Chicago,  111.;  h.  1338  North 
Kingshighway,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 
S.,T. — Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  March  21, 
1886.  Pupil  of  AIC  and  St.  Louis 
School  of  Fine  Arts;  Lorado  Taft. 
Member:  'St.  Louis  AL.  Winner  of 
St.  Louis  Art  League  Fountain  Competi- 
tion. Work:  Eight-foot  decorative 
figure   at   Washington   University. 

TABER,  Sarah  A.    See  Mrs.  W.  H.  Coffin. 

TACK,  Augustus  Vincent,  7  West  43rd 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  and  Deerfield, 
Mass. 

P..  T. — Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Nov.  9, 
1870.  Pupil  of  Mowbray  and  La  Farge 
in  New  York;  Merson  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: ASL  of  N.Y.  (life);  Conn.AFA; 
New  Haven  Paint  and  Clay  C;  Century 
Assoc;  Inter.Soc.AL. 


580 


TADAMA 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


TANNER 


TADAMA,     F(okko),    2012^    Laurelshade 
Ave.,  Seattle,  Wash. 

P.,  T.— Born  Bandar,  India,  May  16, 
1871.  Pupil  of  the  Amsterdam  Academy 
of  Fine  Arts.  Member  :  Seattle  Fine 
Arts  Soc.  Award:  First  prize,  Am- 
sterdam, 1898;  hon.  mention,  Paris 
Salon,  1901.  Work:  In  San  Francisco 
Art  Museum;  New  Royal  Theatre,  Vic- 
toria, B.  C;  Press  Club,  and  Industrial 
Exhibition  Bldg-.,  Seattle. 

TAFFS,    C.    H.,    39    West    67th    St.,    New 
York,    N.    Y.    (I.) 

TAFT,  Lorado,  6016  EUis  Ave.;  h.  1548 
East  61st  St.,  Chicago,  111.;  summer, 
"Eagle  Nest  Camp,"  Oregon,  111. 
S.,  T.,  W.,  L.— Born  Elmwood,  111.,  Apr. 
29,  1860.  Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux- Arts 
in  Paris  under  Dumont,  Bonnaissieux 
and  Thomas.  Member:  NSS  1893; 
ANA  1909,  NA  1911;  Nat.  Academy  AL; 
Chicago  SA;  Chicago  Municipal  AL; 
AIA  (cor.),  1907;  111.  State  Art  Com. 
Instructor  and  lecturer,  Chicago  Art 
Inst.,  since  1886;  lecturer  on  art. 
University  of  Chicago.  Awards  :  De- 
signer's medal,  Columbian  Exp.,  Chi- 
cago, 1893;  silver  medal.  Pan. -Am.  Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901;  gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  Montgomery  Ward  prize,  AIC, 
1906;  silver  medal.  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.. 
1915.  Author:  "History  of  American 
Sculpture";  "Modern  Tendencies  in 
'Sculpture."  Work:  "Solitude  of  the 
Soul,"  Art  Institute,  Chicago;  "Wash- 
ington Monument,"  'Seattle,  Wash.; 
"Fountain,"  Paducah,  Ky. ;  "Trotter 
Fountain."  Bloomington.  111.;  "Columbus 
Memorial  Fountain,"  Washington;  Fer- 
guson "Fountain  of  the  Great  Lakes," 
Chicago;  "Blackhawk,"  Oregon.  111.; 
"Thatcher  Memorial  Fountain,"  Denver, 
Colo.;  Ogle  Co.  Soldiers'  Memorial.  Ore- 
gon,  111.;    "Fountain  of  Time,"   Chicago. 

TAGGART,  George  H(enry),  200  Central 
Park  South,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Port.P. — Born  Watertown,  N.  Y.,  March 
12,  1865.  Pupil  of  Bouguereau,  Ferrier 
and  Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Member: 
Soc. Inter. des  Beaux-Arts  et  des  Let- 
tres;  Buffalo  SA.  Awards:  Medal 
of  honor  and  cash  prize,  Utah  State 
Ex.;  hon.  mention,  Exp.  Toulouse, 
France.  Represented  in  private  collec- 
tion of  Emperor  of  Germany;  Palace  of 
Governor,  Citv  of  Mexico;  Mormon 
Temple,    Salt  Lake   City. 

TAGGART,  Lucy  M.,  1  Lexington  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h  1331  North  Dela- 
ware St.,  Indianapolis,  Ind. 
P. — Born  Indianapolis,  Ind.  Pupil  of 
Forsyth,  Chase  and  Hawthorne;  stud- 
led  in  Europe.  Member:  NAC  (life); 
Art  Workers'  Club  for  Women;  Prov- 
incetown  AA;   N.  A.  Women  PS. 

TALBOT,  Cornelia  Brackenridge  (Mrs.  M. 
W.  Talbot),  Talbot  Hall,  Norfolk  Co., 
Va. 

P.— Born  Natrona,  Pa.,  Dec.  30,  1888. 
Pupil  of  PAFA  and  Hugh  Breckenridge; 
Carnegie  Tech.  Inst.  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA;  Pittsburgh  AA. 
Award  :  First  prize,  Pittsburgh  AA, 
1916. 


581 


TALBOT,  Henry  S.,  387  Washington  St., 
Boston,  Mass. 

P. — M  ember:  Boston  AC.  Work: 
"Morning  in  Mid  Ocean,"  Minneapolis 
Institute  of  Arts. 

TALCOTT,    Sarah    W(hltlng),    Elmwood, 
Conn. 
P.— Born    West    Hartford,    Conn.,    Apr. 

21,  1852.  Pupil  of  Chase  and  Cox  in 
New  York;  Bouguereau  and  Robert- 
Fleury  in  Paris.     Member:  Conn.  AFA. 

TALLMADGE,  Thomas  Eddy,  4  East 
Ohio  St.,  Security  Bldg.,  Chicago,  111.; 
h.  University  Club,  Evanston,  111. 
Etcher.— Born  Washington,  D.  C,  Apr. 
24,  1S76.  Pupil  of  Mass.Inst.of  Technol- 
ogy, Boston.  Member:  Cliff  Dwell- 
ers; Chicago  SE;  N.Y.SE.  Award: 
Chicago  Arch.  Club  traveling  scholar- 
ship, 1904. 

TALLMAN,  M(artha)  G(riffith)  (Mrs. 
Walter  B.  Tallman),  3609  Broadway, 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  studio,  Kent.,  Conn. 
P- — Born  Llanidloes,  North  Wales,  Sept. 

22.  1859.  Pupil  of  F.  S.  Church;  NAD; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Mrs.  Coman;  and  Jane 
Peterson.  Member:  Pen  and  Brush 
C;  NYWCC  (assoc);  N.  A.  Women  PS. 

TANAKA,  Yasushi,  917  Seneca  St.. 
Seattle,   Wash. 

P.,  T. — Born  in  Japan.  Member: 
Seattle   FAS. 

TANBERG,  Mrs.  Ella  Hotelling,  Laguna 
Beach,   Calif. 

P. — Born  Janesville,  Wis.     Member: 
West   Coast   Arts;    Janesville   AL;    Chi- 
cago AC;  Calif.  AC;  Laguna  Beach  AA. 
Work:      "Lily    Pond,    Lincoln    Park," 
owned   by  Janesville  Art  League. 
TANDLER,     Rudolph,    31    Bennett    Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 
TANEJI,  Moichiro  Tsuchiya,  61  West  37th 
St.,   New  York,   N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Ogaki  City,  Japan,  Jan.  14, 
1891.  Studied  in  Japan.  Member: 
Penguins. 
TANNAHILL,  Mary  H.,  121  Washington 
PL,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Prov- 
incetown,   Mass. 

P- — Born  Wanenton.  N.  C.  Pupil  of 
Weir,  Twachtman,  Cox  and  Mowbray 
in  New  York.  Member:  Pa.  S. 
Min.  P.;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Provincetown 
AA.  Award:  Prize  for  best  group, 
N.  A.  Women  PS,  autumn,  1914. 
TANNAHILL,  Sallie  B.,  121  Washington 
PL,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Prov- 
incetown, Mass. 

P.,  T.— Born  New  York,  Oct.  25,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Arthur  W.  Dow,  V.  Preissig. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS.  In- 
structor, Art  Dept.,  Teachers  College, 
Columbia  Univ. 
TANNER,  H(enry)  O(ssawa),  70  bis  Rue 
Notre-Dame-des-Champs,  Paris,  France. 
P.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  June  21,  1859. 
Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Thomas  Eakins; 
Laurens  and  Constant  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1909;  Paris  SAP;  Soc. Inter. 
de  Peinture  et  Sculpture;  Fellowship 
PAFA.  Awards  :  Hon,  mention, 
Paris  Salon,  1896;  third  class  medal, 
Paris     Salon,     1897;     Lippincott     prize. 


TARBELL 


WHO*S  WHO  IN  ART 


TAYLOR 


PAFA  1900;  silver  medal,  Paris  Exp., 
1900;  silver  medal,  Pan.-Am.  Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901;  silver  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  second  class  medal,  Paris, 
Salon,  1906;  Harris  prize,  AIC  1906; 
gold  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Specialty,  biblical  subjects.  Work: 
"The  Raising-  of  Lazarus,"  Luxem- 
bourg" Museum.,  Paris;  "Christ  at  the 
Home  of  Mary  and  Martha,"  Car- 
negie Institute,  Pittsburgh;  "Nicode- 
mus,"  Pennsylvania  Academy,  Philadel- 
phia; "The  Two  Disciples  at  the  Tomb" 
and  "The  Three  Marys,"  Art  Institute 
of  Chicago;  "L'Annonciation,"  Wilstach 
Collection.  Philadelphia;  "Holy  Family," 
Hackley  Art  Gallery,  Muskegon,  Mich.; 
"Christ  Walking  on  the  Water,"  Des 
Moines  Asso.  of  Fine  Arts. 
TARBELL,  Edmund  C(harles),  care  Cor- 
coran Gallery  of  Art,  Washington,  D.  C, 
and  New  Castle  N.  H. 
P..  T, — Born  West  Groton,  Mass.,  Apr. 
26,  1862.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum 
School;  Boulanger  and  Lefebvre  in 
Paris.  Member:  Ten  Am. P.;  ANA 
1904,  NA  1906;  Nat.Inst.AL;  Boston  GA. 
Awards:  Clarke  prize,  NAD  1890; 
Shaw  fund,  SAA  1893;  medal,  Colum- 
bian Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  first  Hall- 
garten  prize,  NAD  1894;  Lippincott 
prize,  PAFA  1895;  Temple  gold  medal, 
PAFA  1895;  gold  medal,  ACPhila.  1895; 
second  Elkins  prize,  PAFA  1896;  hon. 
mention,  Tennessee  Exp.,  Nashville, 
1897;  first  prize,  Worcester  Museum, 
1900;  three  medals,  Boston  Charitable 
Mechanics'  Assoc;  bronze  medal,  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  third  prize,  C.I.Pittsburgh, 
1901;  second  prize,  C.I.Pittsburgh,  1904; 
first  prize,  Worcester  Museum,  1904; 
Harris  prize  AIC  1907;  medal  of  honor, 
PAFA  1908;  Saltus  medal,  NAD  1908; 
first  prize  (n,500),  C.LPittsburgh,  1909; 
first  W.  A.  Clark  prize,  Corcoran  AG 
1910,  Beck  gold  medal,  PAFA  1911;  hors 
concours  (jury  of  awards),  P.-P.Exp., 
'San  F.,  1915.  Instructor,  Corcoran  Art 
School,  Washington.  Work:  "Joseph- 
ine and  Mercie,"  Corcoran  Gallery. 
Washington;  "Woman  in  Pink  and 
Green"  and  "Girl  Reading,"  Cincinnati 
Museum;  "Girl's  Head"  and  "Portrait 
of  a  Lady,"  R.  I.  School  of  Design,  Prov- 
idence; "Portrait  of  Gen.  Charles  G. 
Loring."  "Portrait  of  Edward  Robin- 
son," "Girl  Reading"  and  "My  Children 
in  the  Woods,"  Boston  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts;  "The  Venetian  Blind,"  Worcester 
(Mass.)  Museum;  "The  Golden  Screen," 
Pennsylvania  Academy,  Philadelphia; 
"Afternoon  Tea,"  Wilstach  Collection, 
Philadelphia,  Pa.;  "Portrait  of  John  J. 
Albright,"  Fine  Arts  Academy,  Buffalo; 
"Portrait  of  Gen.  Hugh  Scott,"  War 
Department,  Washington,   D.   C. 

TARLETON,  Mary  Liyinqston,  201  In- 
wood  Ave.,  Montclair,  N.  J.;  summer. 
Great  Neck.  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.^— Born  Stamford,  Conn.  Pupil  of 
Childe  Hassam,  Charles  W.  Hawthorne, 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  N.  A.  Wo- 
men PS. 

TAUSZKY,  D(avid)  Anthony,  1025  Lillian 
Way.  Hollywood,  Calif. ;  summer,  Budd 
La;ke,   N.   J. 


Port.P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Sept.  4, 
1878.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under 
Blum;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under 
Laurens  and  Constant.  Member: 
Salma.C.  1907.  Work:  Portrait  of 
Emp.  Franz  Josef  I,  Criminal  Court, 
Vienna;  portrait  of  George  W.  Wingate, 
Wingate  School,  New  York,   N.  Y. 

TAYLOR,    Beatrice    M.,    306    South   Craig 
St.,   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

TAYLOR,  Charles  Jay,  "The  Players,"  16 
Gramercy  Park,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h. 
5654  Callowhill  St.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.;  also 
Carnegie  Technical  Schools,  Pittsburgh, 
Pa, 

I..  P.,  T.— Born  New  York,  Aug.  11, 
1855.     Pupil  of  ASL,  NAD  and  Eastman 

.  Johnson  in  New  York;  studied  in  Lon- 
don and  Paris.  Member:  SI  1910; 
Pittsburgh  AA;  Pittsburgh  Arch.C;  The 
Players;  Phila.AC.  Awards:  Hon. 
mention  for  drawing,  Pan.-Am.  Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901;  bronze  medal  and  hora 
concurs  (iury  of  awards).  P. -P.  Exp., 
'San  F..  1915.  Represented  in  Carnegie 
Inst,  of  Technology.  Instructor,  Carnegie 
Technical  Schools,  Pittsburgh,  since 
1911;  Instructor  J'ederal  Board  Voca- 
tional Summer  classes,  Boothbay  Har- 
bor, Me.  Illustrated  "The  Taylor-Made 
Girl,"  "Short  Sixes,"  by  H.  C.  Bunner; 
"England,"   etc. 

TAYLOR,  Edgar  J.,  Westbrook,  Conn. 
P.,  I.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  22, 
1862.  Pupil  of  NAD;  ASL  o'f  N.  Y. 
under  Beckwith;  Brooklyn  Art  Guild 
under  Eakins.  Member:  Brooklyn 
AC  (vice-pres.  1889-91);  Conn.  Soc.  A.; 
S.  Indp.  A. 

TAYLOR,  Edwin  C,  Yale  School  of  Fine 
Arts;  h.  352  Townsend  Ave.,  New  Haven, 
Conn.;  summer.  Liberty,  Me. 
P..  T.— Born  Detroit.  Mich..  March  10. 
1874.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.  and  Kenyon 
Cox.      Member:    New    Haven    PCC 

TAYLOR,  Elizabeth,  1504  East  57th  St., 
Chicago,  111.;  h.  New  Berlin,  111.,  sum- 
mer, Provincetown,  Mass. 
P. — M  ember  :  Chicago  SA. ;  S.  Indp. 
A. ;  Provincetown  Printers.  Work: 
"Flowers,"   Detroit  Institute. 

TAYLOR,       Emily      (Heyward)       Drayton 

(Mrs.  J.  Madison  Taylor),  1504  Pine 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Min.P.,  W.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa., 
April  14,  1860.  Pupil  of  Cecile  Ferr^re 
in  Paris;  PAFA.  Member:  Pa. Soc. 
Min.P.  (pres.);  Fellowship  PAFA: 
Plastic  C;  Alliance.  Awards  :  Gold 
medal.  Earl's  Court  Ex.,  London,  1900; 
gold  medal  for  services  on  Jury,  Charles- 
ton Exp.,  1902;  silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  medal  of  honor  PAFA, 
1919;  Lea  prize  ($50),  PAFA,  1920. 
Collaborated  with  Miss  Wharton  in 
writing  "Heirlooms  in  Miniature." 
Work:  Portraits  of  President  and 
Mrs.  "William  McKinley.  Dr.  S.  Weir 
Mitchell,   etc. 

TAYLOR,   Frank  J.,  5  West  16th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 


582 


TAYLOR 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


THAYER 


TAYLOR,   Helena   M.,  124  North  18th  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa, 
P.— M  ember:   Fellowship  PAFA. 

TAYLOR,  Henry  Fitch,  Cornish,  N.  H. 
P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Sept.  15,  1853. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  Am.  PS  (pres.).  Author: 
"The  Taylor  System  of  Organized 
Color." 

TAYLOR,  H.  Weston,  524  Walnut  St., 
Philadelphia.    Pa.    (I.) 

TAYLOR,  Ida  C,  55  Wolcott  St.,  Le  Roy, 
N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Le  Roy.  N.  Y.  Pupil  of  W.  M. 
Hunt;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  Por- 
trait, The  Rt.  Rev.  W.  D.  Walker, 
Historical   Museum    of  Buffalo. 

TAYLOR,    John    H.,   527   Fifth   Ave.,    New 
York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

TAYLOR,  Mary  Perkins  (Mrs.  William 
F.   Taylor).     See  Mary  Smyth  Perkins. 

TAYLOR,  Ralph,  1537  South  Seventh  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa.    (P.) 

TAYLOR,  William  Francis,  Lumberville, 
Bucks    Co.,    Pa. 

P.,  I. — Born  Hamilton,  Ontario,  Canada, 
March  26,  1883.  Pupil  of  W.  L.  Lathrop, 
Albert  Sterner.     Member  :     Salma.  C. 

TAYLOR,  W(illiam)  L(add),  Wellesley, 
Mass. 

I..  P.— Born  Grafton.  Mass.,  Dec.  10, 
1854.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Boulanger 
and  Lefebvre  in  Paris.  Member: 
SI  1905;  Copley  S.  1907.  Series  of  il- 
lustrations: "The  19th  Century  in  New 
England,"  "The  Pioneer  West,"  "Pic- 
tures from  the  Psalms."  "Pictures  from 
the  Old  Testament."  Specialty,  biblical 
subjects. 

TAYLOR.  William  N(icholson),  Harvard 
Club,  New  York.  N.  Y. 
P.,  A.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Jan.  22, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Louis  Bernier.  Mem- 
ber: Mural  P.;  NSS;  Beaux- Arts  Inst, 
of  Design;  Beaux- Arts  Architects;  So- 
ciete  des  Architects  diplomes  par  le 
Gouvernement   Francais. 

TAYLOR,  Will  S.,  American  Museum  of 
Natural  History,  West  77th  St.,  Borough 
of  Manhattan;  h.  183  Emerson  PL 
Borough  of  Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P. — M  ember:  Mural  P. ; 
Salma.  C;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  ^V  o  r  k  : 
Sixteen  panels  relating  to  early  life  of 
Alaskan  and  British  Columbian  Indians, 
Museum  of  Natural  History,  New  York; 
religious  mural  for  the  City  Park 
Chapel,    Brooklyn. 

TEAGUE,  Walter  Dorwin,  131  East  31st 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Forest  Hills, 
N.    Y. 

I.,  D.— Born  Decatur,  111.,  Dec.  18,  1883. 
Pupil  of  George  Bridgman.  Mem- 
ber: Guild  of  Free  Lance  A.;  SI; 
Salma.  C.  Designer  of  advertising  for 
Community  Plate  and  Adler-Rochester 
Clothes,    etc. 

TEASDEL,  Mary,  233  W.  Canyon,  Salt 
I  ake  City.   Utah. 

P.— Born  Salt  Lake  City.  Utah.  Pupil 
of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Brush;  Collin, 
Garrido  and  Simon  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber:   Utah  SA. 


TELLING,  Elisabeth,  2120  Lincoln  Park, 
West,    Chicago,    111. 

E.— Born  Milwaukee,  July  14,  1881. 
Pupil  of  W.  P.  Henderson,  George  Sen- 
seney,  H.  E.  Field,  and  studied  in 
Munich.  Member:  Chicago  SE; 
Chicago  SA;  Brooklyn  SE;  Calif.  PM. 
Work:  "  'Uncle  William'  Creach," 
California    State   Library,    Pasadena. 

TENER,     Mrs.     George     E.,     Grove     Ave., 
Sewickley,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

TEN  EYCK,  John  A(dams),  III,  51  West 
10th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  E.— Born  Bridgeport,  Conn.,  Oct.  28, 
1893.  Pupil  of  F.  Luis  Mora,  Kenneth 
Hayes  Miller  and  Bror  J.  O.  Nordfeldt. 
Member:      Whitney   Studio   Club. 

TERA,  George  Sugimori,  421  East  58th 
St.,   New  York,   N.  Y. 

P.— Born  in  Japan,  Sept.  19.  1887.  Pupil 
of  F.  V.  Du  Mond;  Henry  Read. 

TEW,  Marquerite  R.,  4122  Pasadena  Ave.; 
h.  4204  Pasadena  Ave.,  Los  Angeles, 
Calif. 

S. — Born  Magdalena,  N.  M.,  Jan.  6, 
1886.  Pupil  of  Pa.  Museum  School  of 
Ind.  A.,  PAPA;  under  Grafly.  Mem- 
ber: Calif.  AC;  Fellowship  PAFA; 
N.A.  Women  PS.  Award  :  Cresson 
European  Scholarship,  PAFA,  1913. 
Work:  Mayan  ornament  on  portal 
of  South  West  Museum,  Los  Angeles. 

TEWKSBURY,  Fanny  W(allace),  86  Park 

St.,  Newton,  Mass. 

P.,  T. — Born  Boston.  Mass.  Pupil  of 
Mass.  Inst,  of  Technology  and  Ross  Tur- 
ner in  Boston.  Member:  NYWCC. 
THAIN,  Howard  A.,  286  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

THALINGER,  E.  Oscar,  4522a  Adelaide 
Ave.,   St.   Louis,  Mo. 

P. — Born  Alsace-Lorraine,  March.  20, 
1885.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine 
Arts  under  Wuerpel,  Stoddard  and 
Campbell;  Gruber  in  Munich. 

THATER,  Marie  Louise,  2028  Cherry  St., 
St.,    Philadelphia,    Pa.    (P.) 

THAYER,     Mrs.     Emma     B.,     Monadnock, 

N.  H.      (P.) 

THAYER,  Gerald  H(anderson),  Monad- 
nock.   N.   H. 

P.,  W.,  L..  T.— Born  Cornwall-on-Hud- 
son,  N.  Y.,  Sept.  5,  1883.  Pupil  of 
Abbott  H.  Thayer.  Work:  "Par- 
tridge", Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art; 
"Rabbit",  Brooklyn  Museum  of  Art. 
Author  of  "Concealing  Coloration  in  the 
Animal  Kingdom";  The  Nature-Camou- 
flage Book;  "The  Seven  Parsons  and 
the  Small  Iguanodon." 

THAYER,  Gladys  (Mrs.  David  Reasoner), 
Monadnock,   N.   H. 

P. — Born  South  Woodstock,  Conn.,  July 
17,  1886.  Pupil  of  her  father,  Abbott  H. 
Thayer. 

THAYER,  Grace,  845  Boylston  St.,  Bos- 
ton,   Mass. 

P. — Born  Boston.  Pupil  of  Boston  Mu- 
seum School;  Mme.  Hortense  Richara 
In  Paris.    Member:  Copley  S.  1885. 


583 


THAYER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


THOMPSON 


THAYER,     Raymond     L.,     141    East    27th 
St.,    New   York,   N.   Y.     ' 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

THEISS,  J(ohn)  W(illiam),  1308  East  46th 
St.,  Los  Angeles,  Cal. ;  summer,  Strain's 
Camp,  Mt.  Wilson,  Cal. 
Watercolor  P. — Born  Zelionople,  Pa., 
Sept.  20,  1863.  Pupil  of  Lorenzo  P, 
Latimer. 

THEOBALD,    Elisabeth   Sturtevant    (Mrs. 

Samuel  Theobald,  Jr.),  40  Crescent  Ave., 
Arrochar,  S.  I. ;   N.  Y. 
S.,  P.— Born  Cleveland,  O.,  July  6,  1876. 
Pupil  of  Chase,  Mora,  Hawthorne,  F.  C. 
Gottwald,     Herman     Matzen.       Mem- 
ber:    N.  A.  Women  PS;  S.  Indp.  A. 
THEOBALD,     Samuel,     Jr.,     40    Crescent 
Ave.,  Arrochar,   S.   I.,   N.   Y. 
P.,   T. — Pupil  Andre  Castigne.     Instruc- 
tor Dickinson  High  School,  Jersey  City, 
N.  J. 

THEUERKAUFF,  (Carl)  R(udolph),  Corn- 
wall Bldg. ;  h.  55  South  Ave.,  Roches- 
ter, N.  Y. 

P. — Born  in  Germany,  May  4,  1875. 
Chiefly  self-taught.  Member:  Sal- 
ma.C. ;   Rochester  AC. 

THIEDE,  Henry  A.,  North  American 
Bldg.,  Chicago,  111.;  h.  2749  Woodbine 
Ave.,  Evanston,  111. 

I. — Born  Chicago,  1871.  Member: 
Palette   and   Chisel   C. 

THIEM,  Herman  C,  1589  St.  Paul  St.; 
summer,  Stop  16,  Sumerville  Blvd., 
Rochester,   N.  Y. 

P.,  Arch.,  I. — Born  Rochester,  N.  Y., 
Nov.  21,  1870.  Pupil  of  Mechanics'  Inst.; 
Seth  Jones,  Carl  M.  Raschen.  Mem- 
ber: Rochester  AC;  Picture  Painters' 
C. 

THOBURN,  Jean,  Peabody  High  School, 
Margaretta  St.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.;  care 
of  Mrs.  W.  F.  Knox,  Prospect  Ave., 
Ben  Avon,  Pa.;  summer,  12  Cookman 
Ave.,  Chautauqua,  N.  Y. 
P..  T.— Born  Calcutta,  India,  Nov.  27, 
1887.  Pupil  of  Frank  A.  Parsons,  H.  S. 
Stevenson,  A.  W.  Dow.  Member: 
Pittsburgh  AA. 

THOMAS,  Alice   Blair,  1541  Cassie  Place, 
Hollywood,  Cal. 
P.— M  ember:  Cal.  AC. 

THOMAS,    Elizabeth    H.,   474   Commercial 
St.,    Provincetown,    Mass. 
P. — Born    in    Philadelphia.      Studied    at 
PAFA  and  in  Paris.     Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA. 

THOMAS,  Emma  W(arfieid),  1823-25  Wal- 
nut St.;  h.  3409  Hamilton  St.,  Philadel- 
phia,   Pa. 

P..  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Nov.  23, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Beaux,  Chase,  Thos.  P. 
Anshutz  and  Hugh  H.  Breckenridge. 
Member:  Fellowship  PAPA. ;  Phila. 
Alliance. 

THOMAS,  Mrs.  E.  R.,  New  York  Tele- 
graph Bldg.,  822  Eighth  Ave.,  New 
York,   N.  Y.    (Port.    P.) 

THOMAS,  Estelie  L.,  512  No.  Euclid  Ave., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh  AA. 


THOMAS,      Paul      K(lrk)      M  (Iddlebrook), 

New  Rochelle.  N.  Y. 

Port. P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Jan.  31, 
1875.  Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Cecilia 
Beaux,  Chase  and  Grafly.  Member: 
Lotos  C;  Alliance.  Award:  Bronze 
medal,  S't.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work: 
"Dr.  Joseph  Taylor,"  Bryn  Mawr  Col- 
lege; "Prof,  and  Mrs.  Richard  G.  Moul- 
ton,"  Chicago  University;  "A.  C.  Hough- 
ton," Williams  College;  "Prof.  G.  T. 
Ladd,"  Western  Reserve  University; 
"Prof.  Dexter,"  Yale  University;  "Prof. 
H.  N.  Gardiner,"  Smith  College;  "Charles 
Curtis  Harrison,  LL.D.,"  University  of 
Pennsylvania,   Philadelphia. 

THOMAS,  Roland,  409  East  10th  St., 
Kansas  City,  Mo. ;  summer,  1900  South 
Noland,  Independence,  Mo. 
P. — Born  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  July  31, 
1883.  Pupil  of  William  Chase,  Robert 
Henri  and  Frank  Vincent  DuMond. 
Member:  Kansas  City  AG;  and 
American  Artists,  Munich.  Aw  a  rd  : 
Landscape  prize,  Mo.  State  Art  Ex- 
hibit, 1912.  Wo  r  k  :  "Autumn,"  El- 
verhoj  Art  Gallery,  Milton,  N.  Y.; 
"Winter  Dachaon,"  American  Artists' 
Club,  Munich;  mural  decoration  in  Cur- 
tiss   Bldg.,    Kansas    City,    Mo. 

THOMAS,  S(tephen)  Seymour,  80  West 
40th  St..  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Port. P. — Born  San  Augustine,  Tex.,  Aug. 
20,  1868.  Pupil  of  Chase  in  New  York; 
Lefebvre  and  Constant  in  Paris.  M  e  m- 
ber:  Paris  SAP;  Paris  AAA. 
Awards  :  Plon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1895;  bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900; 
third  class  gold  medal,  Paris  Salon  1901; 
bronze  medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  gold  medal,  Munich,  1901;  second 
class  medal,  Paris  Salon,  1904.  Legion 
of  Honor,  France,  1904,  Chevalier  1905. 
Work:  "A  Portrait,"  Albright  Art 
Gallery,  Buffalo;  "Gen.  Lew  Wallace," 
Art  Association,  Indianapolis;  "Lady 
with  a  Dog,"  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York. 

THOMPSON,  Mrs.  Dorothea.  See  Lltz- 
inger. 

THOMPSON,  Mrs.  Edith  Blight,  West- 
bury,  Long  Island,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  New- 
port,  R.   I. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Apr.  27, 
1874.  Pupil  of  F.  V.  Du  Mond  and  Luis 
Mora.  Member:  Newport  AA. 
Specialty,   interiors. 

THOMPSON,   Fred   D.,  184  Alabama  Ava, 

Providence,   R.   I. 

P. — M  ember:      Providence  WCC. 
THOMPSON.   F.   Leslie,  3607  Leland  Ave., 

Chicago,  111. 

E.— M  e  m  b  e  r  :       Chicago     SE;     Calif. 

P.M. 

THOMPSON,  Frederic  Louis,  126  East 
75th  St.;  h.  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  Chilmark,  Mass. 
P.,  S. — Born  Middleboro,  Mass.,  Nov. 
5,  1868.  Pupil  of  George  H.  McCord. 
Member:  Salma.  C. ;  Soc.  des  Beaux 
Arts. 

THOMPSON,   G(eorge)    A(Ibert),   12  Ash- 
bey    St..    Mystic,    Conn. 
P.,  T.,  D.— Born  New  Haven,  Conn.,  July 


584 


THOMPSON 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


THURBER 


1,  1868.  Pupil  of  Yale  School  of  Fine 
Arts,  Yale  University;  John  La  Farge  in 
New  York;  Merson,  Blanc,  Courtols  and 
Girardot  in  Paris.  Member:  Paint 
and  Clay  C.  of  New  Haven;  Salma.C. 
1909.  Work:  "Nocturne,  the  Quinni- 
piack,"  National  Gallery,  Uruguay,  S.  A. 

THOMPSON,  Hannah,  415  Oakland  Ave., 
Pasadena,   Calif. 

P.,  E.,  C,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa., 
Dec.  27,  1888.  Pupil  of  W.  M.  Chase. 
Member:      Calif.   AC;    Calif.    SE. 

THOMPSON,  John  Edward,  1556  High 
St.,   Denver,   Colo. 

P.,  D.,  T.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  Jan.  3, 
1882.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  Buffalo  and  New 
York;  of  Laurens,  Blanche,  Cottet,  and 
Tudor-Hart  in  Paris.  Member: 
Denver  AA.  Instructor  at  Denver 
Academy   of  Applied  Art. 

THOMPSON,   J.   Woodman,   4739   Maripoe 
St.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

THOMPSON,  Juliet,  119  East  19th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Port.P.— Born  in  New  York.  Pupil  of 
Corcoran  Art  School  and  ASL  In  Wash- 
ington; Julian  Academy  In  Paris.  M  e  m- 
ber  :  N.Y.Municipal  AS;  NAC;  S.Wash. 
A.;  Wash.WCC.  Award:  Bronze 
medal,    Atlanta  Exp.,   1895. 

THOMPSON,  Leslie  P(rince),  308  Fenway 
Studios,  30  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Medford,  March  2,  1880.  Pupil 
of  Boston  Museum  School  under  Tar- 
bell.  Member:  Boston  GA;  St. 
Botolph  C.  Awards:  Bronze  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  third  Hallgarten 
prize,  NAD  1911;  H.  S.  Morris  prize, 
Newport  AA  1914;  silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San  F..  1915;  Beck  gold  medal, 
PAFA.    1919. 

THOMPSON,  Mills,  Saranac  Lake,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P.,  W.— Born  Washington,  D.  C, 
Feb.  2,  1875.  Pupil  of  Corcoran  Art 
School  in  Washington;  ASL  of  Wash- 
ington; ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
S.Wash. A.;  Wash.WCC;  AC  Phila. 

THOMPSON,   Myra,  Spring  Hill,  Tenn. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

THOMPSON,  Nellie  Louise,  8  Adams  Hall, 
Trinity  Court,  Dartmouth  St.,  Boston, 
Mass. 

P.,  S. — Born  Jamaica  Plain,  Boston. 
Pupil  of  Sir  James  Linton  and  South 
Kensington  School  under  Alyn  Williams 
and  Miss  Ball  Hughes  in  London; 
Cowles  Art  School  in  Boston  under  De 
Camp;  Henry  B.  Snell.  Studied  sculp- 
ture under  Roger  Noble  Burnham,  Bela 
Pratt.  Member:  Copley  S.  1893; 
allied  mem.   MacD.   C. 

THOMSON,  Frances  Louise,  819  17th  St., 
N.    W.,    Washington,    D.    C. 
P.— M  ember:    Wash.  WCC;  S.  Wash. 
A. 

THOMSON,  George,  789  Elm  St.,  New 
Haven,    Conn. 

P. — Born  Claremont,  Ontario,  Canada, 
Feb.  10,  1868.  Pupil  of  F.  V.  DuMond, 
W.  L.  Lathrop,  H.  R.  Poore.  Mem- 
ber: Conn.AFA;  New  Haven  Paint  and 
Clay  Club.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention, 
Conn.AFA.  1915. 


THOMSON,    H(enry)    G(rlnnell),    Wilton, 

Fairtield    Co.,    Conn. 

P.— Born    New    York,    N.    Y.,    Nov.    24, 

1850.       Pupil     of     NAD,     ASL     of    N.Y., 

Chase.      Member:      S.Indp.A. 

THOMSON,  Rodney,  49  Claremont  Ave., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

I. — Born  San  Francisco,  Calif.,  Oct.  2, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Partington  School  of 
Illustration.  Member:  SI;  Guild  of 
Free  Lance  Artists, 

THOMSON,  W(illlam)  T.,  1020  Chestnut 
St.;  h.  252  North  16th  St.,  Philadelphia, 
Pa. 

P.,  L— Born  Philadelphia,  Oct.  5,  1858. 
Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member:  Fellow- 
ship PAFA;  ACPhila.;  Phila. Sketch  C; 
AAS. 

THORNDIKE,  Charles  Hall,  26  Ru« 
Friant,  Paris,  France. 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Paris,  of  American  pa- 
rents, Dec.  10,  1875.  Pupil  of  Laurens  in 
Paris.  M  e  m.  b  e  r  :  Paris  AAA;  Assoc. 
Salon  d'Automne,  Paris,.  Officer,  French 
Academic. 

THORN  E,  William,  Carnegie  Hall,  154 
West  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Delavan,  Wis.,  1864.  Pupil  of 
Constant,  Lefebvre  and  Laurens  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1902,  NA  1913; 
SAA  1893.  Awards  :  Medal,  NAD  1888; 
hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1891;  bronze 
medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901. 
Work  :  "The  Terrace,"  Corcoran  Gal- 
lery, Washington. 

THRASHER,  Leslie,  51  West  Tenth  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  10  Barrow  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Lake  Placid, 
N.  Y. 

P.,  I. — Born  Piedmont,  West  Virginia, 
Sept.  15,  1889.  Pupil  of  Chase  and  An- 
shutz.  Member:  Wilmington  SFA; 
SI;   Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

THROCKMORTON,     Cleon     (Francis),      3 
Greens  Court,  Washington,   D.  C. 
P.— Born    Atlantic    City,    N.    J.,    Oct.    8, 
1897.      Member:     Wash.    AC. 

THULSTRUP.     See  De  Thulstrup. 

THUM.  Patty  P^rather),  1236  Garvin  PI.; 
654  Fourth  St.,  Louisville.  Kv. 
P.,  I.,  W.— Born  Louisville.  Pupil  of 
Henry  Van  Ingen  at  Vassar  Col.;  ASL 
of  N.  Y.  under  Chase.  Member; 
Louisville  Art  C. ;  Louisville  AA. ;  Louis- 
ville A/tists'  Lg. ;  Louisville  Sketch  C; 
Louisville  AC.  Award  :  Hon.  men- 
tion for  illustration,  Columbian  Exp., 
Chicago,  1893.  Specialty,  flowers  and 
landscapes. 

THURBER,  Caroline  (Nettleton)  (Mrs. 
Dexter  Thurber),  320  Tappan  St., 
Brookline,  Mass.;  summer.  Ferry  Hill, 
Bristol,  R.  I. 

Port.P.— Born  Oberlin,  O.  Pupil  of 
Laurens  and  Constant  in  Paris;  studied 
in  Italy  and  Germany.  Work:  "Mile. 
Ollivier,"  Chateau  de  la  Mouette, 
France;  "Austin  Adams,"  late  Chief 
Justice,  and  "Lieut.-Gen.  Nelson  A. 
Miles,"  State  House,  Des  Moines,  la.; 
"Ex-Governor  Garvin,"  State  House, 
Providence;  "Ex-Mayor  Miller,"  City 
Hall,  Providence;  "Judge  Tillinghast," 
Supreme  Court,  Providence;  "Ex-Presl- 


585 


THURLOW 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


TODAHL 


dent  Mead,"  Mt.  Holyoke  College;  "Mrs. 
A.  A.  F.  Johnston,"  Oberlin  College; 
"President  McKee,"  Western  College 
for  Women,  Oxford,  O.  Specialty,  por- 
traits  of   children. 

THURLOW,  Helen,  46  East  28th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P, — M  ember:     Fellowship  PAFA. 

TIBBETS,  Marion,  care  of  Seattle  Fine 
Arts   Society,   Seattle,   Wash.    (P.) 

TIDDEN,  John  C(lark),  Rice  Inst.;  h. 
1110  Dennis  Ave.,  Houston,  Tex.;  sum- 
mer, Stratton  Park,  Colorado  Springs, 
Colo. 

P.,  T.— Born  Yonkers,  N.  Y.,  Feb.  10, 
1889.  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Awards  : 
Cresson  European  Scholarship,  PAFA; 
second  Toppan  prize,  PAFA,  1914. 
Work  :  "Autum.n,  1918"  and  4  por- 
traits, University  Club,  Houston,  Tex- 
as; "Portrait  of  Josiah  Jackson,"  Penn. 
State    University,    Philadelphia. 

TIEL,    Ella    Sheldon,    30    Milbourne   Ave., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Fellowship  PAFA. 

TIFFANY,  Louis  C(omfort),  347  Madison 
Ave.,  h.  27  East  72d  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  summer,  Laurelton  Hall,  Oyster 
Bay,  L.  I.,   N.  Y. 

P.,  C— Born  New  York,  Feb.  18,  1848. 
Pupil  of  George  .Inness  and  Samuel 
Colman  in  New  York;  Leon  Bailey  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1871;  NA  1880; 
SAA;  AWCS;  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1889:  Century 
Assoc;  NAC;  N.Y.SFA;  N.Y.Municipal 
AS;  AI  Graphic  A;  NSS;  Societe  Nat.des 
Beaux- Arts;  Im.  Soc.  of  F.  Arts,  Japan. 
Awards  :  Gold  medal  for  applied  arts, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  Chevalier  of  the 
Legion  of  Honor  of  France,  1900;  gold 
medal,  Dresden  Exp.,  1901;  grand  prize, 
Turin  Exp.  of  Decorative  Art,  1902;  spe- 
cial diploma  of  honor,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  gold  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.. 
1915.  In  painting,  makes  specialty  of 
Oriental  scenes;  originator  of  what  is 
known  as  B^avrile  glass.  Art  director 
of   Tiffany   Studios. 

TILDEN,    Alice    F(oster),    55    White    St., 

Milton,  Mass. 
.     P. — Born     Brookline,     Mass.       Pupil     of 
Boston  Museum  School;  Wm.  M.  Chase 
in   New    York;    Lucien    Simon.      Mem- 
ber:    Copley  S.  1898. 

TILDEN,    Douglas,   Oakland,   Cal. 

S.,  T.,  W.— Born  Chico,  Cal.,  May  1. 
1860.  Pupil  of  NAD  under  Ward  and 
Flagg;  Gotham  Students'  Lg.  under  Mow- 
bray; Choppin  in  Paris.  Awards  : 
Mon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1890;  bronze 
medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  gold  medal 
Alaska- Yukon-Pacific  Exp.,  Seattle, 
1909;  commemorative  gold  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work:  "The  Tired 
Boxer,"  Art  Institute,  Chicago;  "Base- 
ball Player,"  Golden  Gate  Park,  San 
Francisco;  memorial  monuments  at 
Portland,  Ore.,  Los  Angeles,  San  Fran- 
cisco,  etc. 

TILTON.     Olive,     (Mrs.     Bigelow     Tilton). 
24  "West  59th  St.;  h.   150  East  72nd  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. :  summer,  Cover  Fariii. 
Hull's    Cove,    Me. 
P. — Born  Mountain   Station,   N.   J.,   May 


12,     1886.       Pupil    of    Collin    and    Delo- 
cluse    in    Paris,    and   studied   in    Munich 
and   London. 
TIM  KEN,    Georgia.      See    Mrs.    John    H. 
Fry. 

TIMIVIONS.  Edward  J.,  952  Lawrence 
Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 

P.— Born  Janesville,  Wis..  1882.  Pupil 
of  AIC;  also  studied  in  Holland,  France, 
Italy  and  Spain,  Member:  Chicago 
SA;  Chicago  ASL.  Work:  Portraits 
in  Univ.  of  Chicago,  Univ.  of  Arkansas, 
etc.     Instructor  AIC. 

TIMOTHY,    David,   240    Miller    St.,    Knox- 
ville,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pittsburgh  AA. 

TIN  DALE,  Edward  Henry,  Fenway  Stu- 
dios, Boston,  Mass.;  h.  64  North  Ash 
St.,  Brockton,  Mass.;  summer,  Hanover, 
Mass. 

P.,  T. — Born  Hanson,  Mass.,  Mar.  21, 
1879.  Studied  at  Munich  Acad,  under 
Carl  Marr,  Hans  von  Hayeck,  Loeftz. 

TISCHLER,  Marian  Clara,  453  Riddle 
Road.   Cincinnati,   O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

TITCOMB,  M(ary)  Bradish,  Fenway 
Studios,  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P.,  I. — Born  in  New  Hampshire.  Pupil 
of  Boston  Museum  School  under  Tar- 
bell,  Benson  and  Hale.  Member: 
^^nley  S.,  1895;  NYWXC;  N.  A.  Women 
PS;  Conn.  AFA.  Award:  Hon.  men- 
tion, Conn.  AFA.  1917.  Work  In: 
White  House,  Washington,  D.  C. 

TITLOW,    Harriet     W(oodfin),    132     East 
19th    St..    New   York.    N.   Y. 
P. — Born  Hampton,  Va.     Pupil  of  Rob- 
ert Henri.     Member:     N.  A.  Women 
PS:   PBC;   S.   Indp.   A.;  NAC. 

TITSWORTH,  Julia,  care  of  Mrs.  S.  H. 
Titsworth,  26  East  49th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  Bronxville.  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Westfield,  Mass.,  1878.  Pupil 
of  AIC;  R.  Collin  in  Paris.  Member: 
N.    A.   Women   PS. 

TITTLE,  Waiter  (Ernest),  3  North  Wash- 
ington Square,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  and 
212  East  Cassillv  St..  Springfield.  O. 
P.,  E.— Born  Springfield,  O.,  Oct.  9,  1883. 
Pupil  of  Chase,  Henri  and  Mora  in  New 
York.  Member:  Royal  Society  of 
Arts,  London.  England.  Author  and  il- 
lustrator. "Colonial  Holidays";  "The 
First  Nantucket  Tea  Party,"  etc.  Etch- 
ings in  Chicago  Art  Inst.;  Cleveland  Art 
Museum;  Library  of  Congress  and  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Washington;  N.  Y.  Pub- 
lic Library;   Calif.   State  Library. 

TITUS  (Mr.)  Aime  Baxter,  2924  Juniper 
St.,  San  Diego,   Calif. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Cincinnati,  April  5,  1883. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.,  Harrison,  Mora, 
Bridgman,    DuMond. 

TOBIN,  George  T(imothy),  528  Main  St., 
New  Rochelle.  N.  Y. 

Genre  P..  I — Born  Weybridge,  Vt.,  July 
26,  1864.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under 
Brush.     Member:   ASL  of  N.  Y. 

TODAHL,  John  O.,  212  Second  Ave.,  Mil- 
ford,    Conn. 
P. — M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 


586 


TODD 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


TOWNS  LEY 


TODD,  Charles  Stewart,  Rookwood  Pot- 
tery; h.  2513  Park  Ave.,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P.— Born  Owensboro,  Ky..  Dec.  16,  1885. 
Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy;  Albert 
Herter  in  New  York.  Member:  Cinn. 
AC;  Cinn.MacDowell  Soc. 

TOERRING,  Helena,  2215  West  Tioga  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Min.P. — M  ember:    Fellowship   PAFA. 

TOKSVIG,  Harald,  422  West  150th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y.    (P.) 

TOLMAN,  R(uel  Pardee),  2020  G  St.,  N. 
W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
P.,  Restorer,  Etcher.  T. — Born  Brook- 
field.  Vt..  March  26.  1878.  Pupil  of 
Los  Angeles  School  of  Art  and  Design; 
Mark  Hopkins  Inst,  of  Art;  Corcoran 
School  of  Art,  Washington;  ASL  of  N. 
Y.;  NAD;  J.  C.  Beckwith.  Member: 
Wash.  AC;  S.  Wash.  A.;  Wash.  ATCC. 
Assistant  curator.  Division  of  Graphic 
Arts,  United  States  National  Museum, 
Washington. 

TOLMAN.  Stacy.  7  Thomas  St..  Provi- 
dence, R.  I.;  h.  1182  Mineral  Spring 
Ave.,  Pawtucket,  R.  I. 
Port. P.,  T. — Born  Concord,  Mass.,  Jan- 
uary, 1860.  Pupil  of  Otto  Grundmann  in 
Boston;  Boulanger,  Lefebvre  and  Ca- 
banel  in  Paris.  Member:  Providence 
AC;  Providence  WCC;  Boston  AC.  In- 
structor of  anatomy,  R.  I.  School  of 
Design. 

TOLSON,  Norman,  3723  Warwick  Blvd., 
Kansas  City,  Mo. 

P.,  T.,  E. — Born  Distington,  Cumber- 
land, England,  Mar.  25,  1883.  Pupil  of 
Angelo  von  Jank,  Munich;  AIC.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :  Chicago  SA.  Awards  :  Ed- 
ward B.  Butler  prize,  AIC.  1917;  first 
prize,  Kansas  City  Art  Institute,  1921. 
Work  :  Decorative  panels  in  La  Salle 
Hotel,  Chicago.  Instructor  in  compo- 
sition and  illustration,  Kansas  City  Art 
Institute. 

TOMLINSON,  Henry  W(elling),  Taconic, 
Conn. 

P.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Sept.  18,  1875. 
Pupil  of  E.  S.  Whiteman  in  Baltimore; 
ASL  of  New  York  under  Cox  and 
Brush. 

TOMPKINS.  Frances  L(ouise),  260  Wash- 
ington Ave.;  Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Newark.  N.  J..  Sept.  21.  1877. 
Pupil  of  Robert  Henri,  John  Sloan,  K. 
H.  Miller,  Max  Weber.  Member: 
S.  Indp.  A.;   ASL  of  N.  Y. 

TOMPKINS,  F(rank)  H(ector),  care  of 
Boston  Art  Club,  Boston,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Hector,  N.  Y..  May  13,  1847. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Cincinnati  School 
of  Design;  Royal  Academy  in  Munich 
under  Loefftz.  Member:  Boston  AC; 
Copley  S.  Award:  Gold  medal,  Mass. 
Charitable  Mechanics'  Assoc.  Work: 
"Mother  and  Child,"  Boston  Art  Club; 
"The  Penitent,"  Pennsylvania  Acad- 
emy, Philadelphia;  "The  Young 
Mother,"    Boston    Museum. 

TOMPKINS,  Van   Veet,  51  West  10th  St., 
NeAv  York.   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 


TOOMEY,  R.  W.,  54  Cleveland  Ave.  Co- 
lumbus,  O. 

P. — M  ember:  Pen  and  Pencil  C,  Co- 
lumbus. 

TOPP,   Esther  E.,  5438  Kincaid  St.,  Pitts- 
burgh.   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

TOPPING,  James,  1006  North  Lawler 
Ave.,    Chicago,    111. 

Ldscp.  P. — Born  Cleator  Moor,  Eng- 
land, in  1879.  Studied  in  England,  and 
at  AIC.  Member:  Palette  and 
Chisel  C;  Chicago  SA;  Business  Men's 
AC. 

TORRANCE,      H.     C,     5624     Elgin     Ave., 
Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

TORRES,  Garcia  J.,  4  AVest  29th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp. A. 

TORREY,  Elliot  (Bouton),  39  West  67th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  East  Hardwick,  Vt.  Studied 
in  Florence  and  Paris.  Me  m  b  e  r  : 
Salma.  C;  Soc.  N.Y.A.  Represented  in 
Chicago  Art  Institute. 

TORREY,  Fred  M.,  6016  Ellis  Ave.,  Chi- 
cago, 111. 

S.— Born  Fairmont,  W.  Va.,  July  29, 
1884.  Pupil  of  Charles  J.  Mulligan, 
Lorado  Taft.  Member:  Chicago 
SA;   Western  Soc.   of  Sculptors. 

TORREY,  Mable  Landrum,  6016  Ellis 
Ave.,    Chicago,   111. 

S.,  T.— Born  Sterling,  Colo.,  June  23, 
1886.  Pupil  of  Charles  J.  Mulligan. 
Member:  Alumni  AIC;  Cordon  C. 
Work:  "Wynken,  Blynken  and  Nod 
fountain,"  City  and  County  of  Denver; 
"Buttercup — Poppy  and  Forget-me- 
not,"    South   Bend    (Ind.),   Library. 

TOWNSEND,  Ethel  Here  (Mrs.  .John 
Townsend),  184  North  19th  St.,  East 
Orange,  N.  J. 

Min.P.— Born  Staten  Island,  N.  Y.,  Sept. 
26.  1876.  Pupil  of  Henry  B.  Snell  and 
Orlando  Rouland  in  New  York.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :    NYWCC. 

TOWNSEND.  Frances,  312  North  3rd  St., 
Yakima,   Wash. 

Landscp.  P.,  T. — Born  Washington, 
Me.,  March  27.  1863.  Pupil  of  Robert 
Harshe.  M.  de  Neal  Morgan,  Ambrose 
Patterson. 

TOWNSEND,  Harry  E(verett),  23  East 
63rd  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P..  I..  Etcher.  C— Born  Wyoming,  111.. 
March  10.  1879.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Howard 
Pvle.  Member:  Salma.C.  1908;  SI 
1911;  Allied  AA;  P-G.;  Brooklyn  SE. 
Official  artist  with  the  A.  E.  F.  during 
World  War.  Work  :  drawings  and 
paintinsrs  of  the  War  at  War  College; 
and  in  the  Smithsonian  Institution, 
Washington,  D.  C. 

TOWNSLEY,  C(hannel)  P(ickering),  care 
of  Frank  Brangwyn,  Temple  Lodge, 
Hammersmith,  London,  England;  h.  623 
Park  View  St..  Los  Angeles,  Calif. 
P.,  T.— Born  Sedalia,  Mo.,  Jan.  20,  1867. 
Pupil  of  Julian  and  Deleclnse  academies 
in  Paris;   Chase  in  New  York.     Mem- 


587 


TOZZER 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


TRUMP 


ber:  Salma.  C;  Calif.  AC.  Formerly 
director,  Chase  European  classes;  Lon- 
don (Eng.)  School  of  Art.  Director, 
Otis    Art    Institute. 

TOZZER,   A.   Clare.  Fernbank,   O. 
P. — Member:   Cincinnati  Woman's  A.  C. 

TRACY,  Glen,  157  A-17,  Mt.  Washington, 
Cincinnati,    O.    (P.) 

TRADER,  Effie  Corwin,  538  Hale  Ave., 
Avondale,  Cincinnati,  O. 
Min.P.— Born  Xenia,  O.,  Feb.  18,  1874. 
Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy;  T. 
Dub6  in  Paris.  Member:  Cincin- 
nati Woman's  AC. 

TRAIN,     H.    Scott,    128    Bradhurst    Ave., 

New   York,   N.    Y. 
I.— M  ember:    SI. 

TRASK,  J.  E.  D.,  52  East  53rd  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.      (P.) 

TRAVER.  George  A.,  2  East  23d  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Member:  NAC;  Salma.  C. 
Work:  "Intervale,"  Brooklyn  Insti- 
tute Museum,   Brooklyn,   N.  Y. 

TRAVER,     Marion     Gray,     Williamsburg, 
Mass.;    103    West    80th    St.,    New    York, 
N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:      N.   A.  Women  PS. 

TRAVER,   Warde,   Central   Park   Studios, 
15  West   67th  St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
P.,  W.,  L..,  T.— Born  Ann  Arbor,  Mich., 
Oct.  10,  1880.     Pupil  of  Royal  Academy, 
Munich,   under  Marr;   Millet  and   Snell. 

TRAVIS,  Olln  H(erman),  245  West  North 
Ave.,  Chicago,  111.;  summer,  Ozark,  Ark. 
P.— Born  Dallas,  Texas,  Nov.  15,  1888. 
Pupil  of  AIC. 

TREGANZA,    Mrs.      Ruth     Robinson,     110 

Morningside  Drive,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:      N.   A.   Women   PS. 

TREIDLER,    Adolph,    32    West    11th    St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.— Member:    SI,    1912;   Salma.    C. 

TREMAINE,  Edna  A.,  care  of  Massachu- 
setts Normal  Art  School,  Boston,  Mass. 
(P.) 

TREVITTS,.  J.,   Manistee,    Mich. 

P.,  T. — Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member: 
Fellowship  PAFA.  Award  :  Cresson 
Traveling  Scholarship,  PAFA. 

TRICKER,  Florence,  5639  Wyalnsing  Ave., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 
P. — M  ember  :      Fellowship   PAFA. 

TRIEBEL,  F(rederic)  E.,  North  Boule- 
vard, College  Point,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  United  States,  Dec,  29,  1863. 
Pupil  of  Augusto  Rivalta.  Member: 
Academiciare  of  Merit,  Roman  Royal 
Academy,  San  Luca,  Rome,  Italy. 
Awards  :  Galileo  silver  medal, 
Museo  Nazionale  di  Antropologia,  Flor- 
ence, 1889,  1891.  Works:  Soldier's 
Monument,  Peoria,  111.;  Iowa  State 
Monument,  Shiloh,  Tenn.;  Miss.  State 
Monument,  Vicksburg;  Robert  G.  Inger- 
soll  statue,  Peoria,  111.;  statues  of  late 
Senator  George  L.  Shoup  and  late  Sen- 
ator Henry  M.  Rice,  Statuary  Hall, 
Washington  Otto  Pastor  Monument, 
Petrograd,   Russia. 


TRIFYLLIS,  Demetrius,  80  West  40th  St., 
New   York,   N.   Y.      (P.) 

TRIGGS,  Floyd  W(lllding),  Darien,  Conn. 
Cartoonist.  —  Born  Winnebago,  111., 
March  1.  1872.     Pupil  of  AIC. 

TRIPP,    B.    Wilson,    252   Hope    St.,   Provi- 
dence. R.  I. 
P. — M  ember  :  Providence  AC. 

TRISCOTT,  S(amuel)  P(eter)  R(olt), 
Monhegan,  Me. 

P. — Born  Gosport,  England,  Jan.  4,  1846. 
Pupil  of  Philip  Mitchell  and  R.Inst.of 
Painters  in  Water  Colors  in  London. 
Came  to  United  States  in  1871.  Mem- 
ber: Boston  AC.  Work  in:  Bos- 
ton Museum  of  Fine  Arts. 

TRNKA,      Mrs.     Alois..      See     A.     B.     W. 

Kindlund. 

TROCCOLI,   Giovanni   Battista,   108  Ward 

St.,  Chestnut  Hill,  Mass. 
P.,  C. — Born  Lauropoli,  Italy,  Oct.  15, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Denman  Ross  and  Julian 
Academy.  Member:  Copley  S.; 
Boston  SAC ;  Boston  GA.  Awards  : 
Hon.  mention,  C.  I.  Pittsburgh,  1911; 
Harris  silver  medal  ($500),  AIC  1913; 
gold  medal,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 

TROTTA,  Gieuseppe,  204  Amity  St., 
Flushing,   New  York.     (P.) 

TROUBETZKOY,  Paul,  15  West  67th  St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 

S. — Born  Lake  Intra,  Lake  Magglore, 
Italy,  Feb.  16,  1866.  Studied  in  Italy, 
Russia,  and  France.  Award  :  Grand 
prize,  Paris  Exp..  1900.  Bronzes  in  the 
Luxembourg  in  Paris;  National  Gallery 
in  Rome;  National  Gallery  in  Venice; 
Museum  of  Alexander  III  in  Petrograd: 
Treliakofsky  Gallery  in  Moscow;  Na- 
tional Gallery  in  Berlin;  Royal  Gallery 
in  Dresden;  Leipsig  Gallery;  Chicago 
Art  Institute;  Detroit  Institute;  Toledo 
Museum;  Buffalo  Fine  Arts  Academy; 
Golden  Gate  Park  Museum;  and  Mu- 
seum in  Buenos  Aires;  Brera  Museum, 
Milan. 

TROUBETZKOY,  Pierre,  15  West  67th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Castle  Hill, 
Cobham,   Va. 

P.,  W.— Born  Milan,  Italy,  Apr.  19.  1864. 
Member:       London    Port.    P.    Soc. 

TROUNSTINE,   Syl.   F.,  2545  N.  Ingleslde 
Place,   Cincinnati,   O. 
P. — M  ember:    Cincinnati  AC. 

TRUE.  Allen  Tupper,  Silt.  Colo.;  h.  1450 
Grant  St.,  Denver.  Colo. 
P.,  I. — Born  Colorado  Springs,  Colo.. 
May  30.  1881.  Pupil  of  Howard  Pyle; 
.Corcoran  Art  School  in  Washington; 
Brangwyn  in  London.  Member: 
Denver  AA.  Assisted  Frank  Brangwyn 
with  decorations  for  Panama-Pacific 
Exp.,  1915;  mural  decorations  in  Wyom- 
ing State  Capitol;  Denver  Public  Li- 
brary; Montana  National  Bank;  open 
air  Greek  Theater,  Civic  Center,  Denver. 

TRUMAN,    Ella    S.,    319    Crown    St.,    New 
Haven,  Conn. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

TRUMP,     Mrs.     Rachel     Bulley,    51    Pine- 
brook    Drive,    Larchmont,    N.    Y. 
P.— M  ember:      N.   A.   Women  PS. 


588 


TRY  ON 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


TUTTLE 


TRYON,  D(wight)  W(illiam),  Harperly 
Hall,  41  Central  Park  West;  1  West  64th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer.  South 
Dartmouth,  Mass. 

Ldscp.P.,  T. — Born  Hartford,  Conn., 
Aug.  13,  1849.  Pupil  of  C.  Daubigny, 
Jacquesson  de  la  Chevreuse,  A.  Guille- 
met  and  H.  Harpignies  in  Paris.  M  e  m- 
ber:  ANA  1890,  NA  1891;  SAA  1882; 
AWCS;        Nat.Inst.A.L.  Awards: 

Bronze  medal,  Boston,  1882;  gold  medals, 
American  Art  Assoc,  New  York,  1886 
and  1887;  third  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD 
1887;  Ellsworth  prize,  AIC  1888;  Palmer 
prize,  Chicago  Interstate  Exp.,  1889; 
Webb  prize,  SAA  1889;  first  class  gold 
medal,  Munich  Exp.,  1892;  medal,  Co- 
lumbian Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  first  prize, 
Cleveland  Interstate  Exp.,  1895;  first 
prize,  Tennessee  Centennial,  Nashville, 
1897;  gold  medal  ($1,500),  C.I.Pittsburgh 
1898;  chronological  medal,  C.I.Pittsburgh 
1899;  gold  medal.  Pan- Am. Exp.,  Buffalo, 
1901;  gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
silver  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F..  1915. 
Professor  of  Art,  Smith  College. 
Work:  Thirty  oil  paintings,  two 
water  colors  and  sixteen  pastels  in 
Freer  Collection,  National  Gallery, 
Washington;  "The  End  of  Day,"  Cor- 
coran Gallery,  Washington;  "Moonrise 
at  Sunset,"  and  "Moonlight,"  Metro- 
politan Museum,  New  York;  "Spring 
Morning,"  Toledo  Museum;  "Autumn 
Sunset,"  Worcester  Museum;  "Eve- 
ning," Pennsylvania  Academy,  Phila- 
delphia; "November  Morning,"  Herron 
Art.  Inst.,  Indianapolis;  "Before  Sun- 
rise— June,"  Institute  of  Arts,  Detroit; 
"Twilight  at  Arverne,"  Art  Museum, 
Montclair.  N.  J.;  "Rising  Moon,"  Hack- 
ley  Art  Gallery.  Muskegon,  Mich.;  "Day- 
break," R.  I.  School  of  Design,  Provi- 
dence. 

TSCHUDI,  Rudolf,  3338  Evanston  Ave., 
W.  H.,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P.,  T.— Born  Schwanden,  Canton  Gla- 
rus,  Switzerland,  April  27,  .1855.  Pupil 
of  H.  Ruch  at  Glarus.  Member: 
Cincinnati  AC.  Awards  :  First  prize, 
Ohio  Mechanics  Institute,  1874;  silver 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Work: 
"Surrender  of  Lee."  -ortraits  of  Jeffer- 
son and  Lincoln,  Evanston  School,  Cin- 
cinnati; eleven  paintings  at  the  Art  Mu- 
seum,   Glarus,    Switzerland. 

TSCHUDY,  H(erbert)  B(olivar),  50  Liv- 
ingston St.,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
P..  I.— Born  Plattsburg.  O.,  Dec.  28, 
1874.  Pupil  of  N.  Y.  ASL.  Member: 
Brooklyn  Society  of  Artists;  Brooklyn 
WCC.  Works:  Forty-eight  panels 
in  Brooklyn  Museum. 

TUCKER,  Allen,  121  East  79th  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  Arch. — Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  June 
29,  1866.  Pupil  of  Columbia  Univ.;  ASL 
of  N.  Y.  Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg. 
1902;  SCUA  1888;  Am.  PS.  Represented 
in  Providence  Museum,  Brooklyn  Mu- 
seum, Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art. 

TUCKERMAN,  Lilia  (McCauley),  (Mrs. 
Wolcott  Tuckerman),  Foothill  Rd.,  Car- 
pinteria,  Calif. 

P. — Born  Minneapolis.  Minn.,  July  15, 
1882.       Pupil  of  Geo.  S.  Noyes,  Chas.  H. 


Woodbury  and  DeWitt  Parshall.  Mem- 
ber:     Calif.   AC. 

TUDOR,  Rosamond  (Mrs.  Burgess), 
258  West  11th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  S. — Born  Buzzards  Bay,  Mass.,  June 
20,  1878.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum 
School  under  Benson  and  Tarbell. 
Member:  Newport  AA;  Province- 
town  AA;   Wash.  AC;   Lg.   of  N.Y.A. 

TURCK,  Ethel  Ellis  de,  524  Walnut  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P. — Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS; 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Plastic  C. 

TURMAN,  William  T.,  Terra  Haute, 
Ind. 

P.— Born  Graysville,  Ind.,  June  19,  1867. 
Pupil  of  AIC;  J.  Francis  Smith,  A.  F. 
Brooks,  Sterba,  A.  T.  Van  Laer.  Mem- 
ber: Terre  Haute  Art  Assoc  (v.-pres.). 
Work  in:  High  School,  Columbia  City, 
Ind.;  Public  Library,  Thorntown,  Ind. 
Head  of  Art  Dept.,  Ind.  State  Normal 
School. 

TURNBULL,  Grace  H.,  1530  Park  Ave., 
Baltimore,  Md.     (P.,  S.) 

TURNER,  Helen  M.,  Ill  East  10th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Cragsmoor, 
Ulster   Co.,    N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Louisville,  Ky.  Pupil  of  ASL 
N.  Y.  under  Cox.  Member:  ANA 
1913;  NA,  1921;  NYWCC;  AUied  AA; 
Port.  P.;  NAC;  N.  A.  Women  PS. 
Awards  :  Filing  prize  for  landscape, 
N.  Y.  Woman's  Art  Club,  1912.  Agar 
prize  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Shaw  memorial 
prize  NAD,  1913;  lion,  mention  AIC, 
1913;  Altman  prize  ($500),  NAD,  1921. 
Work  :  Miniature,  Metropolitan  Mu- 
seum, New  York;  "Girl  With  Lantern." 
Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington;  Detroit 
Institute;  Delgado  Museum,  New  Or- 
leans, La.;  National  Arts  Club,  New 
York. 

TURNER,  Lottie  B.,  296  Ryerson  St., 
Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Saginaw,  Mich. 

P.,  T. — Graduate  of  Pratt  Inst.;  pupil 
of  Beck,  Prellwitz,  Paddock,  Johonnot; 
Collins,    Haney,    Snell,   Watson. 

TURNEY,  Mrs.  Agnes  Richmond.  See 
Agnes   M.    Richmond. 

TURNEY,    Olive,    322    Amber    St.,    Pitts- 
burgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

TURNEY,  Winthrop  Duthle,  122  East 
59th  St..  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer, 
Rockport,    Mass. 

P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of 
Loeb,  Du  Mond  and  Brush.  Member: 
Mural  P.;  S.   Indp.  A. 

TUTTLE.  Adrianna,  97  Quitman  St., 
Newark,   N.  J. 

P. — Born  Madison.  N.  J.,  Feb.  6,  1868. 
Pupil  of  Chase.  Specialty,  portraits  on 
ivory. 

TUTTLE,  Charles  iVI.,  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

TUTTLE,  Mrs.  Mildred  Jordan,  186  St. 
Ronan  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 
P.,  E.,  T.— Born  Portland.  Me.,  Feb.  26, 
1874.  Pupil  of  Yale  School  of  Fine 
Arts;  W.  M.  Chase.  Member:  New 
Haven  PCC.  Work:  "Bishop  Samuel 
Seabury,"    Yale   University. 


589 


TUTTLE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


ULLRICH 


TUTTLE,  Ruel  Crompton,  36  Pearl  St., 
Hartford,  Conn.;  h.  Windsor,  Conn. 
Port,  and  Mural  P. — Born  Windsor,  Sept. 
24,  1866.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under 
Mowbray  and  J.  Alden  Weir.  Mem- 
ber: ASL.  of  N.  Y.;  Conn.  APA; 
Wash.  WCC. 

TYLER,   Bayard   H(enry),  95  William  St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. ;    h.    26    Marshall   Rd., 
Yonkers,  N.  Y. 
Port. P.— Born  Oneida,  Madison  Co.,  N.Y., 

April  22,  1855.  Pupil  of  Syracuse  Univ.; 
ASL  and  NAD  in  New  York.  Mem- 
ber: Lotos  C;  Salma  C;  Lg.  of 
N.Y.A.  Award  :         Hon.       mention 

Wash.  S.A.  1913.  Work:  "J.  J. 
Albright,"  Albright  Memorial  Library, 
Scranton,  Pa.;  Holder  Memorial,  Clin- 
ton, Mass.;  Bill  Memorial  Library, 
Groton,  Conn.;  Standard  Club,  Chicago; 
Municipal  Gallery  and  State  Banking 
Dept.,  Albany;  Supreme  Court,  White 
Plains;  College  for  Women,  New 
London. 

TYLER,  Carolyn  D.,  1401  East  53d  St., 
Chicago,    III. 

Min.P.— Born  Chicago.  Pupil  of  AIC 
under  Mrs.  Virginia  Reynolds.  M  e  m- 
b  er  :  Chicago  SA;  Chicago  WCC; 
Chicago  S. Min.P.;  Alumni  AIC;  Chicago 
AC;    Cordon. 

TYLER,  Ernest  F(ranklin),  15  West  38th 
St.;  h.  131  East  66th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

P.,  A..  D. — Born  New  Haven,  Conn., 
Apr.  13,  1879.  Pupil  of  Yale  School  of 
Fine  Arts.  Member:  Society  of 
Beaux-Arts  Architects;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg. 
Work  in  association  with  Edgar  W. 
Jenney — decorations  in  main  Banking 
Room,  Sun  Life  Assurance  Soc,  Mon- 
treal, Canada;  ceilings  in  Woolworth 
Bldg.,  New  York;  Wisconsin  State  Cap- 
itol Bldg.,  Madison;  Union  Central  Life 
Bldg.,  Cincinnati;  decorations,  Hibernia 
Bank  and  Trust  Co.,  New  Orleans,  La. 

TYLER,  James  G(ale),  Greenwich,  Conn. 
Marine  P.,  I.,  W. — Born  Oswego,  N.  Y., 
Feb.  15,  1855.  Pupil  of  A.  Gary  Sn\ith. 
Member:  Brooklyn  AC;  Salma.C. 
1893;    A. Fund   S, 

TYNG,  Griswold,  1011  Centre  St.,  Jamaica 
Plain,  Mass. 
P. — M  ember:  Boston  AC. 

TYRE,  Philip,  Oak  Lane,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Fellowship    PAFA. 

TYSON,  Carroll  S(argent),  Jr.,  319  Wal- 
nut St.;  h.  1900  Spruce  St.,  Philadel- 
phia,  Pa. 

P.,  S.— Born  Philadelphia,  Nov.  23,  1878. 
Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Chase,  Anshutz 
and  Beaux;  Carl  Marr  and  Walter  Thorr 
in  Munich.  Member:  AC  Phila.;  Fel- 
lowship PAFA;  S.Indp.A.  Awards: 
Sesnan  gold  medal,  PAFA  1915;  bronze 
medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Work 
in:  Art  Club  of  Philadelphia;  State 
College   of  Pennsylvania. 

TYSON,   Mrs.   George,  314  Dartmouth  St., 
Boston,  Mass. 
P.— M  ember:   Boston  WCC. 


UERKVITZ,    Herta    (E.W.E.),    3030    Hoyt 
Ave.,   Everett,   Wash. 
P-.    W.— Born    in    Wisconsin,    March    1, 
1894.        Work:        "Summer      Sunset," 
Seattle  Fine  Arts. 

UFER,  Walter,  c/o  J.  E.  D.  Trask,  52 
East  53rd  Street,  New  York,  N.  Y  • 
summer,   Taos,   N.  M. 

P.— Born  Louisville,  Ky.,  July  22,  1876. 
Studied  in  Chicago,  Dresden,  Munich 
and  Paris.  Member:  ANA;  Chicago 
SA;  Salma.  C. ;  Taos  SA;  Los  Angeles 
Modern  AS;  Phila  AC;  Boston  AC;  NAC; 
Wash.  AC;  American  Ac.  of  Munich. 
Awards:  Cahn  prize,  AIC,  1916; 
first  Logan  medal  ($500),  AIC,  1917; 
Clarke  prize,  NAD,  1918;  Third  class 
medal.  Int.  Exp.,  Carnegie  Inst.,  Pitts- 
burgh, 1920;  Altman  prize  ($1,000), 
NAD,  1921.  Works:  "The  Solemn 
Pledge — Taos  Indians,"  Chicago  Art  In- 
stitute; "Portrait  of  ex-Gov.  Edward 
F.  Dunne,"  Springfield  (111.)  State 
House;  "Don  Pedro  de  Taos,"  Brooklyn 
Inst,  of  Arts  and  Sciences;  "Artist  and 
Model,"  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the 
Fine  Arts,  Philadelphia;  "Suzanna  and 
her  Sisters,"  Maryland  Inst.,  Baltimore; 
"Isleta  Bella"  and  New  Mexican  land- 
scape. Museum  of  History,  Science  and 
Art,  Los  Angeles;  "Blind  Indian— 
Isleta,"   Chicago  Municipal  Collection. 

UHLE,  Bernhard,  125  No.  21st  St.,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa. 
P.— M  ember:    Phila.AC. 

ULBRICHT,  Elsa  E(milie),  School  of  Fine 
and  Applied  Art.  Milwaukee;  h.  249 
28th  St.,  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  summer. 
Summer  School  of  Painting,  Saugatuck, 
Mich. 

P.,  C,  T.— Born  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  Mar. 
18,  1885.  Pupil  of  Frederick  F.  Furs- 
man;  Wis.  School  of  Art;  Alex  Mueller; 
Walter  Marshall  Clute;  George  Sen- 
seney  and  Pratt  Inst.  Member 
Wis.  PS;  Milwaukee  Art  Inst.;  Wis. 
Society  of  Applied  Arts. 

ULLMAN,  Alice  Woods  (Mrs.  Eugene  P. 
Ullman),  39  Commercial  St.,  Province- 
town,  Mass. 

1.,  P. — Born    Goshen,    Ind.     Member 
N.  A.   Women  PS;  NAC. 

ULLMAN,  Eugene  Paul,  care  of  The 
Salmagundi  Club,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  New  York,  March  27,  1877.J 
Pupil  of  Wm.  M.  Chase.  Member:! 
Assoc.Soc.Nat.des  Beaux-Arts,  Paris;! 
Paris  SAP;  Salma.C.  1902.  A  w  a  r 
Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
first  class  medal,  Orleans,  France,  1905;| 
second  prize,  Worcester,  1906;  Tempi* 
gold  medal,  PAFA  1906;  silver  medal, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915:  Work:  "Por- 
trait of  Madam  Fisher"  and  "The  Sea,'* 
Herron  Art  Institute,  Indianapolis,  IndJ 

ULLRICH,  Albert  H.,  932  Judson  Ave.. 
Evanston,    111. 

P.— Born  Berlin,  Germany,  April  24» 
1869.  Pupil  of  AIC  under  Chas.  B. 
Boutwood;  Frederick  Freer;  Gari  Mel- 
chers  and  Duveneck,  and  in  Rome^ 
Munich  and  Paris.  Member:  Palette 
and  Chisel  C,  Chicago;  Chicago  SA'A 
Chicago   AC. 


590 


ULP 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


VALENTINE 


ULP,  Clifford  M(cCormlck),  64  Adams  St., 
Rochester,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Saranac, 
Mich. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Olean,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  23, 
1885.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  William 
M.  Chase  and  F.  Walter  Taylor; 
Mechanics  Inst.,  Rochester.  Mem- 
ber: Rochester  AC.  Work  : 
"Adoration  of  the  Magi,"  altar  paint- 
ing St.  Monica's  Church,  Rochester, 
N.  Y. ;  Mural  decorations,  Eastman  Den- 
tal Dispensary,  Rochester,  N.  Y. ;  "Gen. 
Allenby  in  Palestine,"  National  Gallery, 
Washington.  Director  School  of  Fine 
and  Applied  Art,  Mechanics'  Inst., 
Rochester,   N.   Y. 

UNDERWOOD,  Clarence  F.,  25  Clermont 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I. — Born  Jamestown,  N.  Y.,  1871.  Pupil 
of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris  under  Constant,  Laurens  and 
Bouguereau.     Member:   SI  1910. 

UNITT,   Edward   G.,  152  West  46th  St.;  h. 
228  West  End  Ave..  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Scenic  P.— M  ember:  Artists  Aid  Soc. 

UPJOHN,     Anna     Milo,     care    of    Credit 
Lyonnais,     Paris,     France;     11     Central 
Ave..    Ithaca,    N,    Y. 
P. — M  ember:      N.   A.   Women  PS. 

UPTON,  Florence  K.,  21  Great  College 
St.,  Westminster,  London,  England. 
P.,  L— Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  Ken- 
yon  Cox;  Raphael  Collin  in  Paris; 
George  Hitchcock  in  Holland.  Mem- 
ber: Soc.  Nat.  des  Beaux- Arts,  Paris. 
Award  :  Medal  of  honor.  Inter.  Exp., 
Nantes.  1905.  Illustrator  and  creator 
of  the  "Golliwogg"  series  of  children's 
books. 

URICH,    Louis    J.,    79    Gerry   Ave.,    Elm- 
hurst,   L.    I.,    N.    Y. 

S.,  T.— Born  Paterson,  N.  J.,  July  4, 
1879.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Cooper 
Union;  Beaux- Arts  Arch.  Award: 
Barnett   prize,    NAD,    1914. 

USHER,  Leila,  9  Kirkland  PI.,  Cam- 
bridge, Mass;  summer,  Yarmouth,  Me. 
S.,  P. — Born  Onolaska,  La  Crosse  Co., 
Wis.,  Aug.  26,  1859.  Pupil  of  Geo.  T. 
Brewster  in  Cambridge,  Mass.;  ASL  in 
New  York  under  Augustus  Saint  Gau- 
dens;  H.  H.  Kitson  in  Boston;  and 
studied  in  Paris.  Awards  :  Bronze 
medal,  Atlanta,  Exp.,  1895;  hon.  men- 
tion for  medals,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work:  Bronze  portraits  in  Harvard 
University;  Johns  Hopkins  University, 
Baltimore;  Bryn  Mawr  Universi  ^ 
Rochester  University;  Bowdoin  College; 
Tuskegee  and  Hampton  Universities. 
Medal  in  the  Royal  Danish  Mint  and 
Medal  Collection,  Copenhagen.  Bas- 
relief  in  Fogg  Art  Museum,  Cambridge, 
Mass. 
VAGIS,  P(olignotos)  G(eorge),  126  Ea.st 
75th  St.;  h.  75  Ellen  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

S.— Born  Island  of  Thasos,  Greece,  Jan. 
14,  1894.     Pupil  of  Gutzon  Borglum,  Leo 
Lentelli,   John  Gregory. 
VAIL,    Eugene,    89    Rue    AmpSre,    Paris, 
France. 

P. — Born  Saint-Servan,  France,  of 
American   father,   Sept.   29,   1857.     Pupil 


591 


of  ASL  in  New  York  under  Beckwith 
and  Chase;  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts  in 
Paris  under  Cabanel,  Dagnan-Bouveret 
and  Collin.  Member:  Soc.Nat.des 
Beaux-Arts;  Paris  SAP;  Society  de 
Peintres  et  Sculpteurs;  Providence  AC. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1886;  third  medal,  Paris  Salon, 
1888;  gold  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1889; 
grand  diploma  of  honor,  Berlin;  sec- 
ond medal.  Munich;  tirst  class  medal, 
Antwerp;  silver  medal.  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904;  first  medal,  Liege  Exp.,  1905; 
Legion  of  Honor,  1894.  Work: 
"Ready  About,"  Corcoran  Gallery, 
Washington;  "La  Salute— Moonlight- 
Venice,"  and  "Old  Walls— Venice," 
Rhode  Island  School  of  Design,  Provi- 
dence. 

VAILLANT,  Louis  D(avld),  1.52  West 
55th  St.;  h.  1  West  64th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  summer,  Washington,  Conn. 
Mural  P. —Born  Cleveland,  O.,  Dec.  14, 
1875.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under 
Mowbray.  Member:  ASL  of  N.  Y  • 
N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1902;  Mural  P.;  N.Y. 
Municipal  AS;  Century  Assoc;  Salma.C. 
Award:  Second  Hallgarten  prize. 
NAD  1910.  Work:  Stained  glass  • 
windows  in  Meeting  House,  Ethical 
Culture  Society,  New  York;  ceiling 
decoration.  First  National  Bank,  Pikes- 
ville,   Pa. 

VALENTIEN,  Albert  R.,  3903  Georgia  St., 
San   Diego,   Cal. 

P.,  Potter.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  May 
11,  1862.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Acad- 
emy under  Noble  and  Duveneck.  Mem- 
ber: Cincinnati  AC;  San  Diego  AG. 
Awards:  Gold  medal  for  pattery.  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  silver  medal,  Pan.-Cal.Exp., 
San  Diego,  1915.  Member:  Jury  of 
Awards,     Pan-Calif.     Exp.,     San    Diego, 

VALENTIEN,  Anna  M.  (Mrs.  A.  R. 
Valentien),  3903  Georgia  St.,  San  Diego, 
Cal. 

S.,  Potter.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Feb.  27, 
1862.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy 
under  Rebisso;  Rodin,  Injalbert  and 
Bourdelle  in  Paris.  Member:  Cin- 
cinnati Woman's  AC;  San  Diego  AG. 
Awards  :  Gold  medal,  Atlanta  Exp., 
1895;  collaborative  gold  medal,  Pan.- 
Cal.  Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915:  two  gold 
medals,  Pan-Calif.  Exp.,  San  Diego, 
1916;  highest  award  and  cash  prize, 
Sacramento    Exp.,    1919. 

VALENTINE,    De    Alton,    135    West    16th 
St.,   New   York,   N.    Y. 
I.— Born   Cleveland,    Ohio,    June   6,    1889. 

VALENTINE,  Edward  V(lrginius),  809 
East  Leigh  St.;  h.  109  North  Sixth  St., 
Richmond.    Va. 

S.— Born  Richmond,  Va.,  Nov.  12,  1838. 
Pupil  of  Couture  and  Jouffroy  in  Paris; 
Bonanti  in  Italy;  Kiss  in  Berlin.  Mem- 
ber: Richmond  AC  (ex-pres.).  Presi- 
dent, Valentine  Museum.  Richmond,  Va. 
Work:  "Gen.  Robert  E.  Lee,"  Memo- 
rial Chapel,  Lexington.  Va.;  "Thomas 
Jefferson,"  Richmond;  "Gen.  Hugh  Mer- 
cer," Fredericksburg,  Va.;  "I.  I.  Audu- 
bon," New  Orleans,  La.;  "Jefferson 
Davis,"  Richmond.  Va. ;  "Gen.  R.  E 
Lee,"   U.   S.   Capitol,   Washington. 


VALENTINE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


VAN  INGEN 


VALENTINE,  Jane  H.,  50  East  Chestnut 
Ave.,  Chestnut  Hill,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Bellefonte,  Pa.,  in  1870.  Pupil 
of  PAFA.  Member:  Phila.  Alli- 
ance. 

VALK,  Ella  Snowden,  58  West  57th  St., 
New  York.  N.  Y,. 

Min.  P. — M  ember:  N.  A.  Women 
PS. 

VALLE,  Mme.  Maude  Richmond  Fioren- 
tino,  1136  Corona  St.,  Denver,  Colo.; 
summer,  "Mt.  Falcon,"  Mt.  Morrison 
P.  O.,   Colo. 

P.,  I.,  V^.,  T.— Studied  in  New  York 
and    Paris.      Member:      Denver   AA. 

VAN  BOSKERCK,  Robert  W(ard),  58 
West  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Hoboken,  N,  J.,  Jan, 
15,  1855.  Pupil  of  R.  Swain  Gifford  and 
A.  H.  Wyant  in  New  York.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1897,  NA  1907;  SAA  1887; 
Lotos  C. ;  A. Aid  S.  Awards:  Silver 
medal.  Pan- Am. Exp,,  Buffalo,  1901; 
silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904.  Rep- 
resented in  Union  League  and  Lotos 
Club,  New  York;  Lay  ton  Art  Gallery, 
Milwaukee;  Hamilton  Club,   Brooklyn, 

VAN  BUREN,  Rae,  138  West  56th  St., 
New  York,  N,  Y.    (L) 

VANCE,  Fred  Nelson,  corner  Plumb  and 
Jefferson  Sts,  Crawfordsville,  Ind. 
Mural.P. — Born  Crawfordsville,  Ind., 
1880,  Pupil  of  AIC;  Smith  Academy  in 
Chicago;  Julian,  Colarossi  and  Vittl 
academies  in  Paris;  Max  Bohm  in 
Paris;  E.  Vedder  In  Rome,  Member: 
Paris   AAA. 

VAN  DEN  HENGEL,  Walter,  63rd  and 
Overbrook   Ave.,    Philadelphia,    Pa.    (P.) 

VANDERPOEL,  Emily  Noyea  (Mrs.  John 
A.  Vanderpoel),  22  Gramercy  Park,  New 
York.  N.  Y.;  summer,  Litchfield,  Conn. 
P.,  W.— Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  R. 
Swain  Gifford  and  Wm.  Sartaln.  Mem- 
ber: NYWCC;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  NAC. 
Award  :  Bronze  medal,  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago,  1893.  Author  of  "Color 
Problems";  "Chronicles  of  a  Pioneer 
School." 

VANDERPOOL,  Matilda,  9431  Pleasant 
Ave.,  Chicago,  111;  summer,  Gold  Hill, 
Colo. 

P.,  T.— Born  Holland.  Pupil  AIC,  David 
Ericson.  Member:  Chicago  WCC; 
Chicago  SA;  Cordon  C. 

VAN  DER  VEER,  Mary,  Amsterdam, 
N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Amsterdam,  N,  Y,  Pupil  of 
NAD  under  Edgar  M,  Ward  and  Will 
H.  Low;  Phila.Art  School  under  Chase; 
Whistler  in  Paris;  studied  in  Holland. 
Member:  NYWCC ;  Plastic  C. ; 
N.  A.  Women  PS.  Awards  :  Bronze 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  Shaw 
memorial   prize,   NAD,   1911. 

VAN  DER  WEYDEN,  Harry,  Rye,  Sussex, 
England. 

P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  1868,  Pupil  of 
Laurens,  Lefebvre  and  Constant  in 
Paris;  Fred  Brown  in  London,  Mem- 
ber: Paris  SAP;  Paris  AAA;  Inst, of 
Oil  Painters,  London.  Awards: 
Third  class  medal  Paris  Salon,  1891; 
second      medal,      Inter,Exp.,      Antwerp, 


1894;  gold  medal,  Atlanta  Exp.,  1895; 
bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  second 
gold  medal,  Munich,  1901;  gold  medal, 
Vienna,  1902;  third  medal,  LiSge  Exp,, 
1905,  Work:  "Christmas  Eve,"  Art 
Institute  of  Chicago;  pictures  purchased 
by   French   Government,    1906   and   1908. 

VAN-DORSSEN,    G.,    103    West    14th    St., 
New  York,  N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

VAN  DRESSER,  William,  7  Reservoir 
Oval,  Williamsbridge,  New  York  City, 
N.   Y. 

I. — Born  Memphis,  Tenn,,  Oct,  28,  1871. 
Pupil  of  F.  Luis  Mora  and  Walter  Ap- 
pleton   Clark,     Member:   SI  1911, 

VAN  DUZEE,  Kate  Keith,  1471  Main  St.; 
Dubuque,    Iowa. 

P.,  C, — Born  Dubuque,  la,,  Sept.  18, 
1874,  Pupil  of  Arthur  Dow,  John  Jo- 
hansen  and  Charles  Woodbury.  Mem- 
ber: Chicago  AG;  Dubuque  AA. 
Awards  :  Medals  for  water  color. 
Iowa  'State  Fair,  1917,  1918;  hon,  men- 
tion for  water  color,  St.  Paul  Inst.,  1918; 
medal  for  monochromes  and  water 
colors,  Iowa  State  Fair,  1919,  1920. 
Work:  Oil  painting  in  Dubuque  Pub- 
lic Library. 

VAN     ELTEN,     Elizabeth     F.     Kruseman. 

See  Mrs.  Duprez. 

VAN    EVEREN,    Jay,    309    East    77th    St., 
New    York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:    Mural   P. 

VAN     GORDER,     L(uther)     Emerson,    504 

Euclid  Ave.,  Toledo,  O. 
P.,  I,— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa„  Feb,  22, 
1861.  Pupil  of  Chase  and  C.  Y.  Turner 
in  New  York;  Ecole  des  Beaux- Arts  In 
Paris  under  Carolus  Duran;  studied  in 
London,  Member:  NYWCC;  Toledo 
Tile  C.  Work:  "Quai  Aux  Fleurs." 
Museum  of  Art,  Toledo. 

VAN     INGEN,    W(illiam)     B(rantley),    60 

Washington  Mews,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P, — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Aug, 
30,  1858,  Pupil  of  PAFA  under  Schues- 
sele  and  Eakins;  La  Farge  in  New 
York;  Bonnat  in  Paris.  Member: 
N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1889;  Mural  P.;  Fellow- 
ship PAFA;  ACPhila.;  NAC;  Lotos  C; 
A, Aid  S,:  A.Fund  S.  Award:  Hon. 
mention,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901. 
Work:  "The  Divine  Law,"  "Signing 
of  the  Magna  Charta,"  "Socrates  Dis- 
cussing the  Nature  of  Justice,"  "Cicero 
Speaking  from  the  Roman  Forum," 
"The  Origin  of  Circuit  Courts,"  "The 
Signing  of  the  Constitution  of  the 
United  States,"  "Lincoln  as  a  Law 
Student"  and  "Lincoln  as  President," 
eight  panels  in  U.  S.  Court  House,  Chi- 
cago; "Justice  and  Mercy,"  "An  Ap- 
peal to  Justice,"  U.  S,  Court  House,  In- 
dianapolis; eleven  panels  representing 
"Coinage,"  four  panels,  "Gold  Mining," 
U,  S.  Mint,  Philadelphia;  fourteen  pan- 
els representing  the  "Early  Settlers  of 
Pennsylvania,"  State  Capitol,  Harris- 
burg,  Pa.;  sixteen  panels,  "Industries 
of  New  Jersey,"  State  Capitol,  Trenton; 
"The  Departments,"  six  panels  in  Con- 
gressional Library,  Washington;  "Con- 
struction  of  the   Canal,"   five   panels  In 


592 


VAN  LAER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


VER  BECK 


Administration  Bldg.,  Panama  Canal 
Zone,   1914-15. 

VAN  LAER,  Belle,  Johnsville,  Bucks  Co., 
Pa. 

Min.P.— Born  Philadelpliia,  Sept.  19, 
1862.  Pupil  of  S.  J.  Ferris,  J.  L.  G. 
Ferris,  Herman  Faber  and  Ludwig 
Faber.  Member:  Plastic  C;  Alumni 
Phila. School  of  Design. 

VAN  NESS,  Mrs.  Beatrice  Whitney.  See 
Whitney. 

VAN  PEPPELENDAM,  Laura,  Art  Insti- 
tute, Chicago,  111.     (P.) 

VAN  ROEKENS,  Paule  (Victorine 
Jeanne),  Baker  Bldg.,  1628  Chestnut  St., 
Philadelphia;  h.  Glenside,  Pa. 
P. — Born  Chateau-Thierry,  France,  Jan. 
1,  1898.  Pupil  of  Henry  B.  Snell,  Leo- 
pold G.  Seyffert,  Jos.  Pearson  and  C. 
Grafly.  Member:  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Plastic  C;  Alliance.  Award:  Gold 
medal,  Plastic  C,  1920.  Works:  "15th 
St.,  from  Broad  St.  Station,"  Pa.  State 
College;  "The  New  Boulevard,"  Graphic 
Sketch  Club;  "Treat  'Em  Rough,"  Pa. 
Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts. 

VAN  SLOUN,  Frank  J.,  1617  California 
St.;  h.  946  Central  Ave.,  San  Francisco, 
Calif. 

P.,  E.,  T.— Born  St.  Paul,  Mmn. 
Award:  Bronze  medal,  P.-P  Exp., 
San  F.,  1915. 

VAN  SOELEN,  Theodore,  Chamber  of 
Commerce  Bldg.,  Albuquerque,  N.  M. ; 
summer,  care  of  San  Ysidro  Trading 
Co.,  San  Ysidro,  N.  M. 
P.— Born  at  St.  Paul,  Minn.,  Feb.  15, 
1890.  Pupil  of  PAFA.  Work:  "Sum- 
mer Morning,"  Pennsylvania  Academy 
of  the  Fine  Arts. 

VAN  VEEN,  Pieter  (J.)  (L.),  58  West 
57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer, 
Kent,    Conn. 

P. — Born  The  Hague,  Holland,  Oct.  11, 
1875.  Studied  in  Holland  and  France. 
Member:  Salma.  C;  NAC;  N.  Y. 
Municipal  AS.  Represented  in  Museum, 
Seattle,  Washington;  Butler  Art  Insti- 
tute,   Youngstown,    O. 

VAN-VLECK,   Natalie,  149  East  45th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

VAN  VOAST,  Virginia  R.,  507  East  Third 
St.,  Cincinnati,  O.  ^^ 

P  — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman  s 
AC. 

VAN   VORST,   G.,   470   Fourth   Ave.,   New 
York.  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

VAN  WART,  Ames,  care  of  Century  As- 
soc, 7  West  43d  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.r 
and  Neuilly-sur-Seine,   France. 
S  —Born    New    York.      Pupil    of    Hiram 
Powers.     Member:   Century  Assoc. 

VAN  WERVEKE,  (George),  Atelier 
Bldg.,  33  West  67th  St.,  New  York, 
N.    Y. 

I.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Oct.  7,  1888. 
Illustrations  for  "New  York  Times," 
"Scribner's,"    "Century." 

VAN    WESTRUIVI,   Anne,    8   West   8th   St., 
New  York.  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:   Conn.AFA. 


VARIAN,  George  Edmund,  256  West  121st 
St.;  114  East  28th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ; 
638  10th  St.,  Brooklyn,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I. — Born  Liverpool,  England,  Oct,  16, 
1865.  Pupil  of  Brooklyn  Art  Guild; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  Salma.C. 
1905;  Brooklyn  AC.  Illustrated:  "Seen 
in  Germany,"  by  Ray  Stannard  Baker; 
"The  Tragedy  of  P616e,"  by  George 
Kennan,  etc. 

VARIAN,  Lester  E.,  903  Gas  and  Electric 
Bldg.;  h.  464  Williams  Parkway,  Denver, 
Colo. 

E.,  A.,  T.— Born  Denver,  Colo.,  Oct.  20, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Donn  Barber  and  Chif- 
flot.     Member:      Denver  AC;   AIA. 

VARNUiVI,  William  H(arrison),  School  of 
Fine  Arts.  University  of  Wisconsin, 
Madison.  Wis.;  summer,  Monhegan,  Me. 
Ldscp.P.,  C,  T.— Born  Cambridge, 
Mass.,  Jan.  27,  1878.  Pupil  of  De  Camp, 
Major  and  C.  H,  Woodbury  in  Boston; 
Julian  Academy  in  Paris  under  Lau- 
rens. Member  :  Western  Arts  Assoc. 
Asso,  professor  of  applied  arts,  Univ. 
of  Wis. 

VAYANA,  Nunzio,  903  Main  St.,  Hart- 
ford, Conn.;  summer.  South  Glaston- 
bury, Conn, 

P. — Born  Castelvetrano,  Italy,  Aug.  28, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Grosso,  Morelli,  and  Pi- 
sani.  Member:  Conn.  AFA;  Conn. 
Soc.  of  Painters;  Society  of  Artists, 
Rome. 

VEDDER,  Elihu,  4  Porta  Pinclana.  Roma 
VI,  Italy, 

P.,  S.,  I.,  W,— Born  New  York,  Feb.  26, 
1836.  Pupil  of  T.  H.  Mattlson  at  Sher- 
burne, N,  Y, ;  Picot  in  Paris;  studied 
in  Italy.  Has  resided  In  Rome  since 
1867.  Member:  ANA  1863,  NA  1865; 
SAA  1880;  Mural  P,;  Century  Assoc; 
Nat. Inst. A,L.  Awards  :  Hon.  men- 
tion, Paris  Exp.,  1889;  gold  medal,  Pan- 
Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901.  Work:  "The 
Pleiades"  and  "African  Sentinel,"  Met- 
ropolitan Museum,  New  York;  "Min- 
erva," mosaic  and  five  panels.  Library 
of  Congress,  Washington;  mural  decor- 
ation, Bowdoin  College;  "The  Keeper  of 
the  Threshold,"  Carnegie  Institute, 
Pittsburgh;  "The  Lair  of  the  Sea  Ser- 
pent," "Lazarus,"  "The  Sphinx"  and 
"Fisherman  and  Djinn,"  Boston  Museum 
of  Fine  Arts;  "Storm  in  Umbria,"  "The 
Fates  Gathering  in  the  Stars,"  Art  Insti- 
tute of  Chicago;  "Fisherman  and  the 
Mermaid,"  Brooklyn  Institute  Museum; 
"Sicilian  Girl"  and  "Landscape,"  R.  I. 
School  of  Design,  Providence.  Illus- 
trated: "The  Rubaiyat  of  Omar  Khay- 
yam." Author  of  "The  Digressions  of 
v.";   "Woods  in  "Verse." 

VENANZI,  Carlo  Gino,  4300  Wornall  Rd. ; 
h.  4903  Broadway,  Kansas  City,  Mo. 
P.,  E.,  A. — Borji  Assisi,  Italy,  Sept.  6. 
1875.  Pupil  of  Fine  Art  Institute  of 
Siena,  Florence  and  Rome.  Member: 
Academic    Belle    Arti,    Perugia. 

VER  BECK,  Frank,  care  of  Curtis  Brown, 
Ltd..  6  Henrietta  St.,  Covent  Garden, 
London,    England. 

I.— Born  Belmont  Co.,  Ohio,  1858.  lU 
lustrator  and  author  of  "A  Short  Little 


593 


VER  BECK 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


FOLK 


Tale  from  Bruintown,"  "Timothy 
Turtle's  Great  Day,"  "The  Donkey 
Child,"  "The  Little  Cat  Who  Journeyed 
to  St.  Ives";  "Ver  Beck's  Book  of 
Bears";  "The  Elephant  Child";  "The 
Little  Lost  Lamb,"  etc.  Designer  of 
the  Ver  Beck  earthenware  models. 

VER  BECK,  Mrs.  Frank.  See  Rion, 
Hanna. 

VERBEEK,  Gustave,  125  Sherman  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  E.— Born  Nagasaki,  Japan,  Aug.  29, 
1867.  Pupil  of  Constant,  Laurens, 
Girardot,  Blanc,  and  Brush. 

VERHEYDEN,  Francois  (Isidore),  Prov- 
incetown,   Mass. 

P.,  E.,  T. — Born  Hoeylaert,  Belgium, 
April  8,  1880.  Pupil  of  Royal  Academy 
of  Brussels. 

VERSCHAERER,     Barth,     60     West    36th 
St.,   New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

VETTER,      IVIrs.      Cornelia      C(owles),     29 

Huntington   St.,   Hartford,    Conn. 
P.,  E.,  T.— Born  Hartford,  Feb.  20,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Robert  Henri;  Andrada  in  Paris 
and   Spain.     Member:   Conn.AFA. 

VEZIN,  Charles,  409  Palisade  Ave.,  Yon- 
kers,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  April  9, 
1858.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under 
Du  Mond,  Chase,  George  Elmer  Browne, 
Helen  M.  Turner,  John  Carlson.  M  e  m- 
b  er  :  ASL  of  N.  Y.  (pres.);  Salma. 
C.  1902  (pres.  1914);  Municipal  AS; 
Yonkers  AA  (vice-pres.);  Alliance; 
NAC;  Century  Assoc.  Award:  Hon. 
mention   S.Wash.A.    1914. 

VHAY,  Mrs.  John  D.,  R.  F.  D.  No.  6, 
Pontiac,   Mich.    (P.) 

VIANCO,    Ruth,    care   of  Mechanics   Inst., 
Rochester,    N.    Y. 
P. — Member:    Rochester    AC. 

VICE,  Herman  Stoddard,  56  East  Con- 
gress St.;  h.  1460  Argyle  St.,  Chicago, 
111. 

P.,  I.— Born  Jefferson,  Ind.,  1884.  Pupil 
of  Chicago  Academy  of  Fine  Arts. 
Member:     Palette  and   Chisel   C. 

VICKERS,      S(quire)      J(oseph),      Grand- 

View-on-Hudson,    N.   Y.  . 

P.,  A.,  C,  W.— Born  Middlefield,  Ot- 
sego Co.,  N.  Y.,  May  18,  1872.  Designed 
subway  stations  and  ornamental  ele- 
vated structures  of  the  rapid  transit 
system    of   New   York. 

VILLON,   Jacques,   care   of  Walter  Pach, 
13  East  14th  St.,  New  York,  N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

VINCENT,  H(arry)  A(iken),  Rockport, 
M!ass. 

P.— Born  Chicago,  Feb.  14,  1864.  Self 
taught.  Member:  ANA;  Salma.  C; 
Allied  AA.  Award  :  Shaw  prize, 
Salma.  C,  1907;  Isidor  prize,  Salma.  C, 
1916;    Turnbull   prize,    Salma.   C,    1918. 

VI N  MAR,  Charles,  care  of  Charles  A. 
Moran,  220  Broadway,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 


VINTON,    L(illian)     Hazlehurst,    51    West 

12th   St.,   New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — Born    Boston,    Mass.,    June    5,    1881. 
Pupil  of  'S.   Simi  in  Florence;   R.   Collin 
and   Richard   Miller  in  Paris. 

VINTON-Brown,  Pamela,  51  West  12th 
S.,  New  York,   N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Jan.  28,  1884. 
Pupil  of  Collin  and  Courtois  in  Paris; 
Edwin  Whiteman  in  Baltimore.  Mem- 
ber: French  Miniature  Society; 
Deutsche  Werkbund.  Award  :  Hon. 
mention,  miniature  section.  Exhibition 
American  Woman's  Work,  Paris,  1914. 

VIVIAN,  Calthea  (Campbell),  Hotel  Clare- 
mont,   Berkeley,    Calif. 

P.,  E.,  T.— Born  Fayette,  Mo.  Pupil  of 
Arthur  Mathews;  Lazar  and  Colarossi 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  San 
Francisco  AA;  San  Francisco  SE; 
Laguna  Beach  AA;  Calif.  AA.  Repre- 
sented in  Palace  of  Fine  Arts,  San 
Francisco;  Arkansas  Auditorium  Gal- 
lery. 

VOGNILD,  Edna  (Mrs.  Enoch  Vognild), 
22  Tooker  PI.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.— Born,  Chicago.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Haw- 
thorne, J.  C.  Johansen,  H.  B.  Snell, 
Colarossi  and  Delecluse  Academies  in 
Paris. 

VOGNILD,  Enoch  M.,  22  Tooker  PI., 
Chicago,  111. 

P.— Born  Chicago,  April  8,  1880.  Pupil 
of  AIC  under  Johansen  and  Vanderpoel; 
summer  under  Woodbury;  Julian  and 
Delecluse  Academies  in  Paris.  M  e  m- 
ber:  ASL  of  Chicago;  The  Round 
Table;  Chicago  AC;  Chicago  AG; 
Chicago  SA.  Award  :  Municipal  Art 
League    prize,    1906. 

VOGT,  L(ouis)  C(harles),  141  East  Fourth 
St.,  Cincinnati;  h.  3300  Westside  Ave., 
Hyde  Park,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P. — Born  Cincinnati,  July  29,  1864.  Pu- 
pil of  H.  Siddons  Mowbray  and  Frank 
Duveneck,  Member:  Cincinnati  AC. 
Represented  by  three  water  colors  in 
Cincinnati  Museum. 

VOIGHT,  Charles  A.,  514  Rochelle  Terrace, 
Pelham  Manor,  N.  Y. 
I.— Mem  be  r  :  SI  1913. 

VOLK,  Douglas,  119  East  I9th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Centre  Lovell, 
Me. 

P.,  T.,  L.,  W.— Born  Pittsfleld,  Mass., 
Feb.  23,  1856.  Son  of  the  sculptor,  Leon- 
ard W.  Volk.  Pupil  of  G6r6me  In  Parlii. 
Member:  ANA  1898,  NA  1899;  SAA 
1880;  NAC;  A. Fund  S.;  A. Aid  S.;  Port. 
P.;  N.Y.Arch.Lg,  1912;  Century  Assoc; 
Inter.Soc.A.L.;  Mural  P.  Awards: 
Medal,  Col.  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  Shaw 
Purchase,  SAA  1899;  first  prize, 
Colonial  Exh.,  Boston,  1899;  silver 
medal,  Pan-Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
silver  medal,  Charleston  Exp.,  1902; 
Carnegie  prize,  SAA  1903;  silver 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp..  1904;  gold 
medal.  Carolina  A  A  1907;  Proctor 
portrait  prize,  NAD  1910;  Saltus  gold 
medal.  NAD  1910;  gold  medal.  NAC 
1915;  Maynard  portrait  prize,  NAD  1915; 
gold  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915; 
Beck    gold    medal,    PAFA    1916.      Cross 


594 


VOLKERT 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


VONNOH 


I 


of  officer  of  the  Order  of  Leopold  II., 
1921.  Organized  handicraft  movement 
at  Centre  Lovell;  director  Minneapolis 
School  of  Fine  Arts  1886  to  1893-  for- 
merly instructor  NAD  and  Cooper  Union. 
Work:  "Father  Hennepin"  and  "Battle 
of  Missionary  Ridge,"  mural  decora- 
tions, St.  Paul  Capitol,  St.  Paul,  Minn.; 
"Puritan  Mother  and  Child,"  Carnegie 
Institute,  Pittsburgh;  "Portrait  of  Dr. 
Felix  Adler"  and  "Little  Mildred," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York;  "Ac- 
cused of  Witchci^aft,"  Corcoran  Gallery, 
Washington;  "Boy  with  the  Arrow,"  Na- 
tional Gallery,  Washington;  "Maiden's 
Reverie."  Pittsfield  (Mass.)  Museum; 
"Fur  Trading  Period,"  mural  decoration 
1913  for  Court  House,  Des  Moines,  Iowa; 
"Reverie,"  Art  Museum,  Montolair, 
N.  J.;  "The  Artist's  Daughter,"  Me- 
morial Art  Gallery,  Rochester,  N.  Y. ; 
"Among  the  Lilies,"  National  Arts  C^lub, 
New  York;  "Adoration,"  Hackley  Art 
Gallery,  Muskegon,  Mich.;  "By  the 
Pond,"  Omaha  Art  Gallery;  portraits 
of  King  Albert,  Lloyd  George,  Gen. 
Pershing,  National  Gallerv,  Washing- 
ton; "Gov.  A.  E.  Smith,"  Capitol, 
Albany. 

VOLKERT,  Edward  C(harles),  741  South 
Oak  Drive,  Williamsbridge.  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  summer,  3426  Hallwood  Place, 
Cincinnati,   O. 

P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Sept.  19,  1871. 
Pupil  of  Frank  Duveneck  in  Cincin- 
nati; ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  ANA; 
NYWCC:  AWCS;  Allied  AA;  Salma.C; 
Cincinnati  AC;  Union  Inter,  des  Beaux - 
Arts  et  des  Lettres;  Cincinnati  MacD.ti. 
Work:  Decoration  Woodward  and 
Hughes  High  School,  Cincinnati,  O. ; 
Hamilton  High  School,  Hamilton,  O.; 
Specialty,   cattle. 

VOLL,  Joseph  A.,  224  Pennsylvania  Ave., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

VON  DER  LANCKEN,  Frank,  102  Aber- 
deen St.;  h.  193  East  Ave.,  Rochester, 
N.  Y. ;  summer.  New  Milford,  Conn. 
P.,  S.,  L,  C,  T.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y., 
Sept.  10,  1872.  Pupil  of  Pratt  Inst. 
under  Herbert  Adams;  ASL  in  New 
York  under  Mowbray;  Julian  Academy 
in  Paris  under  Constant  and  Lau- 
rens. Member:  ASL  of  N.Y.;  Sal- 
ma.  C;  Rochester  AC.  Instructor  and 
lecturer  on  History  of  Art,  University 
of  Rochester;  instructor  of  life  drawing 
and  anatomy,  Mechanics'  Inst.,  Roches- 
ter, N.  Y.  Director,  Chautauqua  School 
of  Arts  and  Crafts. 

VONDROUS,  John  C,  Kr.  Vinohrady,  NA 
Smetance  16,  Prague,  Czecho-Slovakia; 
h.  179  East  79th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  E. — Born  Bohemia,  Europe,  Ja7i. 
24,  1884.  Pupil  of  NAD  in  New  Yoj-k 
under  E.  M.  Ward,  G.  Maynard,  F.  C. 
Jones  and  James  D.  Smillie.  Mem- 
ber: S.  V.  U.  Manes  and  Graphic  C, 
of  Prague,  Bohemia;  Chicago  SE; 
Brooklyn  SE.  Award  :  Bronze  medal 
for  etching,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  191^; 
Logan  prize  ($75),  Chicago  Society  of 
Etchers,  1917,  1918  and  1919.  Work 
in:      National    Gallery    of    Prague,    Bo- 


hemia; Art  Inst.,  Chicago;  New  York 
Public  Library;  Fogg  Museum,  Cam- 
bridge,  Mass. 

VON  GOTTSCHALCK,  O.  H.,  225  West 
39th  St.;  h.  7  Fairmount  Ave..,  Hacken- 
St^ok    ^^     T 

p.,  L— Pupil  of  R.I.School  of  Design; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member:  Salma.C. 
1903. 

VON   HOFSTEN,   H(ugo  Olof),  Winnetka, 

I.,  P. — Born  in  Sweden,  June  20,  1865. 
Pupil  of  Royal  Academy  at  Stockholm 
under  M.  E.  Winge,  O.  Aborehus  and 
A.  Larson.  Organizer  of  the  Forestry 
Painters  of  Chicago.  Award  :  First 
water  color  prize,  Swedish  American 
Artists,  1919. 

VONNOH,  Bessie  (Onahotema)  Potter 
(Mrs.  Robert  W.  Vonnoh),  33  West  67th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Grez- 
sur-Loing,  Seine-et-Marne,  France; 
Lyme,  Conn. 

S.,  P.— Born  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  Aug.  17, 
1872.  Pupil  of  AIC  under  Taft.  Mem- 
ber: NS'S  1898;  ANA  1906;  Port.  P.; 
Allied  AA.  Awards  :  Second  prize, 
Nashville  Exp.,  1897;  bronze  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  hon.  mention,  Pan- 
Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  gold  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  Watrous  gold  medal. 
NAD,  1921.  Specialty,  small  groups. 
Work:  "The  Young  Mother,"  and 
eleven  statuettes,  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York;  eleven  statuettes.  Art  In- 
stitute of  Chicago;  thirteen  statuettes, 
Brooklyn  Institute  Museum ;  "Girl  Danc- 
ing," Carnegie  Inst.,  Pittsburgh;  two 
statuettes,  Corcoran  Gallery,  Washing- 
ton; two  statuettes,  Philadelphia  Acad- 
emy; two  statuettes,  Newark  Museum; 
two  statuettes,  Cincinnati  Museum;  two 
stiltuettes,  Detroit  Institute. 

VONNOH,  Robert,  145  East  23rd  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Grez-sur-Loing, 
Seine-et-Marne,  France;  Pleasant  Val- 
ley, Lyme,   Conn. 

P.,  T. — Born  Hartford,  Conn.,  Sept.  17, 
1858.  Pupil  Mass. Normal  Art  School 
in  Boston;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris 
under  Boulanger  and  Lefebvre.  M  e  m- 
ber:  ANA  1900,  NA  1906;  SAA  1892; 
NAC;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  NAC;  Port. 
P.;  Lotos  C;  Salma  C.  1904;  Fellow- 
ship PAFA;  Allied  AA;  Munich  Seces- 
sion (cor.);  Lg.  of  N.Y.A.;  Conn,  AFA. 
Awards  :  Gold  medal  for  por- 
traiture, Mass.  Charitable  Mechanics 
Asso.,  Boston,  1884;  hon.  mention,  Paris 
Salon,  1889;  bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp., 
1889  and  1900;  medal.  Pan. -Am.  Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901;  medal,  Charleston,  1901; 
Proctor  prize,  NAD,  1904;  gold  medal. 
P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915:  Charles 
Noel  Flagg  prize.  Conn.  AFA;  1920; 
Richard  S.  Greenough  prize,  Newport 
AA,  1920.  Work:  "Companion  of 
the  Studio,"  "Portrait  of  the  Artist" 
and  "Dr.  S.  Weir  Mitchell,"  "No- 
vember," Pennsylvania  Academy, 
Philadelphia;  "Dr.  S.  Weir  Mitchell," 
College  of  Physicians.  Philadelphia; 
"John  G.  Milburn."  Buffalo  Club,  Buf- 
falo; "Hon.  John  Russell  Young,"  Union 


595 


VON  RECKLINGHAUSEN        WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


WAGER-SMITH 


League  Club,  Philadelphia;  "Attor.  Gen. 
Grlg-gs,"  Department  of  Justice,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C;  "Postmaster  General 
Charles  Emory  Smith,"  Post  Offico  De- 
partment, Washington;  "Dr.  W.  W. 
Keen,"  American  Philosophical  Society. 
Philadelphia;  "Charles  Francis  Adams." 
Massachusetts  Historical  Society,  Bos- 
ton; "Family  of  President  Woodrow  Wil- 
son," the  White  House,  Washington; 
"In  Flanders  Fields,"  Youngstown  (O.) 
Museum. 
VON  RECKLINGHAUSEN,  M.,  74  Broad- 
way, New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

VON  SCHMIDT,  Harold,  care  of  Foster 
&  Kleiser.  287  Valencia  St.,  San  Fran- 
cisco,   Calif.    (I.) 

VON  SCHNEIDAU,  C,  care  of  Los 
Angeles  Athletic  Club,  Los  Angeles, 
Calif. 

P.,  T. — Born  Smoland,  'Sweden,  March 
24,  1893.  Pupil  of  J.  Wellington  Rey- 
nolds, K.  A.  Buehr,  H.  M.  Walcott, 
C.  W.  Hawthorne,  Richard  Miller. 
Member:  ASL  of  Chicago;  Chicago 
Swedish  AC;  Calif.  AC;  Laguna  Beach 
AA;  Beachcombers  Club,  Provinctown. 
Awards:  First  prize  AIC,  1915;  John 
Quincy  Adams  Traveling  Scholarship, 
AIC,  1916;  second  prize  for  portrait, 
Minn.  State  Fair,  1916;  first  prize 
for  portrait,  Swedish  American  Exhi- 
bition, Chicago,  1917;  gold  medal,  Cali- 
fornia State  Fair,  1919;  second  prize, 
California  State  Fair,  1920;  second  prize, 
Swedish  Club,  Chicago,  1920. 

VOORHEES,      Clark      G(reenwood),      104 

West  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.,  May  29, 
1871.  Pupil  Julian  Academy  In  Paris. 
Member:  Allied  AA;  Conn.AFA;  Sal- 
ma.C;  Lyme  AA.  Awards:  Bronze 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  third 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1906. 
VOS,  Hubert,  15  West  67th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  Newport,  R,  I. 
P. — Born  Maastricht,  Holland,  Feb.  17, 
1855.  Pupil  of  Academy  of  Fine  Arts  in 
Brussels;  Cormon  in  Paris.  Awards  : 
Gold  medals  Paris,  Amsterdam,  Munich, 
Dresden,  Brussels,  etc.  Specialty,  types 
of  aboriginal  races,  portraits  and  in- 
teriors. 

VOS,    Marius,   47   Fifth   Ave.,    New   York, 
N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.   C 

VOSE,  Adairene.  See  Mrs.  Thomas 
Congdon. 

VYSEKAL,  Edouard  A(ntonin),  1945  Mag- 
nolia Ave.,  Los  Angeles,  Cal. 
P. — Born  Kutna  Hora,  Czechoslovakia, 
Mar.  17,  1890.  Pupil  of  Harry  M.  Walcott; 
S.  Macdonald  Wright.  Member: 
Calif.  AC;  Chicago  Palette  and  Chisel 
C  Work:  "The  Conquest  of  the 
Desert,"  Barbara  Worth  Hotel,  El 
Centro,  Cal.;  "Korean,"  in  Mission  Inn, 
Riverside,  Cal. 

VYSEKAL,    Ella    Buchanan    (Mrs.    E.    A. 
Vysekal),     1945     Magnolia     Ave.,      Los 
Angeles,    Calif. 
P.,  W.— Born  Le  Mars,  la.     Pupil  of  S. 


Macdonald  Wright,  Harry  M.  Walcott 
and  Ralph  Clarkson.  Member:  Calif. 
AC.  Work:  Portrait  of  Christian 
Hoffman  in  State  Historical  Bldg., 
Topeka,    Kan. 

VYTLACIL,  William,  Mt.  Lebanon,  N.  Y. 
P. — Member:  Chicago  WCC  Award: 
Hon.  mention  AIC  1913. 

WACHTEL,  Elmer,  315  West  Ave.  43, 
Los  Angeles,   Cal. 

P.,  T.— Born  Baltimore,  Jan.  21,  1864. 
Member:  Ten  Painters  of  Los 
Angeles. 

WACHTEL,  Marion  Kavanaugh  (Mrs. 
Elmer  Wachtel),  315  West  Ave.  43,  Los 
Angeles  Cal. 

P. — Born  Milwaukee,  June,  1875.  Pupil 
of  AIC  and  Chase.  Member  :  Ten 
Painters  of  Los  Angeles;  NYWCC 
Work:  "Eucalyptus  at  Evening."  Cali- 
fornia State  Building;  "San  Gabriel 
Canon,"  Friday  Morning  Club,  Los  An- 
geles. 

WACK,  H(enry)  W(ellington),  33  West 
42nd  St.;  Author's  Club,  7th  Ave.  and 
56th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Monroe,  Orange  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  W.,  L.— Born  Baltimore,  Md., 
Dec.  21,  1873.  Pupil  of  Leon  Dabo,  N. 
R.  Brewer,  H.  Salem  Hubbell,  Frank 
Spenlove.  Member:  N.Y.  Lg.  of 
Painters. 

WADE,  Caroline  D.,  59  East  Van  Buren 
St.,  Athenaeum  Building,  Chicago,  111.; 
h.    Elmhurst,    111. 

P.,  T. — Born  Chicago.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
Courtois  in  Paris.  Member:  Chicago 
SA. 

WADSWORTH,  Adelaide  E.,  10  West 
Cedar  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P.— Born  Boston,  Oct.  29,  1844.  Pupil 
of  Wm.  M.  Hunt,  Frank  Duveneck, 
John  Twachtman,  C.  H.  Woodbury  and 
Arthur  Dow.  Member:  Copley  S. 
1894. 

WADSWORTH,  Myrta  M.,  119  Chili  Ave., 
Rochester,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:   Rochester  AC. 

WADSWORTH,  Wedworth,  Durham. 
Conn. 

Ldscp.P.,  L,  W.— Born  Buffalo,  N.  Y., 
June  22,  1846.  Member:  NYWCC; 
■Salma.  C,  1890;  Brooklyn  AC.  Author 
and  illustrator  of  "Leaves  from  an 
Artist's  Field  Book."  Illustrated  "The 
Song  of  the  Brook,"  "A  Winter's  Walk 
with  Cowper,"  "Under  the  Greenwood 
Tree  with  Shakespeare,"  "Through 
Wood  and  Field  with  Tennyson,"  etc. 

WAGENHALS,  Katherine  H.,  2124  Sunset. 
Blvd.,  San  Diego,  Calif. 
P.— Born  Ebensburg.  Pa.,  Aug.  2,  1883.1 
Pupil  of  Art  Department  of  Smith  Col-1 
lege:  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Academic  Modernef 
in  Paris.  Award  :  Art  Association) 
prize,  Herron  Art  Inst.,  1916.  Work:] 
"The  Visitor,"  Herron  Art  Inst.,  In- 
dianapolis. 

WAGER-SMITH,  Miss  Curtis,  518  Wal-1 
nut  St.;  h.  3207  Baring  St.,  Philadel-j 
phia,  Pa. 

Port. P.,  I.,  W. — Born  Binghamton,  N.  Y.I 
Pupil  of  Emily  Sartain,  Alice  Barber) 
Stephens  and  Henry  McCJarter  in  Phlla-( 


596 


WAGNER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


WALDEN 


delphia.  Member:  Plastic  C;  Soc.of 
Arts  and  Letters;  City  Parks  Assoc; 
Women's  Press  Assoc.  Award:  Silver 
medal,  Dallas  Exp.,  1890.  Illustrated 
"Rhymes  for  Wee  Sweethearts,"  "Story 
Without  an  End"  and  other  children's 
books. 

WAGNER,     Blanche    Collet,    care     of    C. 
Peters,    78    West    55th    St.,    New    York, 
N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

WAGNER,  Frank  Hugh,  care  Pine  Crest 
Inn,  Saugatauk,  Mich. 
P.,  S.,  I. — Born  Milton,  Wayne  Co.,  Ind., 
Jan.  4,  1870.  Pupil  of  Freer,  Vanderpoel 
and  Von  Salza.  Member:  Chicago 
Palette  and  Chisel  C;  Indiana  AA; 
Richmond  AA;  Indiana  Traveling  AA; 
Alumni  Asso.  AIC.  Work:  "Adora- 
tion of  the  Magi,"  St.  Joseph's  Chapel, 
West  Pullman,  111.;  "Portrait  C.  W. 
Hargrave,'  and  "Portrait  of  A.  Kate 
Huron,"   Chapel  Hall,   Danville,  Ind. 

WAGNER,   Fred,  1520  Chestnut  St..  Phil- 
adelphia, Pa. 

P.,  T.— Born  Valley  Forge,  Pa.,  1864. 
Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member:  Phila.  Sketch 
C;  Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila.  WCC. 
Award:  Fellowship  prize,  PAFA.  1914. 
Work:  "Addingham — Winter,"  Penn- 
sylvania Academy;  "Along  Canal,"  Phil- 
adelphia Art  Club;  "Winter  Evening," 
Reading  Art  Museum.  Instructor  at 
Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts 
Summer  School,  Chester  Springs,  Pa.; 
Addingham  Summer  School  of  Outdoor 
Painting. 

WAGNER,  Mary  North,  care  Pine  Crest 
Inn,  Saugatauk,  Mich. 
P.,  S.,  I.,  W.,  L.— Born  Milford,  Ind., 
Dec.  24,  1875.  Pupil  of  John  Vander- 
poel, Charles  Francis  Browne,  Mary  S. 
West.  Louis  J.  Millet,  C.  J.  Mulligan 
and  W.  M.  Chase.  Member:  Ind. 
SA;  Richmond  AA;  Alumni  Asso.,  AIC; 
Ind.  S A.  Work:  Four  drawings  for 
the  "Second  Brownie  Book,"  by  Mrs. 
Alpha   B.    Benson. 

WAGNER,   Rob,   226  Isabel   St.,  Los  An- 
geles, Cal. 

P.,  I.,  W, — Born  Detroit,  Mich.,  Aug.  2, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  Cal.  AC.  Award  :  Sil- 
ver medal,  Alaska-Yukon  Pacific  Exp., 
Seattle,  1909;  bronze  medal,  P.-P.Exp., 
San    F.,    1915. 

WAGNER.    Rosa,   Rockville,   Md. 
P.— M  ember:  Wash.  WCC. 

WAINWRIGHT,   Christine   H.,  8425  Wab- 
ash Ave.,   Seattle,  Wash.    (P.) 

WAITE,  Charles  W.,  1355  Locust  St.,  Wal- 
nut Hills.  Cincinnati,  O. 
P. — Studied    at    Ohio   Mechanics'    Insti- 
tute and  under  Duveneck.    Member: 
Cincinnati   AC. 

WAITE,  Emily  Burling,  104  West  40th 
St.,  New  York.  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  in  Worcester,  July  12,  1887. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Boston  Art  Mu- 
seum School;  studied  in  England, 
France,  Belgium,  Holland,  Germany, 
Austria,  Italy  and  Spain.  Award  : 
Silver   medal,    P.-P.Exp.,    San   F.,    1915. 


Portraits  in  Tufts  College;  Clark  Uni- 
versity; Episcopal  Theological  School, 
Cambridge;  Worcester  Art  Mus.  School. 

WAITT,  Mrs.  M(arian)  P(arkhurst),  162 
Newbury  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Salem,  Mass.  Pupil  of  Boston 
Museum  School,  Juglaris,  Gallison  and 
Louis  Kronberg  in  Boston.  Member: 
Copley  S.   1904;   N.  A.  Women  PS. 

WALCOTT,  Belle  Havens  (Mrs.  H.  M. 
Walcott),  Rutherford,  N.  J.;  summer, 
Newark,  O. 

P. — Born  in  Franklin  Co.,  Ohio.  Pupil 
of  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  studied  in  Paris  art 
schools.  Award  :  Third  Hallgarten 
prize,  NAD  1903.  Represented  in  St. 
Louis  Club. 

WALCOTT,    H(arry)    M(ills),   Rutherford, 

N.    J. 

P.,  T.— Born  Torringford,  Conn.,  July 
16,  1870.  Pupil  of  NAD  in  New  York; 
Julian  Academy  under  Constant  In 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1903;  SAA 
1902.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paria 
Salon,  1897;  bronze  medal,  Pan- Am. 
Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  Shaw  Fund,  SAA 
1902;  first  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1903; 
Clarke  prize,  NAD  1904;  hon.  mention, 
C.I.Pittsburgh,  1904;  silver  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  silver  medal,  P.-P. 
Exp.,  San  F..  1915.  Work  :  "Hare  and 
Hounds,"  Richmond  (Ind.)  Art  Assoc; 
"The  Contest,"  Erie  (Pa.)  Art  Assoc; 
portrait  at  Ohio  State  University,  Co- 
lumbus; portrait  at  Ohio  Wesleyan 
University,  Delaware;  "School's  Out," 
H.  C.  Frick  Collection. 
WALCOTT,  Helen  Breese,  1743  22nd  St., 
Washington,  D.  C;  summer,  care  of 
Morgan,  Harjes  &  Co.,  14  Place  Ven- 
dome,   Paris,   France. 

P. — Born  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  Aug.  20, 
1894.     Pupil  of  C.  W.  Hawthorne. 

WALDECK,  C(arl)  G(ustave),  Marina 
Bldg.,  Grand  and  Lindell  Blvds.,  St. 
Louis,   Mo. 

P. — Born  in  the  United  States,  March 
13,  1866.  Pupil  of  Constant  and  Lau- 
rens in  Paris.  Member:  St.  Louis 
AG;  2x4  Soc.  Awards:  Bronze 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  silver 
medal,  Lewis  &  Clarke  Exp.,  Port- 
land, Ore.,  1905;  Betty  Brown  prize 
($50),  St.  Louis  AG  1914;  first  prize,  St. 
Louis  AL  1915.  OfRcier  d'Academie, 
Paris,  1904.  Work:  "Soap  Bubbles" 
and  "American  Type,"  City  Art  Mu- 
seum,   St.  Louis. 

WALDEN,  Lionel,  P.  O.  Box  1227,  Hono- 
lulu,  Hawaii. 

Marine  P. — Born  Norwich,  Conn.,  May 
22,  1861.  Pupil  of  Carolus-Duran  in 
Paris.  Member:        Nat. Inst.  A.L.; 

Paris  SAP;  Society  Inter.de  Peinture  et 
Sculpture,  Paris.  Awards  :  Second 
class  medal.  Crystal  Palace  Exh.,  Lon- 
don; hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon,  1899; 
silver  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1900;  third 
class  medal,  Paris  Salon,  1903;  silver 
medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  silver 
medal,  P.-P.Exp..  San  F..  1915.  Chev- 
alier of  the  Legion  of  Honor.  France, 
1910.  Work  :  "Fishing  in  the  Road- 
stead," Wilstach  Collection,  Philadel- 
phia;     "Cardiff     Docks,"      Luxembourg 


597 


WALES 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


WALKER 


Gallery.  Paris.  Represented  in  Cardiff 
Museum,  Wales;  Cooke  Gallery,  Hono- 
lulu,  Hawaii. 

WALES,  Orlando  G.,  832  Hamilton  St., 
Allentown,  Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pa.  Pupil  of 
Wm.  M.  Chase,  Alphonse  Mucha. 
Member:  Fellowship  PAPA;  Salma. 
C.  1908. 

WALES,  Susan  M.  L.,  341  Marlboro  St., 
Boston,   Mass. 

Ldscp.  P. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  July 
24,  1839.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum 
School;  Vincente  Poveda  in  Rome; 
Blommers        in        Holland.  Member: 

Boston    WCC. 

WALKER,  A(lanson)  B(urton),  253  Bar- 
clay St.,  Flushing-,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Morningside,  Milford,  Conn. 
I. — Born  Bing-hamton,  N.  Y.,  Nov.  19, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Kenyon  Cox,  Bryson 
Burroughs,  Charles  Curran,  P.  V.  Du- 
Mond.  Member:  SI.  Illustrations 
and  humorous  ideas  for  "Life," 
"Judge,"  "Harper's  Weekly,"  "Harpers' 
Bazaar,"    "Scribner's,"    "Century,"    etc. 

WALKER,    Alice    J.,    97    Whitney    Ave., 
New  Haven,   Conn. 
P. — M  ember:  New  Haven  PCC. 

WALKER,  Dugald  Stewart,  30  East  57th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

I.,  P.,  L. — Born  Richmond,  Va.  Stud- 
ied under  Anne  Fletcher  and  Harriotte 

Taliaferro  Montague  in  Richmond; 
Graham  Cootes  at  Summer  School  of 
University  of  Virginia;  at  the  New 
York  School  of  Art;  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
Work:  Illustrated  "Hans  Ander- 
son's Fairy  Tales,"  "Stories  for  Pic- 
tures,"   "The   Gentlest   Giant,"    etc. 

WALKER,  Ferdinand  G(raham),  308 
Commercial  Bldg.,  Louisville,  Ky. ;  h. 
New  Albany,   Ind. 

P.— Born  Mitchell,  Ind.,  Feb.  16,  1859. 
Pupil  of  Dagnan-Bouveret.  Puvis  de 
Chavannes.  Blanche  and  Merson  in 
Paris.  Member:  Soc.  of  Indiana 
Artists;  Louisville  AA;  Chicago  AG. 
Portraits  in  Kentucky  State  His- 
torical Society  Collection;  University 
of  Kentucky  at  Lexington;  Berea  Col- 
lege; Agricultural  College  of  Michigan; 
Lincoln  Institute,  Simpsonville,  Ky. ; 
Kentucky  State  Collection  at  Frank- 
fort; State  House,  Indianapolis,  Ind.; 
Public  Library,  Jefferson  Davis  Memor- 
ial, New  Albany,  Ind.,  and  other  places; 
also  by  landscapes  in  the  public  gal- 
leries at  New  Albany,  Ind.,  and  Lexing- 
ton Ky.,  two  murals  in  St.  Peter's 
Church,  Louisville,  Ky. 

WALKER,  H(enry)  O(liver),  Cornish, 
N.  H. 

Figure  and  Mural  P.  —  Born  Boston, 
Mass.,  May  14,  1843.  Pupil  of  Bonnat 
in  Paris.  Member:  ANA  1894,  NA 
1902;  SAA  1887;  Mural  P.;  Nat. Inst. 
A.L.;  Century  Assoc.  Awards  :  medal, 
Columbian  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  Shaw 
Fund,  SAA  1894;  Clarke  prize,  NAD 
1895;  silver  medal,  Pan-Am.Exp.,  Buf- 
falo, 1901;  gold  medal,  Charleston  Exp., 
1902;  silver  iTiedal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
third   prize,   Worcester,    1907.     Work 


Mural  paintings — "Lyric  Poetry,"  series 
of  lunettes.  Library  of  Congress,  Wash- 
ington; "Pilgrims  on  the  Mayflower," 
Massachusetts  State  House,  Boston; 
"Wisdom  Attended  by  licarning,"  Ap- 
pellate Court,  New  York;  "Yesterday, 
Today  and  Tomorrow,"  lunette  in 
Minnesota  State  Capitol,  St.  Paul;  panel 
in  Court  Room,  Essex  County  Court 
House,  Newark,  N.  J.;  paintings — 
"Eros  et  Musa"  and  "Musa  Regina," 
National  Gallery,  Washington;  "Morn- 
ing Vision,"  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York;  "Mrs.  Evans  and  Son," 
National    Gallery,    Washington,    D.    C. 

WALKER,  Hobart  A.,  60  Carleton  St., 
East  Orange,  N.  J. 

P.,  A.,  W.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Nov. 
1,  1869.     Pupil  of  Arthur  Hoeber. 

WALKER,  Horatio,  care  of  Montross 
Gallery,  550  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.Y. 
P. — Born  Listowel,  Ont.,  Canada,  1858; 
came  to  New  York  in  1885.  Member: 
ANA  1890,  NA  1891;  SAA  1887;  Nat. 
Inst.AL. ;  Royal  Inst,  of  Painters  in 
Water  Colors,  England;  AWCS;  Salma. 
C;  A.  Fund  S.;  A  Aid  S. ;  Rochester  AC. 
Awards  :  Gold  medal,  competitive 
exhibition  at  American  Art  Galleries, 
New  York,  1887;  Evans  prize,  AWCS 
1888;  bronze  medal,  Paris  Exp.,  1889; 
gold  medal  and  diploma,  Columbian 
Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  gold  medal,  Pan- 
Am.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  gold  medal, 
Charleston  li]xp.,  1902;  gold  medal  for 
oil  and  gold  medal  for  water  colors,  St. 
Louis  Exp.,  1904;  gold  medal  of  honor, 
PAPA  1906;  first  prize,  Worcester,  1907; 
gold  medal,  P.-P.Exp..  San  F.,  1915; 
Hudnut  prize,  AWCS,  1920.  Work: 
"The  narrower — Morning,"  "The  nar- 
rower" and  "The  Sheepfold,"  Metro- 
politan Museum,  New  York;  "Ave 
Maria,"  Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington; 
"The  Wood  Cutter"  and  "Milking— 
Evening,"  City  Museum,  St.  Louis; 
"Sheep  Shearing,"  Albright  Art  Gallery, 
Buffalo;  "Sheepyard — Moonlight."  Na- 
tional Gallary,  War.hington;  "Moonrise 
— A  Canadian  Pastoral,"  Carnegie  Inst., 
Pittsburgh. 

WALKER,   Mrs.  Jess  J.,  515  Forest  Ave., 
Bellevue,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

WALKER,  Marian  D.  Bausman  (Mrs. 
Otis  L.  Walker),  Casper,  Wyom. 
S. — Born  Minneapolis,  Minn.,  June  21, 
1889.  Studied  in  Minneapolis.  Mem- 
ber: Minneapolis  SFA.  Award  : 
Hon,  mention,  Minn.  State  Art  Soc,  1914. 

WALKER,  Nellie  V(erne),  The  Midway 
Studios,  6016  Ellis  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
S.— Born  Red  Oak,  la.,  Dec.  8,  1874. 
Pupil  of  AIC  under  Lorado  Taft. 
Member:  NSS  1911;  Chicago  SA; 
Soc.  W.  Sc.  Awards:  First  Chi- 
cago Municipal  Art  League  prize, 
1907;  second  Grower  prize,  AIC  1908; 
Shaffer  prize,  AIC  1911.  Work: 
"Stratton  Memorial."  Colorado  Springs. 
Colo.;  portrait  statue  of  "Senator  Har- 
lan," Washington;  "Her  Son,"  ideal 
group.  Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  "Chief 
Keokuk,"  Keokuk,  la. 


598 


WALKER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


WALTMAN 


WALKER,  Sophia  A.,  70  West  49th  St.. 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Palatine 
Bridge,  N.  Y. 

P.,  s;,  E.,  C,  W.,  Lr.,  T.— Born  Rock- 
land, Mass.,  June  22,  1855.  Pupil  Lefeb- 
vre  in  Paris;  Mowbray  and  Chase  in 
New  York.  Member:  NAC.  Work: 
"Portrait  of  E.  B.  Woodward,"  State 
Normal    School,    Bridgewater,    Mass. 

WALKER,  William  H(enry),  336  Sanford 
Ave.,  Flushing,  L.  I..  N.  Y. 
Cartoonist. — Born  Pittston,  Pa.,  Feb. 
13,  1871.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber: SI  1909;  Guild  of  Free  Lance 
Artists.  Contributor  to  "Life"  since 
1898.     Specialty,  political  subjects. 

WALKINSHAW,      Mrs.     Jeanle     Walter. 

See  Walter,  Jeanie. 

WALKLEY,   David   B.,  Rock  Creek,   O. 
P.— Born  Rome,  O.,  Mar.  2,  1849.     Pupil 
of  Julian  Academy;  PAFA.    Member: 
Salma.C,    1903. 

WALKOWITZ,  Abraham,  12  Union  Sq., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  Etcher. — Born  Tuiemen,  Siberia, 
Russia,  March  22,  1880.  Pupil  of  NAD 
under  Ward,  Maynard  and  F.  C.  Jones 
in  New  York;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris 
under  Laurens.  Member:  Paris 
AAA;    P-G. 

WALL,  A.  Bryan,  814  Arch  St.,  Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 

P. — Born  Allegheny  City,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
his  father,  A.  Wall.  Member:  A.S. 
of  Pittsburgh;  ACPhila.  Award: 
Gold  medal,   AAS   1907. 

WALL,  Bernhardt,  1947  Broadway,  New 
York.    N.    Y. 

P..  E.— Born  Buffalo.  N.  Y..  Dec.  30, 
1872.  Pupil  of  W.  A.  Levy.  Member: 
Salma.  C.  Editor  and  publisher,  Wall's 
Etched  Monthly. 

WALLACE,  Ethel  A.,  62  Washington 
Sq.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  New 
Hope,    Pa. 

P.— Born  Chesterfield,  N.  J.  Pupil  of 
PAFA  and  William  Lathrop.  Mem- 
ber: N.  A.  Women  PS;  Fellowship 
PAFA. 

WALLACE,  Lucy,  Van  Dyck  Studios,  939 

Eighth    Ave.;    h.    411    West    End    Ave., 

New    York,    N.    Y. 

P.,   C— Born  Montclair,   N.  J.,  Nov.  13, 

1884.      Pupil    of    Kenneth    Hayes    Miller. 

Member:     Alliance;   NYSC. 
WALLER,    Frank,    27    Franklin    St.,    Mor- 

ristown,    N.   J. 

P.,   A.— Born   New  York,   June   12,   1842. 

Pupil  of  Chase,  J.  G.  Chapman  in  Rome. 

Member:    ASL   of   N.    Y.;    N.Y.Arch. 

Lg.,  1887;  NAC.    Work  :    "Washington 

Pleadquarters   in   Morristown." 

WALLEY,  Abigail  B.  P.,  201  Clarendon 
St..    Boston,    Mass. 

P. — Born  Boston.  Pupil  of  Sanderson, 
Langerfeldt,  Bensa  and  Rice.  Mem- 
ber: Copley  S.  Specialty,  landscapes 
and  gardens  in  watercolors  and  pastels. 

WALP,    Mrs.    M.    Vignes,   R.    F.   D.   No.    2, 
Long  Beach.    Calif. 
P.— M  ember:    Calif.   P.M. 


WALSH,  Elizabeth  Morse,  419  Andover 
St.,    Lowell,    Mass. 

P. — Born  Lowell,  Mass.  Pupil  Boston 
Museum  School. 

WALTER,  Christian  J.,  809  Penn  Bldg., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa.;  summer,  Ligonier,  Pa. 
Ldscp.P.,  C— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Feb. 
11,  1872.  Member:  Associated  Artists 
of  Pittsburgh;  Artists'  Brotherhood. 
Award  :  Third  prize,  Pittsburgh  AA 
1913;  Roland  prize  ($200),  Pittsburgh 
AA  1915.     Specialty,   stained   glass. 

WALTER,  J.  W.,  306  Penn  Ave.,  Wilkins- 
burg.    Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA. 

WALTER,  Jeanie  (Mrs.  Robert  Walkin- 
shaw),  936  12th  Ave.,  North,  Seattle, 
Wash. 

P.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  Mar.  28,  1885. 
Pupil  of  Charcoal  C,  Baltimore;  Lu- 
cien  Simon,  Rene  Menard  in  Paris; 
Robert  Henri  in  New  York.  Award  : 
Hon.  men.,  Pac.  Northwest  Exhibition, 
1920. 

WALTER,  Martha,  Park  Avenue  Hotel, 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
PAFA;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Fellow- 
ship PAFA.  Awards  :  Cresson  schol- 
arship, PAFA,  1903;  Mary  Smith  prize, 
PAFA,  1909;  prize,  N.  A.  Women  PS, 
1915.  Work:  "Anne,"  Toledo  Museum; 
"Dorothy  Lee  Bell,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts;  "Umbrellas 
on  the  Beach,"  Norfolk  Society  of  Art; 
"Baby";  Fellowship,  Pennsylvania  Aca- 
demy of  the  Fine  Arts. 

WALTER,     Otis    W.,    314    North    Euclid 

Ave.,    Pittsburgh,    Pa. 
_    P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

WALTER,  V.  H.,  57  East  59th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y.    (S.)     - 

WALTERS,     Emiie,    Tiffany    Foundation, 
Oyster  Bay,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.,    C. — Born    Winnipeg,    Canada,    Jan. 
31,     1893.       Pupil    of    AIC,     PAFA,     and 
Tiffany        Foundation.  Member: 

Salma.  C;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A.;  ASL  of  Chi- 
cago; Fellowship  PAFA.  Awards: 
Goodman  prize,  Chicago  Art  Inst.,  1918, 
1920,  1921;  first  municipal  prize,  Chicago, 
1920;  Tiffany  Foundation  Scholarship 
($2,000),  Work:  "Spring  Blossoms," 
State  College  (Pa.)  Museum;  "Moon- 
glow,"  Winnipeg  Museum  of  Fine  Arts; 
"Winter,"  Herkscher  Museum,  Hunt- 
ington; "The  Old  Mir.,"  National  Muse- 
um of  Ireland;  "Winter,"  Tiffany 
Foundation,   Oyster  Bay,    N.   Y. 

WALTHER,     Charles      H.,     4000     Pimlico 
Road,   Baltimore,  Md. 
P. — M  ember:  Charcoal  C. 

WALTMAN,  Harry  Franklin,  59  East  59th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  in  Ohio,  April  16,  1871.  Pupil 
of  Constant  and  Laurens  in  Paris. 
Award  :  Isidor  prize,  Salma.  C,  1916. 
Member:  'Salma.  C,  1897;  ANA 
1917;  AlHed  AA;  NAC. 


599 


WALTON 


WHO*S   WHO  IN  ART 


WARWICK 


WALTON,  Florence  L.,  18  East  8th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Llewellyn  Park, 
West  Orange,  N.  J.  ,       ^ 

P.— Born  East  Orange,  N.  J.,  July  9, 
1889.  Pupil  of  George  Bellows,  John 
Johansen,  B.  J.  O.  Nordfeldt,  Homer 
Boss.  Member:  S.Indp.A. 
WANG,  E.  O.,  225  Harrison  St.,  Brook- 
lyn, N.   Y. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 
WARD,   E(dmund)    F.,  SSVa   Court  St.;  10 
Washington   Ave.,   White   Plains,    N.   Y. 
P.,    I.— Born   White   Plains,    N.    Y.,    Jan. 
3,      1892.        Pupil     of     Edward     Dufner, 
George     Bridgman,     Thomas     Fogarty. 
Member:        Guild     of     Free     Lance 
Artists.       Illustrations     for     "Saturday 
Evening     Post,"      "Pictorial     Review," 
"Red    Book,"     "Woman's    Home    Com- 
panion." 
WARD,  Elsie.     See  Mrs.  Henry  Hering. 
WARD,      Mrs.      Heber     Arden,     Box     21, 
Denver,    Colo. 

P. — M  ember:   Denver  AA. 
WARD,  Hilda,  Roslyn,  Long  Island,  N.  Y. 
P — Member:       N.     A.     Women    PS; 
NYWCC. 
WARD,  Irving,  6  East  Pleasant  St.,  Balti- 
more, Md.  ^ 
P.— M  ember:   Charcoal  G. 
WARD,    Nina    B.,    1515   Arch    St.,    Phila- 
delphia,  Pa.  „  „,    T 
P.— Born  Rome,  Ga.     Pupil  of  St.  Louis 
School  of  Fine  Arts;  N.Y. School  of  Art 
and    PAFA.      Member:     Fellowship 
PAFA.    Awards:     Cresson  European 
scholarship,   PAFA  1908  and  1911;   first 
Toppan  prize,  PAFA  1912;  Mary  Smith 
prize,  PAFA  1914. 
WARD,    Winifred,    2006    Mt.    Vernon    St., 
Philadfcxphia,  Pa.                       ^       .r  on 
S.,    W. — Born    Cleveland,    C,    Jan.    20, 
1889.     Pupil  of  Charles  Grafly.     Mem- 
ber:   Fellowship    PAFA;    Plastic    C; 
N.  A.  Women  PS;   S.Indp.A. 
WAREHAM,  John  Hamilton  D(ee),  Rook- 
wood  Pottery  Co.;  h.  3329  Morrison  Ave.. 
Clifton,   Cincinnati,   O.                   ,.      -r.      ^ 
p.^  C.— Born  Grand  Ledge,  Mich.     Pupil 
of  Duveneck  and  Meakin.     Member: 
Cincinnati     Municipal     AS.       Award: 
Bronze    medal,     St.    Louis     Exp.,     1904. 
Decorations    in    Fort   Pitt   Hotel,    Pitts- 
burgh;   Seelbach   Hotel,   Louisville;    Ho- 
tel   Sinton,    Cincinnati;    Poll's    Theatre, 
Washington,   D.   C. 
WARGHY,   Armand,   3426   Michigan  Ave., 

Chicago,    111.    (E.) 
WARHAMIK,     Mrs.    C.    A.,    6052    5th    St., 

N.  W.,  Seattle,  Wash.   (P.) 
WARLOW,    C.    Joseph,    1710    Green    St.; 
and  1924  Mt.  Vernon  St.,   Philadelphia, 
Pa. 

P.— M  ember:  PAFA. 
WARNER,  Everett  L(ongley),  care  of 
Salmagundi  Club,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  Lyme,  Conn. 
Ldscp.P.,  Etcher.— Born  Vinton,  la., 
July  16,  1877.  Pupil  of  ASL  In  Wash- 
ington and  New  York;  Julian  Academy 
in  Paris.  M  e  m  b  e  r  :  NYWCC;  AWCS; 
ANA  1913;  NAC  (life);  Wash.WCC; 
Conn.AFA;  S. Wash. A.;  Salma.  C.  1909; 
Paris  AAA.    Awards:  First  Corcoran 


prize,  Wash.WCC  1902;  Sesnan  medal, 
PAFA  1908;  silver  medal,  Buenos  Aires 
Exp.,  1910;  second  Hallgarten  prize, 
NAD  1912;  Evans  prize,  Salma.C.  1913; 
bronze  medal,  S.Wash.A  1913;  Vezin 
prize,  Salma.C.  1914;  silver  medal  for 
painting  and  bronze  medal  for  etching, 
P.-P.Exp.,  San.  F.,  1915;  hon.  men- 
tion, Conn.  AFA  1917.  Work: 
"Broadway  on  a  Rainy  Evening,"  Cor- 
coran Gallery,  Washington;  "A  Febru- 
ary Day,"  Pennsylvania  Academy, 
Philadelphia;  "Amsterdam,"  Erie  (Pa.) 
Public  Library;  "Quebec,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts;  "December 
Hillside,"  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Syra- 
cuse, N.  Y.;  "Along  the  River  Front, 
New  York,"  and  six  etchings,  Toledo 
Art  Museum;  "The  Frozen  Brook,"  R.  I. 
School  of  Design,  Providence;  "A  Moun- 
tain Village,  Tyrol,"  City  Art  Museum, 
St.  Louis;  "The  Guardian  Elm,"  Na- 
tional Arts  Club,  New  York;  "Snowfall 
In    the   Woods,"    Art   Inst,    of   Chicago. 

WARNER,     Mrs.     Mary     Loring,    Middle- 
town,  Conn. 

P. — M  ember:      Conn.      AFA;      New 
Haven  PCC. 

WARNER,     May,     4318      Brooklyn     Ave., 
Seattle,    Wash.    (P.) 

WARREN,   F.  A.,   Snow  Hill,   Md. 
P.— M  e  m  \)  e  r  :     Pitts.  AA. 

WARREN,  Harold  B(roadfield),  8  Craigie 
Circle.  Cambridge,  Mass. 
Ldscp.P.,  1.,  C. — Born  Manchester,  Eng- 
land, Oct.  16,  1859.  Pupil  of  Charles 
H.  Moore  and  Charles  Eliot  Norton  at 
Harvard  University.  Member:  Cop- 
ley S.  1891;  Boston  S.Arch.  (Assoc); 
Boston  SWCP;  Boston  SAC  (Master). 
Specialty,  water  color.  Work:  "The 
Parthenon,"  "The  Propyaea,"  "^gina 
from  the  Parthenon"  and  "Northwest 
Corner  of  the  Parthenon,"  Boston  Mu- 
seum of  Fine  Arts;  "The  Parthenon," 
Cleveland  Art  Museum.  Instructor  in 
water  color.  Department  of  Architecture, 
Harvard  University. 

WARRICK,  Meta  Vaux  (Mrs.  Fuller),  7 
Warren  Rd.,  Framingham,  Mass. 
S..  I.,  C,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  June  9, 
1877.  Pupil  of  School  of  Industrial  Art; 
PAFA;  Collin,  Carles,  Colarossi  Acad- 
emy and  Rodin  in  Paris.  Member: 
Alumni  Assoc,  Pniladelphia  School  of 
Industrial  Art.  Represented  in  Cleve- 
land Art  Museum. 

WARS  HAWS  KY,  A.  G.,  care  of  Folnet, 
19  Rue  Vavin,  Paris,  France;  summer, 
Point  de  Croix,  Bretagne,  France. 
P.— Born  Sharon,  Pa.,  Dec.  28,  1883. 
Pupil  of  Mowbray  and  Loeb  in  New 
York;  Winslow  Homer.  Member: 
Paris  AAA;  Salon  d'Automne;  Cincin- 
nati AC.  Work:  Mural  decoration, 
"The  Dance,"  Rorheimer  and  Brooks 
Studios,  Clevelan<:,  O;  Cleveland  Mu- 
seum of  Art;   Minneapolis  Art  Inst. 

WARWICK,  Edward,  School  of  Industrial 
Art,  Broad  and  Pine  'Sts. ;  h.  5407  Ches- 
ter Ave.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P..  C,  T. — Born  Philadelphia,  Dec.  10. 
1881.  Pupil  of  J.  Frank  Copeland  and 
Charles  T.  Scott.  Member:  Phila. 
Sketch    C. 


600 


WARWICK 


WHO*S   WHO  IN  ART 


WATSON 


WARWICK,  Ethel  Herrick,  5407  Chester 
Ave.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— Born  New  York,  N.  Y.  Pupil  of  W. 
M.  Chase,  Fred  Wagrier,  Hugh  Brecken- 
ridge,  H.  B.  Snell.  Member:  Plastic 
C. ;    Phila.    Alliance;    Fellowship    PAFA. 

WASHBURN,  Cadwallader,  Box  403, 
Lakewood,   N.  J. 

P.,  Etcher,  W. — Born  Minneapolis,  Minn, 
Pupil  in  architecture  of  Mass.  Inst,  of 
Technology,  Boston;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  un- 
der Mowbray  and  of  Chase;  Sorolla  in 
Spain;  Besnard  in  Paris.  Member: 
NAC;  Wash.  AC.  Awards:  Second 
prize,  Paris  AAA;  gold  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,  San  P.,  1915.  Has  spent  winters 
in  Mexico  since  1908. 

WASHBURN,  Mary  S.,  1933  Howe  St., 
Berkeley,   Calif. 

S.— Born  Star  City,  Ind.  Pupil  of  AIC; 
Charles  Mulligan;  Edwin  Sawyer  in 
Paris.  Member:  Cordon  C;  SW  Sc; 
Awards  :  Second  prize,  Paris  AAA; 
gold  medal,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  P.,  1915. 
Work:  "Statue  of  Gen.  Milroy,"  Mil- 
roy  Park,  Rensselaer,  Ind. ;  medal  in 
Carnegie  Inst.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.;  Memor- 
ial to  Lit.  Joseph  Wilson,  Logansport, 
Ind.   Medal  in  Carnegie  Inst.,  Pittsburgh. 

WASHBURN,  May  N  (ightingale),  1206 
Carnegie  Studios,  7th  Ave.  &  56th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  451  Main  St., 
Greenfield,  Mass. 

P.— Born  Greenfield,  Mass.,  July  2,  1861. 
Pupil  of  D.  W.  Tryon. 

WASHINGTON,  Elizabeth  Fisher,  1710 
Chestnut  St.;  h.  214  South  43rd  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Min.  P. — Born  Siegfried's  Bridge,  Pa. 
Pupil  PAFA,  Hugh  Breckenridge,  Fred 
Wagner.  Member  :  Fellowship 

PAFA;  Plastic  C. ;  Phila.  Alliance;  Pa. 
S.  Min.  P.  Award:  Mary  Smith 
prize,  PAFA,  1917;  Fellowship  prize, 
AFA,  1917.  Represented  in  PAFA  Col- 
lection, Civic  Club,  Philadelphia;  Pierce 
Business  College. 

WATANABE,    Torajiro,    102    West    123rd 
St.,  New  York,   N.  Y. ;  summer,  Wood- 
stock,  N.   Y. 
P.— Born    Fukushima,     Japan,     July    9, 

1886.  Pupil  Henry  Read,  Charles  Rosen, 
Member:  Japanese  Art  Society, 
Woodstock  Art  Association. 

WATERS,    R.    Kinsman,    308    East    Tome 
St.,    1143   Lincoln   Rd.,   Columbus,   O. 
P.,  C,  T.— Born  Columbus,   O.,  July  21, 

1887.  Member:      NYWCC. 
WATKINS,    Mrs.    Catherine   W.,   49   ^West 

39th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  Woodstock. 
N.   Y. 

P. — Pupil  of  AIC;  Dauchez,  Miller  and 
Brangwyn  in  Paris  and  London. 
Member:     N.  A.  Women  PS. 

WATKINS,  Mary  Wiiklns.  See  Mrs- 
Preston. 

WATKINS,    W.    Reginald,    801    Williams 
St.,    Baltimore,   Md. 
I.— M  ember:  Char.  C. 

WATROUS,     Harry     W(liison),     58    West 
57th    St.;    h.    145    West    58th    St..    New 
York.    N.   Y. ;    summer,   Hague,   Warren 
Co.,   N.   Y. 
P, — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.,   Sept.  17, 


1857.  Pupil  of  Bonnat,  Boulanger  and 
I^efebvre  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA 
1894,  NA  1895  (cor.  sec.  1898-1920;  SAA 
1905;  A. Aid  S.;  Lotos  C;  Century  Assoc; 
NAC;  Salma.  C.  Awards:  Clarke 
prize,  NAD,  1894;  bronze  medal,  Pan- 
Am.  EXp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  special  com- 
memorative gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp., 
1904.  Work  :  "Passing  of  Summer," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York;  "A 
Vision  of  Love,"  Montpelier  (Vt.)  Mu- 
seum; "A  Study  in  Black,"  City  Art 
Museum,  St.  Louis;  "An  Auto  Sugges- 
tion," Buffalo  Fine  Arts  Academy;  "The 
Drop  Sinister."  Portland  (Me.)  Museum. 

WATROUS,  Mary  E.,  Laguna  Beach,  Cal. 
P.— Me  m  b  e  r  :      Calif.    AC. 

WATSON,  Adele,  20  West  10th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  283  South  Grand 
Ave.,   Pasadena,   Cal. 

P.— Born  Toledo,  O.,  Apr.  30,  1873. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  and  Raphael 
Collin  in  Paris.  Member:  PBC; 
N.   A.  Women  PS;   S.   Indp.  A. 

WATSON,  Agnes  M.,  10  South  18th  St., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of 
Pennsylvania  Museum  School  of  In- 
dustrial Art  and  of  Howard  Pyle. 
Member:    Plastic  C. 

WATSON,  Amelia  Montague,  "Wild 
Acres,"  East  Windsor  Hill,  Conn. 
P..  I.,  T.— Born  East  Windsor  Hill, 
March  2,  1856.  Specialty.  'Southern 
scenery.  Cover  and  frontispiece  for 
"The  Carolina  Mountains."  by  Margaret 
W.  Morley;  illustrations  for  Thoreau'a 
"Cape  Cod";  "Thousand  Mile  Walk  to 
the  Gulf,"  by  John  Muir. 

WATSON,  Charles  A.,  729  Homestead  St., 
Baltimore,   Md. 

P.— Born  Baltimore,  Nov.  16,  1857.  Pu- 
pil of  Andre  Castaigne,  E.  S.  Whiteman 
and  D.  Woodward.  Member:  Char- 
coal C. 

WATSON,  Dawson.  See  Dawson — Wat- 
son. 

WATSON,  Dudley  Crafts,  704  Marshall 
St..  Milwaukee,  Wis. 

P..  T.,  W..  L.— Born  Lake  Geneva,  Wis.. 
April  28,  1885.  Pupil  of  AI  Chicago; 
Sorolla;  Sir  Alfred  East.  Member: 
Chicago  SA;  Wisconsin  PS;  Cliff  Dwell- 
ers' Club,  Chicago.  Award  :  Hon.  men- 
tion for  water  colors.  AIC,  1911. 
Work:  "Monsalvat,"  Milwaukee  Art 
Inst.,  "Parliament  Tower,  London," 
Burlington  (Iowa)  Public  Library.  Lec- 
turer on  the  fine  arts.  Art  editor,  Mil- 
waukee; "Journal."  Originator  of  the 
Music-Picture  Symphonies;  official  di- 
rector of  pageantry.  City  of  Milwaukee; 
director,  Milwaukee  Art  Institute;  Edu- 
cational Director  of  Minneapolis  Inst, 
of  Arts;  Rockford,  111.  Art  Club;  Spring- 
field, Ind.  Art  Association;  Minnesota 
State  Fair;  Lecturer  on  Art,  1920-21,  St. 
Paul  Institute. 

WATSON,  Elizabeth  H.,  126  South  18th 
St.,   Philadelphia,  Pa. 

P.— Pupil  of  PAFA.  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA.  Award  :  Mary  Smith 
prize,  PAFA  1896. 


601 


WATSON 


WHO*S   WHO  IN  ART 


WEBER 


WATSON,  Elizabeth  V.  Taylor,  404  Fen- 
way Studios,  Ipswich  St.,  Boston, 
Mass.;  h.  165  Rawson  Road,  Brookline, 
Mass.;  summer,  Clark's  Island,  Ply- 
mouth,   Mass. 

P. — Born  in  New  Jersey,  Pupil  of  Tar- 
bell,  DeCamp.  Member:  Copley  S. 
Award  :  Bronze  medal,  Tennessee 
Centennial  Exp.,   Nashville,   1897.     • 

WATSON,  Ernest  W.,  Pratt  Institute;  h. 
181  Emerson  Place,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ; 
summer,  The  Berkshire  Summer  School 
of  Art,  Monterey,  Mass. 
I.,  Li.,  T. — Born  Conway,  Mass.,  Jan. 
14,  1884.  Pupil  of  Mass.  Normal  Art 
School,  Boston;  Pratt  Institute,  Brook- 
lyn. One  of  the  founders  and  directors 
of  The  Berkshire  Summer  School  of  Art. 

WATSON,  Mrs.  Eva  Auld,  181  Emerson 
PL,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Mon- 
terey, Mass. 

P.,  I.,  C— Born  in  Texas,  April  4,  1889. 
Pupil  of  M.  O.  Leisser,  Pittsburgh 
School  of  Design,  Pratt  Inst.,  Brook- 
lyn. Member:  Boston  SAC. 
Award:  Hon.  mention,  P,-P.  Exp., 
San   F.,    1915. 

WATSON,     Harry,     Jr.,    Flanders    Hotel, 
47th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

WATSON,  Henry  S(umner),  38  West  72nd 
St.,  and  care  of  "Players,"  16  Gramercy 
Park,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.— Born  Bordentown,  N.  J.,  1868,  Pu- 
pil of  Thomas  Eakins  in  Philadelphia; 
Laurens  in  Paris.     Member:  SI  1904, 

WATSON,  Jessie  N.,  1004  Chemical  Bldg.; 
h.  5723  Vernon  Ave.,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 
P„  A,— Born  Pontiac,  111.,  Jan,  13,  1870, 
Member:     2x4  S, 

WATSON,  Nan,  Harbor  Springs,  Mich. 
P. — Born    Edinburgh,    Scotland.      Pupil 
of  Chase,  Du  Mond,  Girardot  and  Prinet 
in  Paris.     Member:     S.  Indp.  A. 

WATT,  Barbara  H(unter),  25  Oakland 
St.,  Wellesley  Hills,  Mass.;  summer. 
Camp  Quanset,  South  Orleans,  Mass. 
P.,  I.,  A.,  C,  W.— Born  Wellesley,  Mass. 
Pupil  of  Albert  H.  Munsel,  V.  L.  George, 
J,  De  Camp  and  D,  J.  Connah.  Mem- 
ber: Brush  and  Chisel  C. ;  Alumni 
Asso.  of  Mass.  Norm.  Art  School 
Work:  Mural  decoration,  "Pan," 
Mass.  Normal  Art  School,  Boston. 

WATT,  William  G.,  54  West  9th  St., 
New  York.  N.  Y. 

Wood  Engr. — Born  New  York,  May  18, 
1867.  Pupil  of  E.  Heinemann,  Emile 
Clement  w.nd  NAD.  Member:  Sal- 
ma.C.  1903.  Work:  "The  Harvest," 
after  L'Hermitte;  "The  Pool,"  after 
own  painting;  "A  Music  Party,"  after 
Metsu;  "The  Trousseau,"  by  C.  W, 
Hawthorne;  "Magnolia,"  by  J.  J.  Shan- 
non. Work  in:  New  York  Public  Li- 
brary; Carnegie  Institute,  Pittsburgh; 
Public  Library,  Newark,  N,  J.;  Metro- 
politan Museum  Library,  New  York: 
Salmagundi    Club. 

WATTS,  William  Clothier,  Carmel,  Mon- 
terey Co,,   Calif. 

P,— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Pupil  PAFA. 
Member:  Fellowship  PAFA;  Phila. 
Sketch  C, 


WAUGH,  Colton,  428  Lafayette  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y.    (I.) 

WAUGH,  Frederick  J(udd),  Kent,  Conn. 
Marine  P.,  I. — Born  Bordentown,  N.  J., 
Sept.  13,  1861;  son  of  S.  B.  Waugh,  por- 
trait painter.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  Royal 
Academy  of  the  West  of  England,  Bris- 
tol, ANA,  1909;  NA,  1911;  Salma.  C. 
1908;  Lotos  C.  (life);  NAC  (life);  Conn. 
AFA;  Fellowship  PAFA.  Awards  : 
Clarke  prize,  NAD  1910;  gold  medal, 
Buenos  Aires  Exp,,  1910;  $100  prize, 
Boston  Art  Club;  Harris  bronze  med- 
al and  $300,  AIC  1912;  prize  ($100), 
Conn. AFA  1915;  silver  medal,  P,-P,Exp,, 
San  F,.  1915.  Work:  "Roaring  Forties" 
and  "The  Great  Deep,"  Metropolitan 
Museum,  New  York;  "The  Outer  Surf" 
and  "Surf  and  Fog,  Monhegan,"  Art  In- 
stitute of  Chicago;  "The  Coast,"  Mu- 
seum of  Art,  Toledo;  "After  a  North- 
easter" and  "Southwesterly  Gale,  St, 
Ives,"  National  Gallery,  Washington; 
"Under  the  Full  Moon,"  Brooklyn  In- 
stitute Museum;  "Evening,  Coast  of 
Maine,"  Art  Museum,  Montclair,  N.  J.; 
"The  Blue  Gulf  Stream,"  Pennsylvania 
Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts.  Represented 
in  Bristol  (Eng.)  Academy;  Walker  Art 
Gallery,  Liverpool;  Durban  Art  Gallery, 
South  Africa;  Dallas  Art  Association; 
Austin  (Tex.)  Art  League;  City  Art 
Muesum,  St.  Louis.  Author  of  "The 
Clan  of  Munes." 

WAXMAN,  Mrs.  Francis  S.     See  Sheafer. 
WAYMAN,    Nelson    P.,    814    Jarvella    St.. 

Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

WEATHERLY,  Newton,  Geneva,  N.  Y. 
P, — M  ember:  Rochester  AC. 

WEAVER,  Clara.  See  Mrs.  W.  P.  Par- 
rish, 

WEBB,    Charles   A.,   21   Ampersand   Ave,, 
Saranac  Lake,  N,  Y, 
P.— M  ember:    NYWCC. 

WEBB,  Edna  Dell,  9  Lansing  Avenue, 
Troy,  N,  Y. ;  summer,  Navesink,  N,  J. 
P.,  T,— Born  Cohoes,  N,  Y.,  Feb.  12, 
1891.  Pupil  of  NAD;  Troy  School  of 
Arts  and  Crafts. 

WEBB,  Herbert,  Lumber  Exchange  Bldg., 
Seattle,   Wash.    (P.) 

WEBB,   J(acob)  Louis,  32  East  42nd  St., 

New   York,    N.  Y. 

P.— Born  1856.  Member:  SAA  1888; 
ANA    1906. 

WEBB,  Margaret  Ely,  Denison  House,  93 
Tyler  St..  Boston,  Mass.;  26  West  Mich- 
eltonva  St.,  'Santa  Barbara,  Calif, 
I.,  E.— Born  Urbana,  111.,  March  27,  1877. 
Pupil  of  Twachtman  and  Cox  in  New 
York.  Illustrated  "The  House  of  Pray- 
er," by  F,  C,  Converse;  "Aldine  First 
Reader,"   "Under  Greek  Skies,"  etc. 

WEBER,  August  J(ames),  1234  Louden 
Ave.,  Cincinnati,  O.;  h.  420  Third  St., 
Marietta,   O, 

P,— Born  Marietta,  0„  Oct.  21,  1889. 
Pupil  of  Meakin  and  Duveneck  in  Cin- 
cinnati.    Member:     Cincinnati  AC. 


I 


602 


WEBER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


WEINMAN 


WEBER,  F(rederick)  (Theodore),  65-67 
East  56th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  S.,  E. — Born  Columbia,  S.  C,  Mar. 
9,  1883.  Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Ecole 
des  Beaux-Arts  in  Paris.  Member: 
Alliance;  NTWCC;  Brooklyn  SE.  Etch- 
ings in  the  Library  of  Congress,  Wash- 
ington. 

WEBER,  Max,  Nassau  Haven,  New  Hyde 
Park,  L.   I.,   N.   Y. 

P.,  T.,  L.— Born  in  Russia,  Apr.  18,  1880. 
Pupil  of  Dow;  Laurens  and  Matisse  in 
Paris.  Member  :  Modern  Artists; 
Lg.  of  N.Y.A.  Author,  "Essays  on  Art," 
"Cubist  Poems,"  etc. 

WEBER,  Sarah  S.  Stilwell,  1906  Sansom 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.    (I.) 

WEBERG,    John,    80    Sylvania   St.,    Pitts- 
burgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

WEBSTER,  E.  Ambrose,  Provincetown, 
Mass. 

P.,  T.— Born  Chelsea,  Mass.,  Jan.  31, 
1869.  Pupil  of  Boston  Museum  under 
Benson  and  Tarbell;  Laurens  and  Ben- 
jamin-Constant in  Paris.  Member: 
Provincetown   AA;    Boston   AC. 

WEBSTER,  Harold  Tucker,  Tribune 
Bldg.,  154  Nassau  St.;  h.  370  Central 
Park,  West,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Meddybemps,  Me. 

Cartoonist. — Born  Parkersburg,  West 
Va.,  Sept.  21,  1885.  Member:  SI; 
Salma.  C.  Author  of  "Our  Boyhood 
Thrills  and  other  Cartoons";  "Boys  and 
Folks";  cartoon  series  entitled — "Our 
Boyhood  Ambitions";  "The  Thrill  that 
comes  once  in  a  Lifetime";  "Life's 
Darkest  Moment";  "The  Beginning  of 
a  Beautiful  Friendship";  "How  to  Tor- 
ture your  Wife." 

WEBSTER,  Herman  A(rmour),  39  rue 
d'Artois,  Paris,  France. 
Painter-Etcher — Born  New  York,  N.  Y., 
April  6,  1878.  Pupil  of  Laurens  in  Paris. 
Member:  R.Soc.of  Painter-Etchers, 
London;  Soc.Nat.des  Beaux-Arts,  Paris; 
Paris  AAA;  Chelsea  AC;  Cercle  et 
Union  Interalli6s,  Paris.  Award  : 
Gold  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915, 
Work  in:  Luxembourg,  Paris;  South 
Kensington,  London;  Darmstadt;  Li- 
brary of  Congress,  Washington;  Art  In- 
stitute, Chicago;  Fogg  Museum,  Cam- 
bridge,  etc. 

WEBSTER,  Mary  H(ortense),  Midway 
Studios.  6016  Ellis  Ave.,  Chicago,  111.; 
h.  1931  East  89th  St.,  Cleveland,  O. 
P.,  S..  T.— Born  Oberlin.  O.,  May  16, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy 
under  Barnhorn  and  Nowottny;  Injal- 
ber.  Verlet,  and  Waldmann  in  Paris; 
Hitchcock  in  Holland;  Hawthorne  in 
Provincetown.  Member:  Cleveland 
Woman's  AS. 

WEDDELL,   Iris,  Hinsdale,  111. 
E. — M  ember:    Chicago   SE. 

WEDDERSPOON,       R(ichard)       G(ibson), 

4611  Ellis  Ave.,  Chicago,  111.;  summer, 
Hollister,  Mo. 

P.— Born  Red  Bank,  N.  J.,  Oct.  15,  1889. 
Pupil  of  Daniel  Garber  and  Henry  Mc- 
Carter.  Member:  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Chicago  SA;  Chicago  AC.     Awards  : 


European  scholarship,  PAFA,  1915  and 
1916;  first  Toppan  prize,  PAFA,  1917. 
Represented  in  Chicago  Civic  Com- 
mittee,  DePau  University. 

WEEDELL,  Hazel  (Elizabeth),  (Mrs. 
Gustav  F.  Goetsch),  20  Elm  Ave.,  Glen- 
dale,  Kirkwood,  Mo. 

P.,  E.,  C,  T.— Born  Tacoma,  Wash., 
Jan.  26,  1892.  Pupil  of  Gustav  F. 
Goetsch,  Robert  Koehler  and  Ernest 
Batchelder.  Member:  Alumni,  Min- 
neapolis School  of  Art;   St.  Louis  AG. 

WEIFFENBACH,  Elizabeth,  86  Delaware 
Ave.,    Buffalo,    N.   Y.      (P.,    T.) 

WEI  LAND,  James,  61  Poplar  St.,  Brook- 
lyn, New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Toledo,  O.  Pupil  of  NAD; 
Royal  Academy  in  Munich;  Delecluse 
and  Colarossi  Academy  in  Paris.  M  e  m- 
ber:  Salma.C;  Allied  AA;  Province- 
town  AA. 

WEILL,  Edmund,  756  East  9th  St.,  Brook- 
lyn, New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  E.— Born  New  York,  July  29,  1877. 
Pupil  of  NAD  under  Edgar  M.  Ward. 
Member:  Brooklyn  SA;  Brooklyn 
WCC;  S.  Indp.  A;  Salma.  C. 

WEINBERG,  Mrs.  E(milie)  Sievert,  511 
14th  St.,  Oakland,  Cal. 
P.— Born  Chicago,  111.  Pupil  of  AIC 
and  William  M.  Chase.  Member: 
San  F.  AA;  Calif.  AC;  Oakland  AA; 
Alumni    Asso.    AIC. 

WEINBERG,  Louis,  897  Riverside  Drive, 
New    York,    N.    Y. 

P.,  T. — Born  Russian  Poland,  Apr.  11, 
1885.  Pupil  of  Sigismond  de  Ivanowski. 
Member:    S.Indp.A. 

WEI  N  DORP,  Arthur,  W^oolworth  Bldg., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  h.  216  Fifth  Ave., 
Astoria,  L.  L,  N.  Y. 

P.,  A.,  W.,  T.— Born  Long  Island  City, 
May  25,  1885.     Member:     S.Indp.A. 

WEINERT,  Albert,  256  West  55th  St.;  h. 
201  West  15th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S. — Born  Leipzig,  Germany,  June  13, 
1863.  Pupil  of  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts, 
in  Brussels.  Member:  NSS. 
1909;  S.Indp.A.  Work:  "Lake  George 
Memorial,"  Lake  George,  N.  Y.;  "Mc- 
Kinley  Monument,"  Toledo,  O.;  "Statue 
of  Lord  Baltimore,"  Baltimore,  Md.; 
marble  groups  in  vestibule  of  Hall  of 
Records,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  "Stevens 
T.  Mason  Monument,"  Detroit,  Mich.; 
historical  tablets  for  Sons  of  the  Revo- 
lution and  Society  of  Colonial  Wars; 
work  at  Panama-Pacific  Exposition, 
San  Francisco,  Cal. 

WEINMAN,  Adolph  A(lexander),  441 
West  21st  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
S. — Born  Karlsruhe,  Germany,  Dec.  11, 
1870;  came  to  America  in  1880.  Pupil 
of  ASL  of  New  York,  Augustus  Saint 
Gaudens,  Niehaus,  Martigny,  French, 
and  of  Cooper  Union.  Member: 
NSS  1900;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  1902;  SAA 
1903;  ANA  1906;  NA  1911;  Nat.  Inst. 
A.  L. ;  Century  Assoc;  Am.  Numis- 
matic Soc.  Member:  Int.  Jury 
for  Sculpture,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F., 
1915.     Awards  :     Hon.  mention,  Pan- 


603 


WEINRICH 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


WELSCH 


Am.. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  silver  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  silver  medal, 
Brussels  Exp.,  1910;  gold  medal  of 
honor  for  sculpture,  N.  Y.  Arch.  Leg. 
1913;  Saltus  Medal  for  medal,  American 
Numismatic  Society,  1920.  Work: 
Lincoln  memorials  at  Hodgenville,  Ky., 
and  Madison,  Wis.;  "Gen.  Macomb 
Monument,"  Detroit;  "Abraham  Lin- 
coln," statuette,  Metropolitan  Museum, 
New  York;  "Indian,"  head,  Brooklyn 
Institute  Museum;  "The  Rising  Sun" 
and  plaque  "Adelaide,"  Carnegie  In- 
stitute, Pittsburgh;  "Descending  Night," 
Kansas  City  Museum;  "Alexander  J. 
Cassatt,"  New  York;  all  sculpture  on 
exterior  and  interior  of  Pennsylvania 
Railway  Station,  New  York;  sculpture 
on  facade  and  top  of  tower,  Municipal 
Bldg.,  New  York.  Designer  of  half 
dollar  and  dime  for  U.  S.  Government. 
Victory  Button  for  U.  S.  Army  and 
Navy. 

WEINRICH,  Agnes,  Provincetown,  Mass. 
P.,  E.,  C. — Born  in  Iowa. 

WEIR,  Edith  Dean.  See  Mrs.  J.  DeW. 
Perry. 

WEIR,  Irene-  Hotel  Netherland,  Fifth 
Ave.  and  59th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
summer,  Katonah,  N.  Y. 
P.,  D.,  W,.,  L.,  T.— Pupil  of  J.  H. 
Twachtman.  J.  Alden  Weir,  Yale  School 
of  Fine  Arts;  ASL  of  N.  Y. ;  Academic, 
Paris.  Member:  NYWCC ;  N.  A. 
Women  PS;  Alliance.  Director,  School 
of  Design  and  Liberal  Arts  and  of  Art 
Alliance  of  America. 

WEIR,  John  F(erguson),  care  of  Yale 
University,  New  Haven,  Conn, 
P.,  S.,  T.,  L.,  W.— Born  West  Point, 
N.  Y.,  Aug.  28,  1841.  Pupil  of  his 
father,  Robert  W.  Weir,  at  West  Point; 
NAD  in  New  York.  Me  m  b  e  r  :  ANA 
1864,  NA  1866;  Conn.AFA;  Century 
Assoc;  Providence  AC;  New  Haven 
PCC.  Director  of  the  Yale  School  of 
Fine  Arts  1869  to  1913,  and  now  Di- 
rector Emeritus.  Author  of  "John 
Trumbull  and  His  Works,"  etc. 
Work:  "Forging  the  Shaft,"  Metro- 
politan Museum,  New  York;  statues  of 
Pres.  Woolsey  and  Prof.  Silliman  at 
Yale  Univ.;  public  fountain,  New  Haven 
Green;  numerous  portraits  at  Yale  and 
elsewhere. 

WEIS,  John  E(llsworth),  148  East  Fourth 
St.;  h.  2125  Alpine  PL,  W.  H.,  Cincin- 
nati,  O. 

P.,  W.,  T. — Born  Higginsport,  O.,  Sept. 
11,  1892.  Pupil  of  Duveneck,  Meakin, 
Hopkins  and  Wessel.  Member:  Cin- 
cinnati AC;  Cincinnati  MacD.  C;  Duve- 
neck Soc.  of  P.  and  S.;  Lg.  of  N.  Y.  A. 

WEIS,  S(amuel)  W(ashington),  1815  Mai- 
ler's  Bldg.,    Chicago,   111. 
P.— Born   Natchez,    Miss.,   Aug.    8,   1870. 
Member:    Salma.C;    N.    O.    AA. 

WEISBROOK,  F.  S.,  48  McManus  Bldg., 
Davenport,    la. 

P. — A  ward:  Bronze  medal  for  wa- 
ter  color.    St.  Paul  Institute,   1918. 


WEISS,      Mary      L.      (Mrs.      William     H. 
Weiss),  East  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P. — Born   Mauch   Chunk,    Pa.     Pupil   of 
PAFA  under  Chase.     Member:   Fel- 
lowship PAFA;  Plastic  C. 

WEISS,      William      L.,.    East   Gloucester, 
Mass. 
P.— M  ember:      Salma.   C. 

WELCH.    Katharine    G.,    Spring    Station. 
Ky. 
P.— M  ember:     N.  A.  Women  PS. 

WELCH,  IVIabel  R..  care  Van  Dyck  Stu- 
dios, 939  Eighth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y,; 
Min.P.,  T. — Born  New  Haven,  Conn. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Cox  and 
Reid;  Van  der  Weyden,  Garrido,  Lazar 
and  Scott  in  Paris.  Member:  N.  A. 
Women  PS;  Am.  S.  Min.  P.;  Pa.  S.  Min. 
P.;  Lg.  of  N.Y.A.  Awards:  Silver 
medal,  P.-P  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  medal 
of  honor,   PAFA,  1920. 

WELDON,    C(harles)     D(ater),    51    West 

10th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I.,  P.— Born  Ohio.  Pupil  of  Walter 
Shirlaw  in  New  York;  Munkacsy  in 
Paris.  Member:  ANA  1889,  NA 
1897;  AWCS;  Century  Assoc.  Award: 
Bronze  medal,  Charleston  Exp.,  1902. 

WELLS,   Mrs.   Alice  Rushmore,   80  Wash- 
ington Ave.,  Plainfield,  N.  J. 
P. — Member:       Am. S. Min. P.;       Pa.S. 
Min.   P.;    N.   A.   Women   PS. 

WELLS,  Benjamin  B.,  Hackensack,  N.  J. 
P.— M  ember:     Salma.   C. 

WELLS,    Carrie    Carter    (Mrs.    Charles   J. 
Wells),   Mattituck,   L.  I.,   N.   Y. 
P.— Member:   N.  A.  Women  PS. 

WELLS,  Charles  S.,  3004  Hennepin  Ave.; 
summer,  5250  Penn  Ave.,  South,  Minne- 
apolis,   Minn. 

S.,  T. — Born  Glasgow,  Scotland,  June 
24,  1872.  Pupil  of  Karl  Bitter,  Augustus 
Saint  Gaudens,  George  G.  Barnard. 
Work  :  Fountain  Gateway  Park,  City 
of  Minneapolis. 

WELLS,    Mrs.    Emily,    210   Alexander    St., 
Rochester,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember  :    Rochester  AC. 

WELLS.  Newton  A(lonzo),  University  of 
Illinois;  h.  803  West  Oregon  St.,  Ur- 
bana.   111. 

P.,  S.,  L,  Arch.,  C,  T.— Born  Lisbon,  St. 
Lawrence  Co.,  N.  Y.,  April  9,  1852. 
Pupil  of  Constant  and  Laurens  in  Paris. 
Member:  Mural  P.  1905;  Arch.Lg.of 
America  (vice-pres.  1904-06);  Chicago 
SE;  Paris  AAA.  Instructor  in  paint- 
ing, University  of  Illinois,  since  1899. 
Work  :  Mural  decoration  in  Library  of 
Univ.  of  Illinois;  Sangamon  Co.  Court 
House,  Springfield,  111.;  Colonial  Thea- 
ter, Boston;  Englewood  High  School, 
Chicago. 

WELSCH,  Paul,  5  Rue  du  Quartier  des 
Quinze,  Strasbourg,  France. 
P.— Born  at  Strasbourg,  July  26,  1889. 
Pupil  of  Maurice  Denis,  Charles  Guerin, 
Bernhard  Naudin  in  Paris.  Repre- 
sented in:  Chicago  Art  Inst.;  Musee  de 
Mulhouse  and  Musee  du  Chateau  des 
Rohans  in  Strasbourg. 


604 


WELSH 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


WEST 


WELSH,  Herbert,  814  Carpenter  Lane, 
Mt.  Airy  Station.;  h.  5335  Baynton  St., 
Germantown,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Dec.  4,  1851. 
Pupil  of  Bonnat  in  Paris;  F.  Auguste 
Ortmanns  in  Fontalnebleau;  Onorato 
Carlandi  in  Rome.  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA. 

WELSH,    H  (Grace)    Devitt,   1520  Chestnut 
St.,   Philadelphia,   Pa. 

I.,  E.,  P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Mar. 
2,  1888.  Pupil  of  Thomas  Anshutz,  Wil- 
liam M.  Chase,  Joseph  Pennell,  and 
Walter  Everett.  Member:  Phila. 
Sketch  C;  Fellowship  PAFA;  'SI;  Phila. 
WCC;  Art  Directors'  Club.  Work: 
Etching  of  Rembrandt's  "Mill,"  and 
"St.  Paul,"  Widener  Collection,  Phila- 
delphia; etchings  of  the  White  House 
for  President  Wilson;  etching  of  "The 
Lock,"  by  Constable,  Elkins  Collection, 
Philadelphia.  Assistant  Secretary  of 
Division  of  Pictorial  Publicity,  during 
World  War. 

WEN  DEL,  Theodore,  Ipswich,  Mass. 

P.— M  ember:  Boston  GA.  Award: 
Sesnan  medal,  PAFA  1909;  silver  medal, 
P.-P.Exp..  San  F.,  1915.  Work:  "Land- 
scape," Cincinnati  Museum;  "Winter  at 
Ipswich,"  Pennsylvania  Academy,  Phila- 
delphia. 

WENDT,  Julia  M.  Bracken  (Mrs.  Wm. 
Wendt),  2814  N.  Sichel  St.,  Los  An- 
geles, Calif;  Laguna  Beach.  Calif. 
S.,  P.— Born  Apple  River,  111.,  June 
10,  1871.  Pupil  of  AIC  under  Taft. 
Member:  Chicago  SA;  Chicago 
Municipal  A.Lg. ;  Los  Angeles  FAA; 
Calif.  AC;  NAC;  Three  Arts  C.  of  Los 
Angeles.  Awards  :  Sculpture  prize, 
Chicago,  1898;  Chicago  Municipal  A.Lg. 
prize,  1905;  Harrison  prize;  gold  medal, 
Pan-Calif.  Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915;  Calif. 
AC,  1918.  Work:  "Illinois  Wel- 
coming the  Nations,"  presented  to  the 
State  by  111. Woman's  Bd..  Columbian 
Exp.,  1893;  group,  "Art,  Science,  and 
History,"  Los  Angeles  Museum.  In- 
structor Otis  Art  Inst.,  Los  Angeles. 

WENDT,  William,  2814  N.  Sichel  St.,  Lcs 
Angeles,  Calif;  Laguna  Beach,  Calif. 
P.— Born  in  Germany,  Feb.  20,  1865; 
settled  in  Chicago  18S0.  Self-taught. 
Member:  ANA,  1912;  Chicago  SA; 
NAC;  Calif.  AC"  Ten  Painters  of 
Los  Angeles.  Awards:  Second 
Yerkes  prize,  Chicago,  1893:  Young 
Fortnightly  prize,  AIC  1897;  bronze 
medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo.  1901; 
Cahn  prize,  AIC  1904;  silver  medal,  St. 
Louis  Exp..  1904;  hon.  mention.  Chicago 
SA  1905;  silver  medal,  Wednesday  Club, 
St.  Louis,  1910;  Cahn  hon.  mention,  AIC 
1910;  Fine  Arts  Bldg.  prize,  SWA,  1912; 
Kirchberger  prize,  AIC,  1913;  silver 
medal,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F..  1915;  Black 
prize,  Cal.  AC,  1916.  Work  :  "To  Join 
the  Brimming  River,"  Cincinnati  Mu- 
seum; "When  All  the  World  Is  Young," 
"The  Silence  of  the  Night,"  Art  Insti- 
tute of  Chicago;  "Marine,"  Herron  Art 
Institute,  Indianapolis;  "Hills  in  Spring- 
time," Hibbard  High  School,  Richmond, 
Ind. ;  "Montecito,"  Cliff  Dwellers  Club. 
Chicago;  "Where  Peace  Abides,"  Des 
Moines  Assso.  of  Fine  Arts. 

605 


WENIGER,    Maria    P.,   14   St.   Luke's   PI., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
S.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

WENGER,  John,  1931  Broadway;  h.  456 
East  141st  St.;  summer,  care  of  Fol- 
som  Galleries,  396  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Russia,  June  16,  1886.  Studied 
at  Art  Academy,  Petrograd.  Mem- 
ber:   Salma.C;    S.Indp.A. 

WENTWORJTH,  Adelaide  E.,  17  The  Som- 
erset, Avondale,  Cincinnati,  O.;  sum- 
mer, Kittery  Depot,  Me. 
E.,  C,  L.,  T.— Born  Wakefield,  N.  H. 
Pupil  of  D.  W.  Ross,  W.  S.  Robinson, 
Arthur  Dow.  Member:  Cincinnati 
Woman's  AC;  Crafters  Co. 

WENTWORTH,  D(aniei)  F.,  904  Main 
St.;  h.  7  Regent  St.,  Hartford,  Conn. 
P. — Studied  in  Munich,  but  largely  self- 
taught.  Member:  Conn.  AFA. 
(pres.).  Work:  "In  the  Lane,"  "In 
the  Forest  of  Allach,"  Wadsworth 
Athenaeum. 

WENTZ,  Henry  Frederick,  Worcester 
Bldg.  Roof,  Portland,  Ore.;  summer, 
Neah-kah-mie  Mt.,  Nehalem  P.  O.,  Ore. 
P.,  C,  L.,  T.— Born  The  Dalles,  Ore. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Work:  "Sand 
Dune,  Neahkahmie,"  Portland  Art  As- 
sociation. 

WERNER,    Frank   A.,   5121   Drexel   Blvd., 
Chicago,  111. 
P. — M  ember:  Chicago  SA. 

WERNTZ,  Car!  N.,  81  East  Madison  St., 
Chicago,  111. 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Sterling,  111.,  July  9,  1874. 
Pupil  of  J.  H.  Vanderpoel,  Frederick 
Freer,  Lawton  Parker,  Jeanette  Pratt, 
Orson  Lowell,  A.  Mucha  and  Robert 
Reid  in  America;  Richard  Miller  In 
Paris;  Onorato  Carlandi  in  Rome;  Seti 
Mizuno  and  Kaho  Kawatika  in  Japan. 
Me  m  b  e  r  :  Western  Arts  Assoc. ;  Pa- 
lette and  Chisel  C;  Illinois  Manual  Arts 
Assoc.  Formerly  cartoonist  on  "Chi- 
cago Record."  Illustrated  books  and 
magazine  articles.  Founder,  director 
and  instructor,  Chicago  Academy  of 
Fine  Arts. 

WESSEL,     Bessie     Hoover     (Mrs.    H.    H. 
Wessel),  care  Art  Academy,  Cincinnati, 
O. 
P. — Member:    Cincinnati  Woman's  AC. 

WESSEL,  Herman  H.,  Art  Academy, 
Cincinnati.    O. 

P.  —  Member:  Cincinnati  A  C. 
Award:  Hon.  mention,  Herron  Art 
Institute,    1916. 

WESSELHOEFT,        Mary        Fraser,       407 

Bleecker  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P., I., C— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  1873.  Pu- 
pil of  Boston  Museum  School;  Denman 
W.  Ross  and  Charles  H.  Woodbury  in 
Boston;  Von  Habermann  in  Munich. 
Member:  Copley  S.  1892;  Chicago  SE; 
S.  Indp.  A. 

WESSER,  Ethelyn  H.,  1226  Bushwick 
Ave.,    Brooklyn,   New   York,    N.   Y.    (P.) 

WEST,  Mrs.  George  Parsons.  See  Isa- 
belle   Percy. 


WEST 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


WHITE 


WEST,  Louise,  The  Montreal,  Baltimore, 
Md.     (P.) 

WESTERMAN,  Harry  James,  1661  Frank- 
lin Park,  South,  Columbus,  O. 
Cartoonist, P.,  I,,  T.,  W. — Born  Parkers- 
burg-,  W.  Va.,  Aug.  8,  1876.  Pupil  of 
Columbus  Art  School.  Member:  Co- 
lumbus Pen  and  Brush  Co.;  Lg.  of 
Columbus  Artists.  On  staff  "Ohio  State 
Journal"  since  1897;  cartoonist,  McClure 
Newspaper  Syndicate. 

WESTON,   Morris,  Weston  Art   Galleries, 
622  Lexington  Ave.,   New  York,   N.   Y.; 
summer,  Essex,  Conn. 
P.,  S..  W.,  T.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  Nov. 
22,  1858. 

WETHERBEE,  George,  "White  Cottage," 
18  Redington  Road,  Hampstead,  N.  W., 
London,    England. 

P.— Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  1851.  Pupil  of 
Royal  academies,  London  and  Antwerp. 
Member:  Royal  Inst.  Painters  in 
Water  Color;  R.  I.  Painters  in  Oil. 
Awards  :  Silver  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  also  Chicago  and  Paris, 
Work:  "Music  of  Pipe  and  Brook," 
Albright   Art    Gallery,    Buffalo. 

WETHERILL,   E(lisha)    Kent  K(ane),  143 

East  23rd  St.;  h.  142  East  18th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Phoenicia, 
N.   Y. 

P.,  E.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Sept.  1, 
1874.  Pupil  of  Thomas  Anshutz,  Whis- 
tler, Laurens.  Award  :  Gold  Medal, 
Panama-Pacific  Exp.,  San  Francisco, 
1915. 

WETiVIORE,  iVlary  Minerva,  511  West 
Church  St.,  Champaign,  111. 
Port.  P.— Born  Canfield,  O.  Pupil  of 
Cleveland  Art  School;  ASL  of  New 
York  under  Chase,  Cox;  Julian  Academy 
in  Paris  under  Constant  and  Laurens; 
Colarossi  Academy  under  Courtois  and 
Prinet.  Member:  Chicago  SA;  Chi- 
cago AG;  N.  A.  Women  PS.  Instructor 
of  painting  at  University  of  Illinois. 

WETTERAN,  Rudolf,  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
P.— M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

WETZEL,  George  J(ulius),  1624  Univer- 
sity Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  New  York,  Feb.  8,  1870.  Pu- 
pil of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Mowbray, 
Beckwith,  Cox  and  Chase.  Member: 
ASL  of  N.  Y.  (life) ;  Nat.  Fine  Arts  Soc. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  AC  Phila. ; 
hon.  mention,  Salma.  C.  Work: 
"Edgar  Allan  Poe  Cottage,"  Bronx 
Museum  of  Science  and  Art,  New  York. 

WEYAND.    Mrs.    Charles    L.       See    Edith 

Varian  Cockroft. 
WHEELER,  Cleora   (Clark),  1376  Summit 

Ave.,    St.    Paul,    Minn. 

I.,    C. — Born    Austin,    Minn.      Pupil    of 

Julie     Gauthier.       Member:     Amer. 

Bookplate       S.;        Minn.        State       AS. 

Award  :       First     award     in     design, 

Minn.    State   AS.,    1913. 
WHEELER,  Clifton  A.,  5317  Lowell  Ave., 

Indianapolis,   Ind. 

P.,  T.— Born  Hadley,  Ind.,  Sept.  4,  i883. 

Pupil  of  Forsyth  in  Indianapolis;  Henri, 

Miller    and    Chase    in    New    York;    also 

studied  in  Europe.    Work:  "Twilight 


in  January,"  Herron  Art  Institute, 
Indianapolis;  Thorntown  (Ind.)  Public 
Library;  mural  paintings  in  Indianapolis 
City  Hospital;  St.  Joseph's  Convent, 
Tipton,  Ind.;  Circle  Theatre,  Indianap- 
olis. Mural  in  Brookside  School,  Whit- 
tier  School,  Indianapolis,  Ind. 
WHEELER,  Dora.     See  Mrs.  Wm.  Keith. 

WHEELER,    E.    Kathleen,    Hillside,    Wis. 

(S.) 

WHEELER,  Janet  D.,  1710  Chestnut  St.; 
h.  The  Belgravia,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Port.P.— Born  Detroit,  Mich.  Pupil  of 
PAFA;  Bouguereau  and  Courtois  in 
Paris.  Member:  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Plastic  C.  Awards:  Toppan  prize, 
PAFA;  Mary  Smith  prize,  PAFA  1901; 
gold  medal,  ACPhila.  1902;  silver  medal, 
St.    Louis    Exp.,    1904. 

WHEELER,      Laura,      Brinton      Cottage, 

Cheney,    Pa.;    summer,    166    Marion    St., 

Brooklyn,    New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.,     I.,     C,     T.— Born     Hartford,     Conn. 

Pupil  of  W.  M.  Chase,  Henry  McCarter, 

and    Violet    Oakley.      Illustrated    "The 

Shadow,"   "The  Upward  Path." 
WHEELOCK,  Lila  Audubon  (Mrs.  Howard 

Wheelock),    2041/2    West    13th    St.,    New 

York,   N.   Y. 

S.— M  ember:      N.   A.   Women  PS. 
WHEELOCK,  Warren,  131  Macdougal  St., 

New  York,   N.  Y. 

P.— M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

WHELEN,    Blanclie,    1812   West   24th    St., 

Los  Angeles,  Calif. 

P. — Born    Los   Angeles,    Calif.      Pupil   of 

Nicholas  Haz.     Member:     Calif.  AC; 

Whitney  Studio  C. 
WHIPPLE,    Elsie    R.,    1505    Orchlee    St., 

N.    S.,    Pittsburgh,   Pa. 

P.— M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

WHITAKER,  Mrs.  Stella  Trowbridge,  1654 
Massachusetts  Ave.,  Cambridge,  Mass. 
P. — M  ember:    S.Indp.A. 

WHITE,  Alden,  Acushnet  Station,  New 
Bedford,    Mass. 

E. — Born  Acushnet,  Mass.,  Apr.  11,  1861. 
Pupil  of  V.  Preissig.  Member:  Chi- 
cago SE;  Boston  SE;  New  Bedford  AG. 

WHITE,  Belle  Cady,  150  Steuben  St., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  R.  F.  D.,  Old 
Chatham,  N.  Y. 

P.- -Born  Chatham,  N.  Y.,  1868.  Pupil 
of  Pratt  Inst,  in  Brooklyn;  Snell,  Wood- 
bury, Herbert  Adams  and  Hawthorne. 
Member:  Brooklyn  WCC.  Instruc- 
tor in  Pratt  Institute. 

WHITE,  C(larence)  Scott,  Belmont,  Mass. 
Ldscp.P.,  T. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  March 
14,  1872.  Pupil  of  Chnrles  H.  Wood- 
bury. Member:  Boston  SWOP; 
Copley  S. 

WHITE,     Mrs.     Emma     L.     R.,     3    Gordon 
Place,   New  Brighton,   S.   I.,   N.   Y. 
P. — Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS. 

WHITE,  Henry  C(ook),  Waterford,  Conn. 
P.— Born  Hartford,  Sept.  15.  1861.  Pu- 
pil of  D.  W.  Tryon  and  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
Member:  Conn.AFA;  NYWCC;  The 
Pastellists. 

WHITE,  Juliet  M.     See  Mrs.  Gross. 


606 


WHITE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


WHITMOOR 


WHITE,    Lucy   Schwab,   340   Edward   St., 
New  Haven,   Conn. 
P. — M  ember:  New  Haven  PCC. 

WHITE,  Margaret  Wood  (Mrs.  V.  G. 
White),  337  West  23rd  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  summer.  East  Hampton,  L.  I., 
N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Chicago,  111..  Mar.  4,  1893. 
Pupil  of  Biloul,  Humbert,  Richard  Mil- 
ler, Johansen,  Bridgman.  Member  : 
N.   A.   Women  PS. 

WHITE,  Nelson  C(ook),  Waterford,  Conn. 
P. — Born  Waterford,  Conn.,  June  11, 
1900.  Pupil  of  Henry  C.  White  and 
NAD.     Member:     Conn,  AFA. 

WHITE.    Orrin    A.,    1302    Stevenson    Ave., 
Pasadena,  Cal. 
P.— M  ember:    Cal.AC. 

WHITE,  (Thomas)  Gilbert,  "Cowmoney 
Lodge,"  Fairfield,  Conn. 
Mural  P.,  I.,  W.,  L..,  T.— Born  Grand 
Haven,  Mich.,  July  18,  1877.  Pupil  of 
Laurens,  Twachtman,  MacMonnies, 
Member:  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.  Dec- 
orated by  French  Government.  Mural 
decorations  in  Kentucky  State  Capitol; 
Hotel  McAlpin;  New  Haven  County 
Court  House;  Federal  Building,  Gads- 
den, Ala.;  Peninsula  Club,  Grand  Rap- 
ids, Mich.;  Utah  State  Capitol;  "Por- 
trait of  Gov.  McCreary  of  Kentucky," 
Pan-American    Building,    Washington. 

WHITE,  Victor  (Gerald),  337  West  23rd 
St.,  New  York.  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Dublin,  Ireland,  Feb.  28,  1892. 
Pupil  of  Chase,  Bellows,  Henri;  Biloul, 
Lucien  Simon  and  Richard  Miller  in 
Paris. 

WHITE,  Walter  C(harles)  L(ewis),  Farm- 
er's and  St.  Marks  Aves.,  St.  Albans, 
L.  I..   N.  Y. 

P.,  T. — Born  ShefReld,  Yorkshire,  Eng- 
land, 'Sent.  15,  1876.  Pupil  of  Carlson, 
Beck,  Bridgman,  Dow,  Pratt  Inst. 
Member:  Phila.  AC;  Brooklyn 
Society  of  Artists;   Brooklyn  WCC. 

WHITE,   W.    D.,   Edgemoor,    Del.    (I.) 

WHITEHAIM.  (Edna)  IVIay,  32  Holly  St., 
Clarendon,   Va. 

P.,  I. — Born  Scribner,  Neb.,  Jan.  16, 
1887.  Pupil  of  Sara  Hayden  and  Sey- 
mour at  Univ.  of  Neb;  AIC.  Mem- 
ber: Lincoln  AC.  Award  :  Neb- 
raska State  Fair  prizes. 

WHITEHEAD,    Margaret    Van    Cortlandt, 
4S68    Ellsworth    Ave..    Pittsburgh,    Pa. 
P.  —  Member:      Pittsburgh      A      A. 
Award  :   First  prize,    Pittsburgh  AA, 
1912. 

WHITEHEAD,  Walter,  care  the  Frank 
■Seaman  Agency,  470  Fourth  Ave.,  New 
York.   N.  Y. 

I..  T.— Born   Chicago,   111.,    Sept.    2,   1874. 
■       Pupil    of    AIC    and    Howard    Pyle.      In- 
^       structor  Chicago  Academy  of  Fine  Arts. 
Member:   SI  1911;  Salma.C. 

WHITEHURST,  Cameiia,  411  N.  Charles 
St.;  h.  1501  Eutaw  PI.,  Baltimore,  Md.; 
summer,  Roland  Park,  Md. 
P. — Born  Baltimore,  Md.  Pupil  of 
Chase,  Beaux.  Member:  Fellowship 
PAFA;  N.  A.  Women  PS.  Awards: 
First    prize.    All    Southern     Exhibition, 


Charleston,  S.  C,  1921;  hon.  men.,  N.  A. 
Women  PS,  1920,  1921. 

WHITEMAN,  S(amuel)  Edwin,  The  Ter- 
races, Mt.  Washington,  Baltimore,  Md. 
Ldscp.P.,T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Pupil  of  Boulanger,  Constant  and  Le- 
febvre  in  Paris.  Instructor  Johns  Hop- 
kins   Univ.      Member:      Charcoal    C. 

WHITESIDE,  Frank  Reed,  1010  Clinton 
St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer,  Ogun- 
quit.  Me. 

Ldscp.P.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Aug.  20,  1866.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Laurens 
and  Constant  in  Paris.  Member: 
Phila.Sketch  C;  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Phila.   WCC;    Phila.   Alliance. 

WHITFIELD,  Emma  M(orehead),  1800 
Grove  Ave.,  Richmond,  Va. 
P.,  T. — Born  Greensboro,  N.  C,  Dec. 
5,  1874.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Raphael 
Collin  in  Paris.  Member:  Richmond 
AC.  Work:  Portraits  in  State  Li- 
brary, Richmond,  Va.;  Richmond  Col- 
lege, Richmond,  Va. ;  Carnegie  Library, 
Greensboro,  N.  C. ;  State  Capitols,  Ra- 
leigh, N.  C,  and  Jackson,  Miss. 

WHITING,  Almon  C(Iark),  care  of  Sal- 
magundi Club,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

P. — Born  Worcester,  Mass.,  March  5, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Mass. Normal  Art  School 
in  Boston;  Constant,  Laurens  and 
Whistler  in  Paris.  Member:  Paris 
AAA;  Salma.C.  Director,  Toledo  Mu- 
seum, 1901-03.  Work:  "Notre  Dame, 
Paris,"   Museum    of  Art,    Toledo. 

WHITING,     Florence,     117     East     Walnut 
Ave.,   Merchantsville,  N.  J. 
P. — M  ember:    Fellowship    PAPA. 

WHITING,  John  D.,  345  Whitney  Ave.; 
h.  291  Edwards  St.,  New  Haven.  Conn. 
P.,  I.— Born  Ridgefield.  Conn.,  July  20, 
1884.  Pupil  of  John  H.  Niemeyer,  G. 
A.  Thompson,  Lucius  W.  Hitchcock. 
Member:  New  Haven  Paint  and  Clay 
C. 

WHITLOCK.      Frances     J(eannette),      6G6 

West   36th   St.,    Los   A^ngeles,    Calif. 
P.,    C,    T. — Born    Warren,    HI..    Dec.    12, 
1870.      Pupil   of   Dow   and    Charles    Mar- 
tin.    Member:    Calif.    AC. 

WHITLOCK,  (Mary)  Ursula,  Petrus  Stuy- 
vesant  Club,  129  East  10th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  care  of  Cecilia 
Beaux,  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P.,  C,  T.— Born  Great  Barrington, 
Mass.,  Jan.  6,  1860.  Pupil  of  J.  Alden 
Weir;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris.  M  e  m- 
b  e  r  :     N.  A.  Women  PS. 

WHITMER,  Mrs.  Helen  C(ro2ier),  316 
Spahr  St.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P..  T.— Born  Darbv.  Pa..  .Tan.  6.  1870. 
Pupil  of  Breckenridge.  Anshutz.  Henri. 
Thouron.  Vonnoh.  Member:  Pitts- 
burgh AA;   S.  Indp.  A. 

WHITMOOR.    Robert    H(uston),    R.    R.    1, 

Osborne,  Ohio;  h.  726  Superior  Ave., 
Davton,    Ohio. 

P..  E.,  C.  T.— Born  Davton,  O.,  Feb. 
22,  1890.  Pupil  of  H.  M.  Walcott,  James 
R.  Hopkins.  Member:  Dayton  So- 
ciety of  Etchers. 


607 


WHITNEY 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


WIGAND 


WHITNEY,  Beatrice  (Mrs.  Van  Ness),  91 
Francis  St.,  Brookline,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Chelsea.  Mass.,  March  24, 
1888.  Pupil  of  Tarbell,  Benson,  Hale 
and  Pratt.  Awards  :  Julian  A.  Shaw 
prize,  NAD  1914;  silver  medal,  P. -P. 
Exp.,    San    P.,    1915. 

WHITNEY,  Gertrude  V(anderbilt)  (Mrs. 
Harry  Payne  Whitney),  8  West  8th  St., 
and  19  Macdougal  Alley;  h.  871  Fifth 
Avenue,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer, 
Old  Westbury,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
S. — Born  New  York  City.  Pupil  of 
James  E.  Fraser  and  Andrew  O'Connor. 
Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS;  NSS. 
Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  Paris  Salon, 
1913;  NAC  prize,  N.  A.  Women's  PS 
1914;  bronze  medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F., 
1915. 

WHITNEY,  Mrs.  Helen  Reed,  Moylan, 
Rose  Valley,  Pa.;  summer,  Nantucket, 
IVTS-SS 

p. — Born  Brookline,  Mass.,  July  1,  1878. 
Pupil  of  Boston  School  of  Drawing  and 
Painting  under  Hale,  Benson  and  Tar- 
bell. Member:  Plastic  C;  Phila. 
Alliance. 

WHITNEY,  Isabel  L.,  337  Fourth  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  114  Remsen  St., 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Greenwich, 
Conn. 

Mural  P.,  I.,  C. — Born  in  Brooklyn. 
Pupil  of  Arthur  Dow,  Howard  Pyle, 
Haley-Lever.  Member  :  Brooklyn 
SA;   NAC;  Alliance;   S.Indp.A. 

WHITNEY,  Margaret  Q.,  147  Gates  Ave., 
Montclair,   N.   J. 

S.— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Feb.  12,  1900. 
Pupil  of  Charles  Grafly.  Member: 
Philadelphia         Alliance,  Fellowship 

PAPA. 

WHITNEY,  Philip  R..  Moylan,  Rose  Val- 
lev,  Pa. ;  summer,  Nantucket,  Mass. 
P.,  A.,  T.— Born  Council  Bluffs,  la.. 
Dec.  31,  1878.  Pupil  of  Fred  Wagner; 
Dep.  of  Art,  Mass.  Inst,  of  Technology; 
School  of  Fine  Arts,  University  of  Penn- 
sylvania. Member:  Phila.  Sketch 
C. ;  Phila.  AC;  Phila.  Alliance.  Work: 
"Winter,"  in  Pennsylvania  State  College. 

WHITSIT,     Jesse,     411     West     115th     St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born   Decatur,   111.,   May  11,   1874. 

WHITTEKER,    Lilian    E.,    2621    Glenview 
Ave.,   Cincinnati,  O. 
P. — M  ember:   Cincinnati  Woman's  AC. 

WHITTEMORE,  Mrs.  Grace  Connor,  6 
Morse  Ave.,  East  Orange,  N.  J. 
P.,  C,  T. — Born  Columbia  Co.,  Pa., 
Oct.  29,  1876.  Pupil  of  Daingerfield  and 
Snell.  Member:  N.  J.  Soc.  Arts  and 
Crafts. 

WHITTEMORE,  William  J(ohn),  58 
West  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  New  York.  March  26,  1860. 
Pupil  in  New  York  of  Wm.  Hart,  NAD, 
and  ASL.  under  P.eckwith;  Lefebvre  and 
Constant  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA 
1897;  AWCS;  NYWCC:  Am.S.Min.P.; 
Salma.  C.  1890;  Lotos  C.  Awards: 
Silver  medal.  Paris  Exp.,  1889;  bronze 
medal,  Atlanta  Exp.,  1895;  bronze  medal, 
Charleston  Exp.,  1902;  Proctor  prize, 
NAD,  1917. 


WHYTE,  James,  334  West  28th  St.,  New 

York,   N.  Y. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 
WICKHAM,  Julia  M.,  Cutchogue,  L.L  N.Y. 

P.— M  ember:      N.  A.  Women  PS. 
WICKS,     Heppie    En    Earl,    710    Carnegie 

Hall,  156  West  57th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Port. P..   L.,   T.— Born  Le  Roy,   Genessee 

Co.,  N.  Y.     Pupil  of  L.  M.  Wiles,  Irving 

R.  Wiles,  C.  Y.  Turner;  Julian  Academy 

and  Beaux-Arts  in  Paris. 
WICKSON.     Guest,     2723    Bancroft    Way, 

Berkeley,  Calif.    (P.) 

WICKWIRE,   Jere   R.,  130  West  57th   St., 
New   York,    N.    Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

WIECHMANN,   Margaret  H(elen),  Wain- 
scott,  L.  L,  N.  Y. 

S.— Born  New  York,  Sept.  29,  1886.  Pu- 
pil of  A.  Phimister  Proctor,  ASL  and 
NAD  in  New  York.  Specialty,  small 
bronzes  of  animals. 

WIECZOREK,  Max,  311  Hollingsworth 
Bldg.,  Los  Angeles,  Cal. 
P. — Born  Breslau,  Germany,  Nov.  22, 
1863.  Studied  in  Italy  and  Germany; 
pupil  of  Ferdinand  Keller,  Max  Thedy. 
Member:  Calif.  AC;  Laguna  Beach 
AA;  Art  Alliance;  Calif.  WCS. 
Awards:  Silver  medal,  Pan. -Calif. 
Exp.,  San  Diego,  1915;  Harrison  popular 
prize,  Calif.  AC,  1918;  merit  prize,  Ari- 
zona State  Fair,  1920;  merit  prize, 
Laguna  Beach  AA,  1920;  A.  J.  Ackerman 
prize,  Calif.  AC,  1920.  Work:  "Portrait 
of  George  Chaff ey,"  Library  Union  Chaf- 
fey  High  School,  Ontario,  Calif.;  "Head 
of  Christ,"  Keotona  Inst,  of  Theosophy, 
Hollvwood,  Calif.;  "The  Old  Sycamore." 
Engineers'  Club,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
"Foothills,"  Los  Angeles  Athletic  Club. 

WIEDERSEIM,    Mrs.    Grace   Gebbie.     See 
Mrs.   Drayton. 

WIEDHOPF,    Etta    L.    W.,    7    East    101st 

St.,   New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 
WIEGAND,     Gustav     (Adolph),    44    West 

96th  'St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born     Bremen,     Germany,     Oct.     2. 

1870.     Pupil  of  Dresden  Royal  Academy 

under    Eugene    Bracht;    Chase    in    New 

York.    Member:  Salma. C;  Allied  AA. 

Awards:     Bronze    medal,    St.    Louis 

Exp.,     1904;     second     Hallgarten     prize, 

NAD   1905. 

WIESSLER,   William,    Jr.,   419   East  Lib- 
erty  St.,    Cincinnati,   O.    (P.) 

WIGAND,    A.    Albright    (Mrs.    Otto    WI- 

gand),  1947  Broadway,  New  York,  N.  Y. ; 
Woodside  Ave.,  Stapleton,  S.  I.,  N.  Y.. 
P. — M  ember:  N.  A.  Women  PS. 
Awards:  N.  Y.  Woman's  AC  prize, 
1908;  Shaw  memorial  prize,  NAD,  1909; 
Simpson  prize,  N.  Y.  Woman's  AC.  1909; 
NAC  prize,  N.  Y.  Woman's  AC,   1912. 

WIGAND,  Otto  Charles,  1947  BroadAvay, 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Woodside  Ave., 
Stapleton,  S.  L,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  ASL  In 
New  York;  Boulanger  and  Lefebvre  In 
Paris.     Member:    NYWCC. 


608 


WIGGINS 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


WILFORD 


WIGGINS,  Carleton,  108  West  57th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Lyme, 
Conn. 

P. — Born  Turner's,  Orange  Co.,  N.  Y., 
March  4,  1848.  Pupil  of  NAD  and 
George  Inness  in  New  Yorl^.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1890,  NA  1906;  SAA  1887; 
AWCS;  Salma.C.  1898  (pres.);  Lotos  C; 
Brooklyn  AC;  A.Fund  S.;  A.  Aid  S. 
Awards:  Gold  medal,  Prize  Fund 
Exhibition.  New  York,  1894;  bronze 
medal,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901. 
Work:  "A  Holstein  Bull,"  Metropol- 
itan Museum,  New  York;  "The  Plow 
Horse,"  Lotos  Club,  New  York;  "The 
Wanderers."  Hamilton  Club,  Brooklyn, 
N.  Y.;  "October,"  Corcoran  Gallery, 
Washington;  "Evening  after  a  Shower," 
National  Gallery.  Washington;  "Cattle 
In  Pond"  and  "Sheep  and  Landscape." 
Brooklyn  Institute  Museum:  "Lake  and 
Mountains"  and  "Moonrise  on  the 
Lake,"  Art  Institute  of  Chicago;  "Sheep 
and  Landscape,"  Newark  Museum. 

WIGGINS,   Guy  C,  Lyme,   Conn. 

P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Feb.  23,  1883. 
Pupil  of  his  father,  Carleton  Wiggins 
and  of  NAD  in  New  York.  Mem- 
ber: Salma.  C;  Conn.  AFA.;  ANA 
1916;  Lotos  C;  NAC;  Lyme  AA;  Allied 
AA.  Awards  :  Dunham  prize,  Conn. 
AFA,  1916;  Turnbull  prize,  Salma.  C, 
1916;  Harris  bronze  medal  and  prize 
($300),  AIC,  1917;  hon.  mention,  Phila. 
AC,  1917;  Flagg  prize  ($100);  Conn. 
AFA,  1918;  Isidor  prize,  Salma  C. 
1919.  "Wo  rk:  "The  Metropolitan 
Tower,"  Metropolitan  Museum.  New 
York;  "Columbus  Circle — Winter"  and 
"Gloucester  Harbor,"  National  Gallery, 
Washington;  "Berkshire  Hills — June," 
Brooklyn  Institute  Museum;  "Old  North 
Docks."  Hackley  Art  Gallery.  Muskegon. 
Mich.;  "Lightly  Falling  Snow,"  Chicago 
Art  Institute;  "Fifth  Avenue,  Winter." 
Dallas  Art  Association;  "Fifth  Ave.  and 
42nd  St.,"  Los  Angeles  Museum;  "Opal- 
escent Days,"  Lincoln,  Neb.,  AA; 
"Winter  Morning,"  Museum,  Newark, 
N.  J.;  "Through  the  Storm,"  Lotos 
Club;  "Madison  Square."  National  Arts 
Club.  Represented  in  Syracuse  Museum 
and  Reading  Museum. 

WIGGINS,  Sidney  IVl(iller),  601  "West 
138th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  summer, 
New  Haven,  Oswego  Co..  N.  Y. 
P.,  E. — Born  New  Haven,  N.  Y.,  Jan. 
12.  1883.  Pupil  of  John  Sloan,  Robert 
Henri.      Member:     S.   Indp.   A. 

WILCOX,  Lois,  Mountain  Road,  Engle- 
wood.  N.  J.,  summer,  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.  Pupil  of 
Raphael  Collin.  H.  R.  Poore.  F.  V.  Du 
Mond,  Philip  Hale,  Willard  L.  Metcalf. 
Member:     N.A.    Women    PS. 

WILCOX,  Urquhart,  79  Allen  St.,  Buffalo, 
N.    Y. 

P.,  T. — Born  New  Haven,  Conn.,  1876. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  Buffalo.  Awards: 
Fellowship  prize,  Buffalo  SA  1906;  Hen- 
gerer  prize  (first  award),  Buffalo  SA 
1911;  Fellowship  prize,  Buffalo  SA 
1913.  Director  School  of  Fine  Arts. 
Albright  Art  Gallery,  Buffalo.  N.  Y. 
Work:  "A  Song."  Albright  Art 
Gallery,  Buffalo. 


WILDER,   Arthur   B.,  Woodstock,  Vt. 
P.— Born    Poultney,    Vt.,    April    23,    1857. 
Pupil   of   ASL    of   N.    Y.;    Brooklyn    Art 
Guild  School.     Member:  Boston  WCC. 

WILDER,  Ralph  (Everett),  "Record-Her- 
ald," Chicago,  111.;  h.  2131  Tasso  Place, 
Morgan   Park,   111. 

Caricaturist. — Born  Worcester,  Mass., 
Feb.  23,  1875.  Pupil  of  AIC  and  Art 
Academy  of  Chicago.  On  staff  of  "Chi- 
cago  Record-Herald"   since   1903. 

WILDHACK,  Robert  J.,  R.  F.  D.  11,  Box 
179,  Los  Angeles,  Calif.;  h.  La  Crescenta, 
Calif. 

I..  P.— Born  Pekin,  111..  Aug.  27,  1881. 
Pupil  of  Robert  Henri  In  New  York; 
Otto  Stark  in  Indianapolis.  Mem- 
ber: SI  1910;  Salma.C.  Specialty, 
posters. 

WILDIVIAN,  Miss  M.,  1639  Race  St.,  Phil- 
adelphia,   Pa. 
P.— M  ember:  Phlla.  AA. 

WILES,  Gladys  (Lee),  (Mrs.  W.  R.  Jep- 
son),  care  of  I,  R.  Wiles,  130  West  57th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  Cox, 
Chase,  Johansen,  Wiles.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS;  MacD.  C.  Award: 
Medal  of  French  Museum,  N.  A.  Wom- 
en PS,   1919. 

WILES,  Irving  R(amsey),  130  West  57th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Port. P.— Born  Utica,  N.  Y.,  Apr.  8, 
1861.  Pupil  of  his  father,  L.  M.  Wiles; 
of  Chase  and  of  Beckwith  in  New 
York;  Carolus-Duran  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1889,  NA  1897;  SAA  1887; 
AWCS;  Nat.Inst.AL;  Port.P.;  Allied  AA; 
Mural  P.;  Century  Assoc;  Lotos  C;  Paris 
AAA;  NAC.  Awards:  Third  Hall- 
garten  prize,  NAD  1886;  Clarke  prize. 
NAD  1889;  hon.  mention,  Paris  Exp., 
1889;  medal,  Col.  Exp.,  Chicago,  1893; 
Evans  prize,  AWCS  1897;  medal,  Ten- 
nessee Centennial,  Nashville,  1897;  Shaw 
prize,  SAA  1900;  bronze  medal,  Paris 
Exp.,  1900;  gold  medal.  Pan- Am. Exp., 
Buffalo,  1901;  first  Corcoran  prize, 
S. Wash. A.  1901;  gold  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp.,  1904;  silver  medal,  Appalachian 
Exp.,  Knoxville,  1910;  gold  medal, 
Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910;  Proctor  por- 
trait prize,  NAD  1913;  gold  medal, 
P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F..  1915;  Morris  prize, 
Newport  AA,  1917;  Maynard  portrait 
prize,  NAD.  1919.  Work:  Four 
portrait  panels,  Hotel  Martinique,  New 
York;  "Lady  Betty."  City  Art  Mu- 
seum, St.  Louis;  "Ex-Mayor  Schie- 
ren,"  City  Hall,  Brooklyn,  New  York; 
"The  Student."  Corcoran  Gallery, 
Washington;  "The  Brown  Kimono"  and 
"Russian  Tea."  National  Gallery.  Wash- 
ington; "General  Guy  V.  Henry,"  Mili- 
tary Academy,  West  Point,  N.  Y.; 
"L.  M,.  Wiles"  and  "George  A.  Hearn," 
Metropolitan   Museum.    New   York. 

WILEV,  Frederick  J.,  139  West  55th  St., 
New  York.   N.   Y. 

P. — Member:  Century  Assoc;  Lotos 
C.  Award:  Bronze  medal,  St.  Louis 
Exp..   1904. 

WILFORD,  L.  F.,  4115  Forest  Ave.,  Kan- 
sas City.  Mo.   (P.) 


609 


WILHELM 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


WILLIAMS 


WILHELM,  Arthur  L.,  981  Hague  Ave., 
St.  Paul,  Minn. 

P. — Born  Muscatine,  la.,  Dec.  14,  1881. 
Pupil  of  C.  C.  Rosenkranz,  and  AIC. 
Award:  Special  mention,  Minn.  State 
exhibition,  1916. 

WILIMOVSKY,  Charles  A.,  Fine  Arts 
Institute;  2110  East  30th  St.,  Kansas 
City,    Mo. 

P.,  E.— Born  Chicago,  III.,  1885.  Pupil  of 
AIC;  J.  C.  Johansen,  and  Wm.  M. 
Chase.  Member:  Chicago  ASL; 
Alumni  AIC;  Chicago  SE.  Awards: 
Dean  prize  ($50),  Kansas  City  Fine  Arts 
Inst.,  1916;  silver  medal,  Oklahoma 
Artists,  1917;  prize  ($100),  Kansas  City 
Art  Inst.,  1920.  Represented  in  Linds- 
borg,  Kan.,  University;  Kansas  City 
Club. 

WILKE,  William  H(ancock),  1130  Shat- 
tuck  Ave.,  Berkeley,  Calif.;  summer, 
Villa  Grande,  Sonoma  Co.,  Calif. 
I.,  E.,  C. — Born  at  San  Francisco. 
Pupil  of  A.  F.  Mathews;  Laurens  and 
Blanche  in  Paris.  Member:  Calif. 
SE;  Calif.  PM.  Award  :  Gold  medal, 
P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 

WILKINSON,  Edith  L.,  Lovell  Studio, 
Brewater   St.,   Provinctown,    Mass.    (P.) 

WILKINSON,  Tom,  1  Madison  Ave.,  New 
York.   N.   Y.  _        T  A 

P.— M  ember:    Guild  of  Free  Lance  A. 

WILL.  Blanca,  340  Millville  Ave.,  Palo 
Alto,  Calif.;  26  Portsmouth  Terrace, 
Rochester,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Birchlea 
Studio,  Bluehill  Falls,  Me. 
S  I  — Born  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  July  7, 
1881.  Pupil  of  Herbert  Adams,  James 
Eraser  G.  G.  Barnard,  Sonia  Rosental; 
D.  W.  Tryon,  John  Alexander,  Tryon  in 
Karlsruhe;  Tuhrig  in  Dresden. 

WILLARD,  Theodora,  3  Berkeley  Place, 
Cambridge,    Mass.  -    .  i, 

P_Born  Boston,  Mass.  Pupil  of  Ab- 
bott Graves  and  A.  W.  Biihler.  Mem- 
ber:  Copley  S.   1892. 

WILLCOX,  Mrs.  Anita  Parkhurst.  See 
Parkhurst. 

WILLET,  Annie  Lee  (Mrs.  William  Wil- 
let),  2218  St.  James  Place,  Philadelphia; 
summer,  7902  Lincoln  Drive.  St.  Mar- 
tin's, Chestnut  Hill,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
p  c,^  W.— Born  at  Bristol,  Pa.,  Dec. 
15,  1866.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  studied  in 
France  and  England.  Member:  St. 
Dunstan's  Guild,  Boston;  Fellowship 
PAFA-  Phila.  Alliance.  Author  of  articles 
on  stained  glass.  Work  :  Designer  and 
maker  in  collaboration  with  William 
Willet  of  the  Sanctuary  and  aisle  win- 
dows. West  Point  Military  Chapel; 
Great  West  Window,  Post  Graduate 
College,  Princeton;  Mather  Memorial, 
Trinity  Cathedral,  Cleveland;  Guthrie 
Memorial,  St.  John's  Church,  Locust 
Valley,  L.  I.;  St.  Paul's  Cathedral, 
Pittsburgh;  Harrison  Memorial,  Calvary 
Church,  Germantown;  mural  paintings 
in  St.  Alvernia's  Convent,  Pittsburgh; 
Presbyterian  Hospital  Chapel,  Pitts- 
burg; Thaw  Memorial,  Third  Presby- 
terian Church,  Pittsburgh;  Buchanan 
Memorial,  St.  Nathaniel's  Church,  Phila- 
delphia;  all  windows  in   St.   Matthews', 


Conshohocken,  Pa.;  Chamberlaine  Me- 
morial, Fox  Chase,  Philadelphia;  win- 
dow in  Torresdale  P.  E.  Church,  Pa.; 
Harrison  Memorial,  Holy  Trinity,  Phila- 
delphia; Herbert  Hugh  Riddle  Memorial, 
Chicago;  memorials  in  Greenwood 
Cemetery  Chapel,  New  York;  Trinity 
Church,  Syracuse;  St.  Paul's  Church, 
Halifax,   N.   S. 

WILLETT,  Arthur  R(eginald),  489  Fifth 
Ave.,  New  York;  h.  Bronxville,  N.  Y. 
Mural  P.— Born  England,  Aug.  18,  1868. 
Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1897;  Mural 
P.;  A. Aid  S. 

WILLETT,  J.,  324  East  19th  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

P.— Born  Russia,  June  22,  1882.  Stud- 
ied in  Munich  and  Paris,  and  at  the 
Imperial  Academy  of  Art  in  Petrograd. 

WILLIAMS,  Alyn,  230  Madison  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Barrack's  Hill, 
Plimpton,  Sussex,  England;  summer, 
R.  F.  D.  37,  South  Norwalk,  Conn. 
P.,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  in  Wales,  Aug. 
29,  1865.  Pupil  of  Laurens  and  Cour- 
tois  in  Paris.  Member:  R.S.M.P. ; 
Pa.  S.  Min.  P.;  Royal  Cambrian  Acad- 
emy. Work:  Miniatures  of  King 
Edward  VII.  and  Queen  Alexandra  in 
Guildhall,  London,  Art  Gallery. 

WILLIAMS,  Mrs.  Ada  G.,  1365  Chapel  St., 
Cincinnati,  O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

WILLIAMS,  Adele,  1009  West  Ave.,  Rich- 
mond,  Va. 

P.— M  ember:  NYWCC.  Award: 
Prize,  Pittsburgh  AA  1912. 

WILLIAMS,  Adele  Fay,  111  Bliss  St., 
Joliet,   111. 

P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  Art  Assoc. 
Award  :   Prize,   Pittsburgh  AA,   1912. 

WILLIAMS.     Charles     D.,    118    East    28th 
St.,   New  York,   N.   Y. 
I.— M  ember:     SI. 

WILLIAMS,  Charles  Sneed,  408  South 
Michigan  Ave.,  Chicago,  111.;  h.  654 
Fourth  Ave.,  Louisville.  Ky. 
P.— Born  Evansville,  Ind.,  May  24,  1882. 
Studied  in  Louisville,  New  York  and 
London.  Member:  Union  Interna- 
tionale des  Beaux-Arts;  Louisville  AA; 
Wash.  AC.  Award  :  Four-year  resi- 
dent scholarship  at  Allan-Praser  Art 
College,    Scotland,    1902. 

WILLIAMS,  Clara  Elsene  Peck  (Mrs. 
J.  Scott  Williams),  South  Dwight 
Place,  Englewood,  N.  J. 
P.,  I.— M  e  m  b  e  r  :  SI  1912  (assoc); 
NYWCC;  N.  A.  Women  PS;  Fellowship 
PAFA.  Award  :  Watrous  prize,  N.  Y. 
Woman's  AC   1912. 

WILLIAMS,  Dwight,  44  Albany  St.,  Ca- 
zenovia,    N.   Y. 

Ldscp.P.,  T. — Born  Camillus,  Onondaga 
Co.,  N.  Y.,  Apr.  25,  1856.  Pupil  of 
John  C.  Perry.  Member:  Central 
N.Y.Soc.A,  Work:  "Landscape," 
Hamilton  College;  "Landscape,"  Ca- 
zenovia   Public  Library. 


610 


WILLIAMS 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


WILLOUGHBY 


WILLIAMS,  Eleanor  Palmer  (Mrs.  Car- 
roll R.  Williams),  3708  Chestnut  St., 
Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer.  New  Hope, 
Bucks    Co.,    Pa. 

P. — Born  Baltimore,  Md.  Pupil  of 
Maryland  Inst,  in  Baltimore;  George  H. 
Smillle,  B.  West  Clinedlnst  and  Hugh 
Newell  in  New  York;  Margaret  Lippin- 
cott  in  Philadelphia.  Member: 
Phila.  WCC;  Plastic  C;  Phila.  Alliance. 

WILLIAMS,  Florence  Alston,  728  Mont- 
gomery St.;  h.  1925  Octavia  St.,  San 
Francisco;  summer,  Monterey.  Calif. 
P. — Born  'San  Francisco,  Calif.,  Sept. 
30,  1890.  Pupil  of  N.  Y.  ASL  and  PAFA. 
Member:   San  F.   A  A. 

WILLIAMS.  FCrederick)  Ballard,  27  West 
67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Glen 
Ridge,    N.   J. 

P.— Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Oct.  21,  1871. 
Pupil  of  Cooper  Union  and  NAD  in  New 
York.  Member:  ANA  1907,  NA 
1909;  NYWCC;  Lotos  C;  Salma.C.  1898; 
NAC.  Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  Pan.- 
Amer.  Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  Inness  prize, 
Salma.  C,  1907;  Isidor  gold  medal,  NAD. 
1909.  Work:  "A  Glade  by  the  Sea" 
and  "Conway  Hills,"  National  Gallery. 
Washington;  "Happy  Valley"  and 
•'L' Allegro,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New 
York;  "Vivacetto,"  Albright  Art  Gal- 
lery, Buffalo;  "Chant  d' Amour,"  Brook- 
lyn Institute  Museum;  "Old  Viaduct  at 
Little  Falls,  N.  J."  and  "Sea  Echoes," 
Art  Museum,  Montclair,  N.  J.;  "Grand 
Canyon,"  Hackley  Art  Gallery,  Muske- 
gon. Mich.;  "Spring,"  Brooklyn  Institute 
Museum;  "A  Glimpse  of  the  Sea,"  City- 
Art  Museum,  St.  Louis;  represented  in 
collections  of  Dallas  Art  Association; 
Lotos  Club,  New  York;  National  Arts 
Club.  New  York;  Quinnipiack  Club, 
New  Haven. 

WILLIAMS,  Gaar,  The  Indianapolis 
News,   Indianapolis,  Ind.    (I.) 

WILLIAMS,  George  Alfred,  Kennebunk- 
port,   Me. 

P.— Born  Newark,  N.  J.,  July  8,  1875. 
Studied  under  Chase  and  Cox.  Award: 
Silver  medal,  P.-P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work:  "The  Drama  of  Life— The 
Marginal  Way,"  Art  Institute  of  Chi- 
cago; 6  decorative  paintings,  "Tristan 
and  Isolde,"  in  Newark  Museum. 

WILLIAMS,    Henrietta,   17   Bedford   Ave., 
Grafton,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

WILLIAMS,  John  A(lonzo),  51  West  10th 
St.;  h.  39  West  67th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I. — Born  Sheboyan,  Wis.,  March  23, 
1869.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  and  Met- 
ropolitan Museum  School.  Member: 
SI  1910;   Salma.C.;  NAC. 

WILLIAMS,  J(ohn)  Scott,  8  East  66th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Rose- 
field  Gardens,  R.  F.  D.  No.  2,  Plainfield, 
N.    J. 

P.,  I.,  E.,  C. — Born  Liverpool,  Eng., 
Aug.  18,  1877.  Pupil  of  AIC.  Mem- 
ber: AWCS;  NYWCC;  Salma.  C; 
SI;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.;  Phila.  Sketch  C; 
Guild  of  Free  Lance  A.;  Alumni  Asso. 
AIC.       Awards  :      Shaw     black     and 


white  prize,  Salma.  C,  1912,  Vezin 
prize,  Salma.  C,  1914;  Isidor  prize, 
Salma.  C,  1919.  Represented  by  mural 
and  glass  work  in  Bush  Terminal  Sales 
Bldg.,    New    York,    N.    Y. 

WILLIAMS,    Kate    A.,    1264    Boston    Rd., 

New  York,   N.   Y. 

P. — M  ember:     N.  A.  Women  PS. 
WILLIAMS,      May,      5722      Baum      Blvd., 

Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

WILLIAMS,  Reed,  1111  Central  Bldg.,  Los 

Angeles,   Calif. 

E. — M  ember:       Los      Angeles      Print 

Makers. 

WILLIAMS,  Walter  Reid,  3158  North  Hal- 

sted  St..   Chicago,   111. 

S. — Born    Indianapolis,    Ind.,    Nov.    23, 

1885.     Pupil   of   Charles   Mulligan,    Bela 

Pratt;    Paul    Bartlett    and    Merci6    in 

Paris. 
WILLIAMS,   Mrs..  W.  N.,  52  West  Maiden 

St.,   Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

WILLIAMSON,  Ada  C,  care  of  Art  Al- 
liance, 18th  and  Walnut  Sts.,  Philadel- 
phia, Pa. 

P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA; 
Plastic  C.  Award  Shillard- Smith 
gold  medal,  Plastic  C.  1913. 

WILLIAMSON,  Mrs.  A.  W.,  1936  Madison 
Rd.,  E.,  Cincinnati,  O. 
P. — M  ember:      Cincinnati      Woman's 
AC. 

WILLIAMSON,    J.    Maynard,    Jr.,    h.    514 

So.   Linden  Ave.,   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P.,    I.— Born    Pittsburgh,    Pa.,    June    7, 
1892.     Pupil  of  F.  V.  Du  Mond.    Mem- 
ber: Pittsburgh  AA.    Award  :  Prize, 
Pittsburgh  AA  1911. 

WILLIAMSON,     Margaret    T.,    514    South 
Linden,    St.,   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

WILLIAMSON,  Shirley  (Mrs.  Edward 
Lincoln  Williamson),  425  Treehaven 
Apts.,  Berkeley,  Calif.;  Carmel,  Calif. 
P. — Born  New  York.  Pupil  of  Arthur 
Dow,  ASL  in  New  York;  Constant  and 
Rodin  in  Paris.  Member:  N.  A. 
Women  PS. 

WILLING,  John  Thomson,  171  Madison 
Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  5909  Wayne 
Ave.,  Germantown,  Pa.;  summer,  Henry- 
ville,  Munroe  Co.,  Pa. 
P.,  C,  W.,  L.— Born  Toronto,  Canada, 
Aug.  5,  1860.  Pupil  of  Ontario  School 
of  Art.  Member:  Am.  Inst,  of 
Graphic  A.;  Royal  Canadian  Academy 
(assoc);  Art  Directors'  C;  SI.  Editor, 
Motion  Play  Magazine. 

WILLIS,  Albert  Paul,  4703  Springfield 
Ave.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  summer,  Bailey 
Island,  Casco  Bay,  Me. 
Ldscp.P.,  T.— Born  Philadelphia,  Nov. 
15,  1867.  Pupil  of  Frank  V.  Du  Mond. 
Member:  Phila.WCC;  Phila.Sketch  C. 

WILLOUGHBY,  Alice   Estelle,  The  Rock- 
ingham, Washington,  D.   C. 
P.— Born  Groton,  N.  Y.     Pupil  of  Wash- 
ington   Art    Lg. ;    Corcoran    Art    School. 
Member:   Wash.   WCC;   Wash.   AC. 


611 


WILLSON 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


WIN  SLOW 


WILLSON,  Martha  B(uttrick)  (Mrs. 
Howard  D.  Day),  88  Congdon  St.,  Provi- 
dence,  R.   I. 

Min.  P. — Born  Providence,  R.  I.,  Aug. 
16,  1885.  Pupil  of  Lucia  Fairchild  Ful- 
ler.    Member:   Providence  AC. 

WILMES.    Frank,    1560    Elm    St.,    Cincin- 
nati,   O. 
P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  AC  (sect.). 

WILMOT,  Alta  E.,  939  Eighth  Ave.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:      SPNY. 

WILSON,    Beatrice    Hope,   973   Park  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

WILSON,    Charles,    2310    Beaumont   Ave., 
New  York,   N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

WILSON,    Claggett,    111    East    62nd    St., 

New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer,  Squirrel 
Island,   Me. 

P. — Born    Washington,    D.    C,  Aug.    3, 

1887.      Pupil   of   F.    Luis   Mora,  Richard 

Miller,  and  Laurens  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber:    S.Indp.A. 

WILSON,  Edward  A.,  31  West  67th  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  524  Watchung  Rd., 
Bound  Brook,  N.  J. 

I. — Born  Glasgow,  Scotland,  Mar.  4, 
1886.  Studied  AIC,  and  with  Howard 
Pyle.  Member:  SL  1912;  Salma.  C; 
Guild  of  Free  Lance  Artists;  Art  Di- 
rectors' Club. 

WILSON,  Frederick,  Briarcliff  Manor. 
Westchester  Co.,  N.  Y.;  and  35  West 
82nd  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  C— Born  Great  Britain,  Nov.  3, 
1858.  Pupil  of  Charles  Wilson  in  Eng- 
land. Member:  N.Y.Arch.Lg.  1911;  AC 
Phila.  Award:  Gold  medal,  Paris,  1900. 
Work:  Mural  painting  and  glass, 
Cuyahoga  County  Court  House,  Cleve- 
land, O.;  "Christ  Reigning  from  Cross," 
reredos  St.  Clement's  Church,  Phila- 
delphia; "Memorial  to  Chinese  Gor- 
don," Manchester  Cathedral,  England; 
cartoons  for  "Wade  Memorial,"  mosaic, 
Cleveland,  O.;  cartoons  for  "Morgan 
Dix  Memorial,"  Staten  Island,  N.  Y.; 
"Farragut  Memorial,"  Annapolis  Naval 
Academy,    etc. 

WILSON,     Mrs.     Grace,     5857     Ellsworth 
Ave.,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

WILSON,  Helen,  1928  E  Street,  Lincoln, 
Neb. 

P.,  C,  T.— Born  Lincoln,  Neb..  Oct.  26, 
1884.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Charles  W.  Haw- 
thorne.    Member:    Chicago   ASL. 

WILSON,  Henrietta.  Art  Academy,  Cin- 
cinnati, O. ;  h.  3912  Spencer  Ave.,  Nor- 
wood, O. 

P.,  T. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.  Pupil  of 
Cincinnati  Art  Academy.  Member: 
Cincinnati  Woman's  AC.  Instructor, 
Cincinnati  Art  Academy. 

WILSON,  Kate,  3912  Spencer  Ave.,  Nor- 
wood.  O. 

P. — Born  Cincinnati.  O.  Pupil  of  Louis 
Rebisso  at  Cincinnati  Art  Academy. 
M  e  m  h  e  r  ;   Cincinnati  Woman's  AC. 


WILSON,  Mrs.  Lucy  Adams,  Conserva- 
tory of  Art  and  Music;  h.  219  Eighth 
St.,   Miami,   Fla. 

P.— Bi?rn  Warren,  O.,  in  1855.  Pupil 
of  Herron  Art  Institute,  Indianapolis; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.;  William  Forsyth  and  T. 
C.  Steele.  Member:  Chicago  WCC. 
Represented  in  Herron  Art  Inst.;  Con- 
servatory of  Art  and  Music,  Miami,  Fla. 

WILSON,  Mrs.  Rose  Cecil  O'Neil,  Bonne- 
brook,  Day  P.  O.,  Tanney  Co.,  Mo.; 
and  62  Washington  Sq.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

I. — Born  Wilkes -Barre,  Pa.  Member: 
Soc.des  Beaux-Arts  (assoc),  Paris;  SI 
1912   (assoc). 

WILSON,  Sarah  C,  Quay  Sq.,  Beaver,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA. 

WILSON,  Vaux,  143  22nd  St.,  Elmhurst, 
L.    I.,    N.    Y.    (I.) 

WINCH  ELL,  Ward,  219  Union  Oil  Bldg., 
Los  Angeles,   Cal. 
P. — M  ember:    Cal.    AC. 

WINEBRENNER,    Harry,  Venice,   Cahf. 
P.— Member:   Calif.  AC. 

WING,  Anna  Belle.     See  Mrs.  Kindliind. 

WINGERT,  Edward  Oswald,  Oak  Lane, 
Philadelphia,   Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Feb.  29,  1864. 
Pupil  of  Hovenden,  Anshiitz  and  Porter 
in  Philadelphia.  Member:  Fellow- 
ship PAFA. 

WINKLER,  John  W.,  728  Pine  St.,  San 
Francisco,    Calif. 

P.,  E.— Member:  Calif.  PM. ;  Chi- 
cago SE.  Awards  :  Logan  prize, 
Chicago  SE,  1918;  purchase  prize,  Calif. 
SE,  1919.  Work  in:  Chicago  Art 
Institute. 

WINN,  James  H(erbert),  Fine  Arts  Bldg., 
410  South  Michigan  Ave.;  h.  9562  Pros- 
pect Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  S.,  C,  W.,  T. — Born  Newburyport, 
Mass.,  Sept.  10,  1866.  Pupil  of  AIC. 
Member  :  Chicago  SA;  Chicago  WCC; 
Cliff  Dwellers  C;  Alumni  AIC. 
Awards  :  Arthur  Heun  prize,  AIC, 
1910;  first  prize  and  gold  medal.  Woman's 
Convention  Exhibition,  Knoxville,  Tenn., 
1913.  Instructor,  Jewelry  and  Metal 
Work,   Art  Inst.,   Chicago. 

WINNER,  Margaret  F.,  1619  Chestnut  St., 
Philadelphia,   Pa. 

P.,  I.,  T. — Born  Philadelphia.  Pupil  of 
PAFA  and  Howard  Pyle.  Member: 
Plastic  C. 

WINSLOW,  Earle  B.,  21  Bennett  Ave., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  North  ville,  Mich.,  Feb.  21, 
1884.  Pupil  of  Detroit  Fine  Arts  School; 
ASL  of  N.Y.     Member:     Salma.   C. 

WINSLOW,  Mrs.  Eleanor  C.  A.,  1190 
Madison  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I. — Born  Norwich,  Conn.,  May,  1877. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.Y.;  studied  in  Paris. 
Award  :  Third  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD 
1907.  Member:  N.  A.  Women  PS; 
Conn.   AFA;   Norwich  AA, 


612 


WIN  SLOW 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


WOLFE 


WINSLOW,    Henry,   10   Fitzroy  St..   Lon- 
don.  W..   England. 

P.,  E.,  Engr. — Born  Boston,  Mass.,  1874. 
Pupil  of  Whistler  in  Paris.     Member: 
Chicago  SE:  AI  Graphic  A.    Work    in: 
British    Museum,    London;    Bibliotheque 
Nationale.     Paris:     Boston    Museum     of 
Fine  Arts;  New  York  Public  Library. 
WINSTANLEY,    John    Breyfogle,    care    of 
Dentists'     Supply    Co.,     220    West     42nd 
St.,    New    York,    N.    Y. 
P.,   W..    I. — Born   Louisville,   Kv.      Pupil 
of  PAFA  .  Member:     NYWCC;   Fel- 
lowship     PAFA.        Award  :       Bronze 
medal,   P. -P.   Exp.,    San  F.,   1915. 
WINTER,   Alice    Beach    (Mrs.    Charles   A. 
Winter).    53    East    59th    St..    New   York, 
N.   Y. :   summer,   135   Mt.  Pleasant  Ave., 
East  Gloucester,  Mass. 
P..  S..  I. — Born  Green  Ridge,  Mo.,  March 
22,    1877.     Pupil   of   St.    Louis   School   of 
Fine   Arts   and   ASL   of  N.   Y.     Mem- 
ber:     N.    A.   Women   PS;    S.   Indp.   A. 
Specialty.    childhnAt^    subjects. 
WINTER,   Charles   Arilan),    53    East    59th 
St.,   New  York.   N.  Y. 

P.,  I.— Born  Cincinnati,  O..  Oct.  26. 
1869.  Pupil  of  Cincinnati  Art  Academy 
under  Noble  and  Nowottny;  Julian 
Academy  in  Paris  under  Bouguereau 
and        Ferrier.  Award:        Foreign 

scholarship  from  Cincinnati  Art  Acad- 
emy, 1894. 
WINTER,  Ezra  (Augustus),  7  MacDougal 
Alley,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
P..  I. — Born  Manistee,  Mich.,  March  10, 
1886.  Pupil  of  Chicago  Academy  of 
Fine  Arts;  American  Academy  in  Rome. 
Member:  Palette  and  Chisel  C, 
Chicago;  Mural  P.;  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg. ; 
American  Academy  at  Rome  Scholar- 
ship, 1911-14.  Work:  Decorations  in 
offices  of  Guaranty  Trust  Co.,  New 
York;  Great  Hall  and  Vestibule,  (IJunard 
Bldg.,  New  York. 
WINTER.  Milo  (Kendall),  621  Sheridan 
Road,   Evanston,   111. 

I. — Born  Princeton,  111..  Aug.  7.  1888. 
Pupil  of  AIC.  Member:  AWCS:  Cliff 
Dwellers,  Chicago.  Illustrated  "Nights 
with  Uncle  Remus."  "Aesop's  Fables." 
"Alice  in  Wonderland,"  "Billy  Pop- 
Gim."  etc. 
WINTER,    Raymond,   Fairhaven,    Pa. 

P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 
WINTRINGHAM,    Frances    M.,    6    Charles 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

P. — Born  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  Mar.  15,  1884. 
Pupil  of  George  Bellows,  Kenneth  Hayes 
Miller,  Robert  Henri  and  Charles  Haw- 
thorne. Member:  S. Indp. A.;  Lg. 
of  N.Y.A. 

WIRE,    Melville   T.,    409   Center   St.,    Ore- 
gon City,  Ore. 
P.— Born    Austin,    111.,    Sept.    24,    1877. 

WIRTH.  Anna  M(aria).  518  North  Lake 
Ave.,  Pasadena,  Calif.;  h.  248  Barron 
Ave..    Johnstown.    Pa. 

I..  W. — Born  Johnstown.  Pa.,  Nov.  12. 
1868.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Phila.  School  of 
Design  for  Women.  Illustrated  "Pro- 
gressive Pennsvlvania,"  by  .1.  M.  Swank. 
Author  and  illustrator  of  "The  King's 
Jester,'     etc. 


WIRTZ,   William,  2129   St.   Paul  St.,   Bal- 
timore,   Md. 
P. — M  ember:   Charcoal  C. 

WISE,  Louise  Waterman  (Mrs.  Stephen 
Wise).  23  West  90th  St..  New  York, 
N.  Y. ;  summer.  Lake  Placid,  N.  Y. 
Port.P.,  W.— Born  New  York.  Pupil  of 
Kenyon  Cox,  Robert  Henri,  George 
Bellows.  M  e  m  b  e  r  :  N.  A.  Women 
PS;   S.   Indp.  A. 

WISE.    William    G.,    3431    North    21st    St., 
Philndelphia.   Pa. 
P.— Member:    Fellowship   PAFA. 

WITHENBURG,     Mrs.     Virginia    Thomas, 
Glendale,   O. 

P.— M  ember:      Cincinnati      Woman's 
AC. 

WITTMARK,    Edgar   F.,   106  W.    55th   St., 
New   York,    N.    Y.    (I.) 

WITTIVIER,   Henry,  407  Park  Bldg.,  Pitts- 
burgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

WOELFLE,  Arthur  W.,  261  Madison  Ave., 
Flushing,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Trenton,  N.  J.,  Dec.  17,  1873. 
Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  under  Mowbray, 
Beckwith,  Cox  and  Twachtman;  NAD 
under  Will  Low  and  C.  Y.  Turner;  Carl 
Marr  and  Diez  in  Munich.  Member: 
ASL  of  N.  Y.;  SalmaC,  1902.  Awards: 
Hon.  mention,  Munich;  scholarship, 
Brooklyn  Institute.  Work:  Murals  in 
Court  House  at  Youngstown,  O.;  Court 
House  of  Coshocton,  O.;  also  ten  por- 
traits of  judges  in  the  Court  House  at 
Youngstown,   O. 

WOLCOTT,  Frank,  1377  East  57th  St., 
Chicago,    111. 

P.,  S.,  E.,  C— Born  McLeansboro,  111. 
Pupil  of  AIC,  Lawton  Parker.  Mem- 
ber:    Chicago   SA. 

WOLCOTT,  Katherine,  5222  Blackstone 
Ave..   Chicago,  111. 

Min.  P.— Born  Chicago,  1880.  Pupil  of 
AIC;  Virginia  Reynolds;  Lawton  Parker; 
H.  B.  Snell.  Member:  Chicago  SA; 
Alumni  AIC;  Chicago  S.Min.P. ;  Chicago 
AC. 

WOLEVER,  Adeleine,  Fenway  Studios, 
30  Ipswich  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 
P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Belleville,  Ont..  Can- 
ada, April  8,  1886.  Pupil  of  Tarbell. 
Benson,  Hale,  Paxton,  Woodbury  and 
Noyes.  Work  :  Theatre  drawings  in 
the  Boston  Transcript. 

WOLF,  Eva  M.  Nagel  (Mrs.  Addison 
Wolf),  129  North  20th  St..  Philadelphia, 
Pa. 

P..  L,  C— Born  Chicago,  111.,  Oct.  10, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Maryland  Inst,  in  Balti- 
more;   PAFA. 

WOLF,    Fay    Miller,    Box   765,    Woodmere, 
L.  L,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S. Indp.  A. 

WOLF,    Max.   93   Second   Ave.;   h.    86   Sec- 
ond Ave..   New   York,    N.   Y. 
P..    T. — Born    Vienna,    Austria,    Oct.    22, 
1885.      Pupil   of   Veith,    Schauer,    Heller. 

WOLFE,  Ada  A.,  2007  Willow  Ave..  N.. 
MinTieapolis.  Minn. 

P.— Born  Oakland.  Cal.  Pupil  of  Minne- 
anolis  School  of  Fine  Arts;  NY.  School 
of  Art  under  Chase.     A  av  a  r  d  s  :    First 


613 


WOLFE 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


WOODBURY 


prize,  Minn.  State  Art  Soc,  1914;  hon. 
mentions,  Minn.  State  Art  Soc.  In- 
structor, Minneapolis  School  of  Fine 
Arts. 

WOLFE,  George  E.,  334  West  56th  St., 
New  York,   N.  Y.    (I.) 

WOLFF,  Gustave,  508  West  162d  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  in  Germany,  March  28,  1863. 
Came  to  America  when  three  years  old. 
Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts 
under  Paul  Cornoyer;  studied  in  Eu- 
rope. Member:  St.  Louis  AG;  St. 
Louis  2x4  Soc.  Awards  :  Silver 
medal,  Portland,  Ore.,  1905;  first  Dolph 
prize,  Competitive  Ex.,  St.  Louis,  1906. 
Work:  "The  Brook,"  City  Art  Mu- 
seum,  St.  Louis. 

WOLFF,  Otto,  245  West  North  Ave., 
Chicago,    111. 

P.,  I.,  C,  W.,  L.,  T.— Born  Cologne, 
Germany,  July  30,  1858.  Studied  in 
Paris.  Member:  Chicago  SA;  Chi- 
caero  AC.  Award:  Hon.  mention, 
Paris  Salon,  1888. 

WOLFSON,     William,     5714     Melvin     St., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

WOLINSKI,  Joseph,  32  Moore  Park  Road, 
Sydney,  Australia. 

P.— Born  July  13,  1873.  Pupil  of  Royal 
Art  Society  of  New  South  Wales;  Cola- 
rossi  in  Paris.  Member:  Royal  Art 
Society,  New  South  Wales.  Work: 
"After  Life's  Fitful  Fever  He  Sleeps 
Well,"  "An  Interior,"  two  head  studies 
in  charcoal  and  "Summer"  in  National 
Art   Gallery   of   New    South   Wales. 

WOLKIN,    Harry,    837    Estella    St.,    Pitts- 
burgh. Pa. 
P. — M  ember  :    Pittsburgh   AA. 

WOLTZ,    George    W.,    61    West    37th    St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 
P. — M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

WOMRATH,  A(ndrew)  K(ay),  Menton, 
Alpes-Maritimes,  France. 
P.,  I.,  D. — Born  Frankford,  Philadelphia. 
Pa..  Oct.  25.  1869.  Pupil  of  ASL  in  New 
York  under  Twachtman  and  J.  Alden 
Weir;  Grasset  and  Merson  in  Paris; 
Westminster  School  of  Art,  London. 
Member:  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg.,  1902; 
NAC. 

WOOD,  E(ila)  Miriam,  7014  St.  Charles 
Ave.,  New  Orleans,  La.;  summer.  Box 
176,   Covington,   La. 

P. — Born  Birmingham,  Ala.,  Feb.  18, 
1888.  Pupil  of  Ellsworth  Woodward, 
Henry  McCarter,  Hawthorne,  Chase, 
Newcomb  School  of  Art,  New  Orleans; 
PAFA.  Member:  N.O.  AG:  N.O. 
Arts  and  Crafts  C.  Awards:  Second 
prize,  "Mississippi  AA,  Jackson.  Work: 
"The  Fisherman's  Dory,"  Mississippi  Art 
Assoc. 

WOOD,  Franklin  T.,  Rutland,  Mass.;  486 
Bovlston  St..  Boston.  Mass. 
E.  —  Member:  Chicago  S  B. 
Award:  Bronze  medal,  P. -P.Exp., 
San  F..  1915.  Represented  in  Chicago 
Art  Institute. 


WOOD,  Grant,  Kenwood  Park,  la. 
P.,  S. — Born  Anamosa,  la.,  Feb.  13, 
1892.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Minneapolis  Han- 
dicraft School  of  Design.  Work:  "De- 
mocracy," mural  painting,  Harrison 
School,  Cedar  Rapids;  life  membership 
medal,  bas-relief,  for  Cedar  Rapids  Art 
Assoc. ;  decoration  in  National  Masonic 
Research   Bldg.,   Anamosa,    Iowa. 

WOOD,  Jessie  Porter,  2005  Columbia  Rd., 
Washington,    D.   C. 

P.,  I.,  C,  T.— Born  Syracuse,  N.  Y., 
Feb.  27,  1863.  Pupil  of  J.  Carrol  Beck- 
with,  George  de  Forest  Brush,  Walter 
Shirlaw,   J.   Ward   Stimson,    and   others. 

WOOD,  Katheryn  Leone,  6  Van  Nest  PI., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P.,  W. — Born  Kalamazoo,  Mich.,  July 
25,  1885.  Pupil  of  Frederick  Freer, 
Lawton  Parker  and  others.  Work: 
Miniature  of  Mrs.  J.  C.  Burrows,  Con- 
tinental Memorial  Hall,  Washington, 
D.     C. 

WOOD,  M.   Louise.     See  Mrs.  Wright. 

WOOD,  Margaret.     See  White,  Mrs.  V.  G. 

WOOD,    Mary    Earl,   404  Fenway   Studios, 
30   Ipswich    St.,    Boston,    Mass. 
P. — Born    Lowell,    Mass.      Pupil    Boston 
Museum    School    under   Tarbell,    Benson 
and  DeCamp.    Member:  Copley  S. 

WOOD,  Virginia  Margraves,  58  West  57th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h.  Ivy  Depot, 
Albemarle,  Va. 

P.,  E.,  T.— Born  near  St.  Louis,  Mo. 
Pupil  of  Chase,  Du  Mond,  Hawthorne, 
and  studied  abroad.  Member:  N.  A. 
"Women  PS.  Work  :  Mural  decora- 
tions in  Broadway  Cafe;  illustrated 
several  books. 

WOOD,  Waddy  B.,  816  Connecticut  Ave., 
N.  W.,   Washington,   D.  C.     (P.,  A.) 

WOOD,  William  S.,  1727  Land  Title  Bldg., 
Philadelphia,    Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Fellowship  PAFA. 

WOODBURY,  Charles  H(erbert),  16  Ar- 
lington St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  and  Ogun- 
quit.   Me. 

Marine  P. — Born  Lynn,  Mass.,  July  14, 
1864.  Pupil  of  Mass.Inst.of  Technology 
in  Boston;  Julian  Academy  in  Paris 
under  Boulanger  and  Lefebvre.  Mem- 
ber: SAA  1899;  ANA  1906,  NA  1907; 
AWCS;  Boston  WCC  (pres.);  NYWCC; 
St.  Botolph  C;  Copley  S.  1900;  Bos- 
ton GA.  Awards:  Third  prize,  Bos- 
ton AC;  gold  medal,  Atlanta  Exp., 
1895;  second  prize,  Tennessee  Centen- 
nial, Nashville,  1897;  two  medals.  Me- 
chanics' Fair,  Boston;  bronze  medal, 
Paris  Exp.,  1900;  bronze  medal,  Pan- 
Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901;  first  prize, 
Worcester  Museum,  1903;  silver  medal, 
St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  hon.  mention, 
C.I.Pittsburgh,  1905;  second  prize,  Wor- 
cester, 1907;  silver  medal,  Buenos  Aires 
Exp..  1910:  Evans  prize,  AWCS  1911; 
second  W.  A.  Clark  prize  ($1,500)  and 
Corcoran  silver  medal,  1914;  gold  medal 
for  oil  painting  and  medal  of  honor  for 
water  colors.  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work:  "The  Clilf."  Carnegie  Insti- 
tute, Pittsburgh;  "The  Steamer,"  "San- 
gus  Marsh,"  "Fishing  Nets"  and  "The 
Green   Wave,"    Rhode   Island   School   of 


614 


WOODBURY 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


WOOLF 


Design,  Providence;  "Off  the  Florida 
Coast,"  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Boston; 
"The  North  Atlantic,"  Worcester  Mu- 
seum; "At  Sea,"  Herron  Art  Institute, 
Indianapolis:  "Porcoises,"  and  "The 
Rainbow."  City  Art  Museum.  'St.  Louis. 

WOODBURY,     J.     C,     155     Medway     St., 
Providence,  R.  I. 
P. — Member:   Providence  WCC. 

WOODMAN,  Florence,  4201  South  Michi- 
gan Ave.,   Chicago,  III.    (P.) 

WOODROFFE,    Eleanore    G.,    9    Jane    St., 
New  York.   N.  Y. 
P.— Member:    N.    A.   Women   PS. 

WOODRUFF,  Corice  (Mrs.  Henry  S. 
Woodruff),  2017  Pleasant  Ave.,  Minne- 
apolis, Minn. 

S.,  P. — Born  Ansonia,  Conn.,  Dec.  26, 
1878.  Pupil  of  Minneapolis  School  of 
Fine  Arts  under  Robert  Koehler;  Kunte 
Akerberg;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
Artists  Guild,  Chicago;  Attic  C, 
Minneapolis.  Awards  :  First  prize  for 
sculpture,  Minnesota  State  Art  Society, 
second  prize,  1914;  hon.  mention  for 
sculpture,  St.  Paul  Institute,  1916. 
Specialty,  small  sculpture. 

WOODRUFF,  Julia  S.,  1703  15th  Ave., 
Seattle,   Wash.    (P.) 

WOODS.    Alice.      See   Mrs.    Paul   Ullman. 

WOODS,  Lilla  Sorrenson  (Mrs.  E.  B. 
Woods),  26  Ocean  Ridge,  Hanover,  N.  H. 
P.— Born  Portage,  Wis.,  April  27,  1872. 
Pupil  of  Lydia  Ely  in  Kilburn,  Wis.; 
AIC;  summer  class  at  Delavan,  Wis.; 
Miss  Hawley  at  Rijsvard  in  Holland; 
Laurens  in  Paris;  Corcoran  School  of 
Art  in  Washington;  Helen  Todd  Ham- 
mon  in  Boston.  Member:  Minne- 
sota   State    Art    Society. 

WOODSIDE,  Annie  J.,  5146  Liberty  Ave., 
Pittsburgh.  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  AA. 

WOODSON,  Marie  L.,  832  So.  Pearl  St., 
Denver,  Colo. 

P..  C,  T.— Born  Selma,  Ala.,  'Sept.  9, 
1875.  Pupil  of  AIC;  Ochtman;  N.  Y. 
School  of  Fine  and  Applied  Art.  Mem- 
ber: Alumni  Asso.  AIC;  Denver  AA; 
Art  Commission,  City  and  County  of 
Denver.  Award:  Prize  for  "Wel- 
come Arch"  for  Denver.  Work: 
Mural  decoration  in  Denver  Public  Li- 
brary; illustrated  "Tunes  for  Tiny 
Tots,"  by  Antoinette  Freneauff.  Di- 
rector of  Art  Education,  Denver  Public 
Schools. 

WOODWARD,  Miss  Dewing,  Blue  Dome 
Fellowship,  P.  O.  Box  1232,  Miami.  P'la. 
P.,  T. — Born  Williamsport,  Pa.  Pupil 
of  PAFA;  Julian  and  Colarossi  Acad- 
emies in  Paris.  Awards  :  Silver 
medal,  Marseilles  Exp.,  1903;  diplome 
d'honneur,  City  of  Paris,  1904;  gold 
medal,    Nantes,    1904. 

WOODWARD,  Ellsworth,  Newcomb  Col- 
lege; 1316  Pine  St.,  New  Orleans,  La, 
P.,  I.,  T.,  C— Born  Bristol  Co.,  Mass., 
July  14,  1861.  Pupil  of  R.I.School  of 
Design  in  Providence;  Carl  Marr  In 
Munich.  Member:  Art  Assoc. of  New 
Orleans;    Boston    SAC;     La.    State    Art 


Teachers'  Assoc.  Award:  Gold 
medal.  Art  Association  of  New  Orleans. 
Director  of  Art  Education,  Newcomb 
College,  since  1890.  Represented  in 
Delgado  Museum  of  Art,   New  Orleans. 

WOODWARD,    J.    Douglas,    199    Weyman 
Ave.,   New  Rochelle,   N.   Y. 
I.— M  ember:     SI. 

WOODWARD,  Loila  Grace,  National  Park 
Seminary,  Forest  Glen,  Md. 
P.,  T.— Born  Coldwater.  Mich.,  May  2, 
1858.  Studied  in  Boston,  Chicago,  Eng- 
land, Holland,  Rome  and  Venice,  and 
under  Du  Mond,  Merson,  Collin  and 
Whistler  in  Paris.  Member:  Minne- 
apolis Soc.  of  Fine  Arts. 

WOODWARD,  Mabel  May,  36  Belvedere 
Blvd.,  Providence,  R.  I. 
P. — Born  Providence,  R.  I.,  Sept.  28, 
1877.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Du  Mond  and 
Cox  in  New  York.  Member:  Provi- 
dence AC;  Providence  WCC;  Province- 
town  AA.  Instructor.  Rhode  Island 
School  of  Design,  Providence. 

WOODWARD,  Robert  Strong,  Shelburne 
Falls,   Mass. 

P. — ^Born  Northampton,  Mass.,  May  11, 
1885.  Mostly  self  taught.  Member: 
Salma.  C;  Boston  AC.  Awards: 
First  Hallgarten  prize,  NAD,  1919;  hon. 
mention,    Concord   AA,    1920. 

WOODWARD,  Stanley  W(ingate),  198 
Dartmouth  St.,  Boston,  Mass.;  h.  48 
Abbott  Rd.,  Wellesley  Hills,  Mass. 
P.,  I.,  E.— Born  Maiden,  Mass.,  Dec.  11, 
1890.  Pupil  of  Eric  Pape,  Frank  Ben- 
son, Philip  Hale,  Joseph  Pearson,  Chas. 
Woodbury  and  Edwin  Blashflield. 
Member:  Chicago  SE;  Concord  AA; 
Brooklyn  SE;  Copley  S.;  Calif.  P.M.; 
Fellowship  PAFA;  Boston  ^WCC. 
Award  :  Hon.  men.,  Concord  AA. 
1919. 

WOODWARD,  William,  Tulane  Univer- 
sity, New  Orleans.  La. 
P.,  Arch.,  C. — Born  Seekonk,  Mass.,  May 
1,  1859.  Pupil  of  R.I.School  of  De- 
sign in  Providence;  Mass. Normal  Art 
School  in  Boston;  Boulanger  in  Paris. 
Member:  Louisiana  Art  Teachers 
Assoc,  (ex-pres.);  Louisiana  Chapter 
AIA;  Art  Assoc,  of  New  Orleans  (ex- 
vice-pres.);  AIA  1897  (hon.).  Professor 
of  drawing  and  painting,  Tulane  Uni- 
versity, New  Orleans. 

WOODWELL,   Elizabeth,  7008  Penn  Ave., 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

WOODWELL,  W.  E.,  201  Wood  St.,  Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

WOOLF,  S(amuel)  J(ohnson),  154  West 
55th  St.;  h.  457  West  123d  St.,  New 
York,    N.    Y. 

Port. P.,  W.— Born  New  York,  Feb.  12, 
1880.  Pupil  of  ASL  and  NAD  under 
Cox  and  Brush.  A  V7  a  r  d  s  :  Third 
Hallgarten  prize,  NAD  1904;  medj^l, 
Appalachian  Exp.,  Knoxvllle,  1910. 
Work:  "Dr.  Finley,"  College  of  the 
City  of  New  York;  "Mark  Twain," 
Brook  Club:  "Dr.  Hunter,"  Normal 
College;  "Cardinal  Logue,"  Catholic 
Club,    New    York.      Author:    "A    Short 


615 


WOOLLEY 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


WRIGHT 


History  of  Art."  As  special  corre- 
spondent with  American  Expeditionary 
Force,  painted  portraits  of  Joffre, 
Pershing,  and  other  commanders. 
WOOLLEY,  A.  B.,  435  North  School  St., 
Avalon,  Pa. 
P. — M  ember:    Pittsburgh   AA. 

WOOLRYCH,  Bertha  Hewit  (Mrs.  F. 
Humphry  Woolrych),  3855  Hartford 
St.,  St.  Louis,  Mo.;  summer,  Sherman, 
Mo. 

P.,  I. — Born  in  Ohio  in  1868.  Pupil  of 
St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts;  Morot, 
Collin  and  Courtois  in  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: St.  Louis  AG  (treas.,  1905-1909); 
St.  Louis  Art  Students'  Association. 
Awards  :  Medal,  Lewis  and  Clark 
Exp.,  Portland,  1905;  gold  and  silver 
medals,  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Art; 
silver  medal,  1908,  St.  Louis  District, 
General  Federation  of  Women's   Clubs. 

WOOLRYCH,  E.  Humphry  W.,  1411  In- 
ternational Life  Bldg.;  h.  3855  Hartford 
St.,  St.  Louis,  Mo.;  summer,  Sherman, 
Mo. 

P.,  I. — Born  Sydney,  Australia.  Pupil 
of  Royal  Academy,  Berlin;  Ecole  des 
Beaux  Arts,  Colarossi  Academy,  Collin, 
Courtois  and  Purvis  de  Chavannes  in 
Paris.  Member:  Hellas  Art  Club, 
Berlin;  St.  Louis  AG;  Brush  and 
Pencil  C;  2x4  Soc;  St.  Louis  Arch.C. 
Awards  :  Bronze  medal,  Portland 
Exp.,  1905;  medal  for  portrait.  Mo. 
State  Fair,  Sedalia,  1913.  Work: 
Water  color  in  St.  Louis  Public  Library. 

WORCESTER,  Albert,  467  West  Canfield 
Ave.,    Detroit,    Mich. 

P.,  E. — Born  West  Campton,  N.  H.,  Jan. 
4,  1878.  Pupil  of  Luc-Olivier  Merson 
and    Jean    Paul    Laurens    in    Paris. 

WORDEN,  Laicita  Warburton,  4141  North 

•    Broad   St.,    Philadelphia,   Pa. 

P..  S.,  I.— Born  Philadelphia,  Sept.  25, 
1892.  Pupil  PAFA.  Member:  Fel- 
lowship PAFA. 

WORDEN,  Sara  A.  See  Mrs.  Hinton  S. 
Lloyd. 

WO  RES,  Theodore,  Bohemian  Club;  h. 
1722  Buchanan  St.,  San  Francisco,  Cal. 
P.,  I.,  T. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal. 
Aug.  1,  1860.  Pupil  of  Alex.  Wagner 
and  Duveneck  in  Munich.  Member: 
Century  Assoc.  Award  :  Gold  medal, 
Alaska-Yukon  Exp.,  1909.  Instructor  at 
San   Francisco   Art   Institute,    1907-1912. 

WORKMAN,  David  Tice,  1210  First  Ave., 
North,  Minneapolis,  Minn. 
E.— Born  Wahpeton,  N.  D.,  1884.  Pupil 
of  Benson  and  Hale  in  Boston;  Pyle  in 
Wilmington;  Brangwyn  and  Swan  in 
London.  Member:  Chicago  SE;  At- 
tic C,  Minneapolis;  Minneapolis  SA. 
Award  :  First  prize,  Minnesota  State 
Art  Commission,  1914.  Wo  r  k  :  Mural 
decorations,  Irving  School,  and  East 
Side  High  School,  Minneapolis,  Minn.; 
Lincoln  High  School,  Hibbing,  Minn. 

WORMAN,  Eugenia  A.,  1712  Summit 
Ave.,    Seattle,   Wash.    (P.) 

WORTHINGTON,     Mary     E.,     1455    Hum- 
boldt   St..    Denver,    Colo. 
P. — Born  Holyoke,  Mass.     Studied  with 
Constant,   Laurens  and  F.   V.   DuMond 


in  Paris,  and  Henry  Read  in  Denver. 
Member:  Denver  AA. 

WRAY,     Henry    Russell,    33    West    Willa- 
mette Ave.,    Colorado   Springs,   Colo. 
P.,  E.,  W.— Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Oct. 
3,    1864.     Member:    Phila.    Sketch   C; 
Colorado   'Springs    Art    Society. 

WRENN,  Charles  L(ewis),  364  West  23rd 
St.,  New  York,  N.   Y. 

P.,  I. — Born  Cincinnati,  O.,  Sept.  18, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Chase  and  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
Member:   SI;    Salma.   C. 

WRIGHT,  Alice  Morgan,  393  State  St.,  Al- 
bany, N.  Y.;  and  28  West  8th  St.,  New 
York,   N.   Y. 

S.— Born  Albany,  N.  Y.  Member: 
N.  A.  Women  PS;   S.  Indp.  A. 

WRIGHT,    (Mr.)   Alma    Brockerman,  L.  D. 

S.  U.,  Salt  Lake  City,  Utah. 
P.— Born  Salt  Lake  City,  Nov.  22.  1875. 
Pupil  of  Bonnat,  Laurens,  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts  and  Julian  and  Colarossi 
academies  in  Paris.  Member:  Soc. 
of  Utah  Artists;  Paris  AAA.  Awards: 
State  prize.  1904;  medal  of  honor,  Utah 
Art   Inst.,    3  905. 

WRIGHT,  Bertha  Stevens,  (Mrs.  Law- 
rence Wright),  Lawrence,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
P.— Born  Astoria,  L.  I.,  N.  Y.  Self- 
taught.  Member:  Alliance;  S. 
Indp.   A.;   Lg.   of  N.Y.A. 

WRIGHT,  Charles  H.,  Room  309,  1931 
Broadway,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  27  Willow 
Ave.,  Larchmont,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I. — Born  Knightstown,  Ind.,  Nov.  20, 
1870.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Mem- 
ber: SI  1914;  Salma.  C. ;  NYWCC; 
Guild  of  Free  Lance  Artists. 

WRIGHT,  Charles  Lennox,  Bayside,  L.  I., 
N.  Y. ;  summer.  West  Rockaway,  N.  Y. 
P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Boston,  Mass.,  May  28, 
1876.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Dagnan- 
Bouveret    in    Paris. 

WRIGHT,  Emma  R.,  1233  Chapel  St.,  New 
Haven,    Conn. 
P. — M  ember:   New  Haven  PCC. 

WRIGHT,  Fred  W.,  15  West  67th  St.,  New 
York.  N.  Y. 

P.— Born  Crawfordsville,  Ind.,  Oct.  12, 
1880.  Pupil  of  Julian  Academy  and  P. 
Marcel-Baronneau  in  Paris;  J  Otis 
Adams.  Member:  Salma.  C. ;  Lg. 
of  N.  Y.  A. 

WRIGHT,     George     H(and),     Salmagundi 

Club,  47  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
h.  Westport,   Conn. 

P.,  I.— Born  Fox-Chase,  Pa.,  Aug.  6, 
1872.  Pupil  of  PAFA  and  Spring  Gar- 
den Inst.  Member:  SI  1901;  Salma. 
C;  S.  Indp.  A.;  Guild  of  Free  Lance 
Artists. 

WRIGHT,  Mrs.  Gladys  Yoakum,  606  West 
Third   St.,   Fort  Worth,   Texas. 
P.,  W.— Born  Greenville,  Tex.     Pupil  of 
McLeod   School   of  Art  in   Los   Angeles. 

WRIGHT,  M.  Louise  (Mrs.  John  Wright), 
2  Cheltenham  Terrace,  London,  S.  W., 
England. 

P.,  I.— Born  Philadelphia,  1875.  Pupil 
of  PAFA;  Whistler  and  Julian  Academy 
in    Paris;    F.    W.    Jackson    in    England. 


616 


WRIGHT 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


YARROW 


Member:  Phila.WCC;  NYWCC;  Fel- 
lowship PAFA.  Award:  Bronze  med- 
al, St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904. 

WRIGHT,  Margaret  Harden  (Mrs.  James 
Hayden  Wright),  371  Harvard  St., 
Cambridge,    Mass. 

Etcher. — Born  Newton,  Mass.,  March 
28,  1869.  Pupil  of  Mass. Inst, of  Tech- 
nology in  Boston;  W.  H.  W.  Bicknell; 
Merson  in  Paris.  Member:  Chicago 
SE;  Copley  S;  Boston  SE.  Specialty, 
bookplates.  Represented  in  New  York 
Public   Library. 

WRIGHT,  William,  2203  Los  Angeles  Ave., 
Beechview,   Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
P.— M  ember:     Pitts.  AA. 

WUERPEL,  Edmund  H(enry),  St.  Louis 
School  of  Fine  Arts,  Washington  Uni- 
versity; h.  9  Walinca  Terrace,  Clayton, 
Mo. 

P.,  T,,  W.,  L.— Born  St.  Louis,  May  13, 
1866.  Pupil  of  St.  Louis  School  of  Fine 
Arts;  Julian  Academy  and  Ecole  des 
Beaux- Arts  in  Paris  under  Bouguereau, 
Robert-Fleury,  Ferrier  and  Aman-Jean. 
Member:  St.  Louis  AG  (life;  pres. 
1909);  St.  Louis  Municipal  A.  L.  (chair- 
man, Art  Com.);  2x4  Soc.  (pres.  1906- 
1908);  Paris  AAA  (hon.).  Awards: 
Bronze  medal,  Nashville  Exp.,  1897; 
silver  medal,  Missouri  Building,  Lewis 
and  Clarke  Exp.,  Portland,  Ore.,  1905; 
hon.  mention,  Buenos  Aires  Exp.,  1910; 
St.  Louis  AG  life  membership  prize, 
1914;  hors  concours  (jury  of  awards). 
P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Director, 
•St.  Louis  School  of  Fine  Arts  since 
1909.  Work:  "In  the  Hollow,"  City 
Art  Museum,  St.  Louis;  "An  Evening 
Idyll,"  Herron  Art  Institute,"  Indianapo- 
lis; "An  Evening  Song."  Public  Library, 
St.  Louis;  "Night,"  High  School,  St. 
Louis.  Work  in:  Church  of  the  Unity, 
St.  Louis;  Murals  in  Missouri  Athletic 
Club. 

WUHL,  Edna  Dell,  9  Lansing  Ave.,  Troy 
N.  Y.     (P.) 

WULFF,  Timothy  Milton,  2245  Turk  St., 
San  Francisco,   Cal. 

P. — Born  San  Francisco,  Cal.,  Oct.  13, 
1890.  Pupil  of  Frank  Van  Sloun. 
Member:  San  P.  AA.  Work: 
"The  Laughing  Buffoon,"  in  the  Palace 
of    Fine    Arts,    San    Francisco. 

WUNDERLY,    August,    Wood   and    Oliver 
Aves..   Pittsburgh.   Pa. 
P. — M  ember:  Pittsburgh  A  A. 

WYAND,  Mrs.  Charles  L.  See  Cockcroft, 
Edith  Varian. 

WYER,  Raymond,  Art  Museum,  Worces- 
ter, Mass. 

P.,  W.,  L. — Born  in  London,  Eng.  Stud- 
ied in  London  and  Brussels;  in  Paris 
at  Academie  Delecluse  and  under  Bou- 
guereau and  Benjamin-Constant.  Mem- 
ber: Artists'  Soc.  and  Langham  C, 
London;  Archeological  Inst,  of  Am.; 
Amer.  Assoc.  Museums;  NAC;  St.  Bo- 
tolph  C;  Boston;  Fellow  Royal  Soc. 
of  Arts,  London.  Director  Plackley 
Gallery  Muskegon  1912-16;  Worcester 
Museum,  1918.  Lecturer  and  writer 
on  art  and  sociology. 


WYETH,    N.   C,   Needham,   Mass. 

P.,  I.— Born  Needham,  Ma.ss.,  Oct.  22, 
1882.  Pupil  of  Howard  Pyle.  Member: 
SI  1912;  Phila. Sketch  C;  Salma.C.  1908; 
Fellowship  PAFA.  Awards:  Beck 
prize,  Phila.WCC,  1910;  gold  medal, 
P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915.  Murals  in: 
Missouri  State  Capitol;  Hotel  Traymore, 
Atlantic  City;  Reading  Museum  of  Fine 
Arts;  Federal  Reserve  Bank  of  Boston; 
New  York  Public  Library;  Hotel  Utica, 
Utica,  N.  Y. 

WYLIE,   Samuel    B.,   Woodstock,   N.   Y. 
P.— M  ember:     Salma.    C. 

WYMAN,  Florence.     See  Ivins. 

XERON,    John,    129    West    12th    St.,    New 

York,   N.   Y. 

P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 
YAEGER,   William    L,,   4024  Westminster 

Ave.,   Philadelphia,   Pa. 

P.— Me  m  b  e  r  :   Phila.   AA. 

YAFFEE,  Edith  Widing,  91  Walker  Road, 
Swampscott,   Mass. 

P. — Born  Helsingfors,  Finland,  Jan.  16, 
1895.  Pupil  of  Paxton,  Hale  and  PAFA. 
Awards  :  Chaloner  Paris-American 
prize,  1920;  European  traveling  Scholar- 
ship,   PAFA,    1921. 

YAFFEE,  Herman,  Cousins  Island,  Me.; 
h.  Walker  Rd.,  Swampscott,  Mass. 
P. — Born  Knoxville,  Tenn.,  June  20, 
1897.  Pupil  of  School  of  Museum  of 
Fine  Arts,  Boston;  PAFA  studied  in 
Paris   and    Spain. 

YALE,  (Charlotte)  Liila,  208  West  Main 
St.,    Meriden,    Conn. 

P.,  T. — Born  Meriden,  Conn.,  Mar.  14, 
1855.  Pupil  of  D.  F.  Wentworth  in 
Hartford;  George  de  Forest  Brush; 
Chase;  ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
Meriden  Arts  and  Crafts  Association. 

YANDELL,  Enid,  133  East  40th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. ;  Edgartown,  Mass. 
S.,  T.— Born  Louisville,  Ky.,  Oct.  6, 
1870.  Pupil  of  Cincimati  Art  School; 
Philip  Martiny  in  New  York;  MacMon- 
nies  and  Rodin  in  Paris.  Member: 
NSS  1898;  N.Y.Munic.  AS;  N.Y.  WCC. 
Awards  :  Designer's  medal,  Colum- 
bian Exp.,  Chicago,  1893;  silver  medal, 
Tennessee  Exp.,  Nashville,  1897;  hon. 
mention,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
bronze  medal  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
Officier  de  I'Academie,  French  Govern- 
ment, 1906.  Organized,  1907.  Branstock 
Summer  School  of  Art  at  Edgartown. 
Work:  "Carrie  Brown  Memorial 
Fountain,"  Providence;  bust,  "Dr.  W. 
T.  Bull,"  Col.  Physicians  and  Surgeons, 
New  York;  "Emma  Willard  Memorial," 
Albany,  N.  Y. ;  "Hogan  Fountain"  and 
"Boone  Monument,"  Louisville.   Ky. 

YARROW,  William  H(enry)  K(emble), 
care  Daniel  Gallery,  2  West  47th  St., 
New  York,   N.   Y. 

P. — Born  Glenside,  Pa.,  Sept.  24,  1891. 
Pupil  of  Henry  R.  Rittenberg;  PAFA; 
Colarossi  and  Grande  Chaumi^re  Acad- 
emies in  Paris.  Member:  Fellowship 
PAFA;  Phila.  AC;  Allied  AA:  Salma.  C; 
S.  Indp.  A.  Awards:  Silver  medal, 
P. -P..  San  F..  1915;  portrait  prize.  New- 
port,  1916;   gold  medal,   Phila.   AC,   1916. 


617 


YATES 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


YOUNG 


Wo  r  k  :  "In  the  Orchard,"  Pennsyl- 
vania Academy  of  the  Fine  Arts;  "Still 
Life,"  Philadelphia  AC.  Editor,  Ameri- 
can Art  Library. 

YATES,  CuIIen,  The  Van  Dyck  Studios, 
939  Eighth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  h. 
Shawnee-on-Delaware,  Monroe  Co.,  Pa. 
Ldscp.P.— Born  Bryan,  O.,  Jan.  24,  1866. 
Pupil  of  NAD,  Chase  and  Ochtman  In 
New  York;  Ecole  des  Beaux-Arts, 
Colarossi  and  Julian  academies  under 
Laurens  and  Constant  in  Paris.  M  e  m- 
ber:  ANA,  1908;  NA,  1919;  AWCS; 
NYWCC;  NAC;  Lotos  C;  Salma.C.  1899; 
NAC  aife);  Allied  AA.  Awards: 
Bronze  medal,  'St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  In- 
ness  prize,  Salma.  C.  1907;  Isidor  prize, 
Salma.  C,  1921.  Work:  "Rock- 
Bound  Coast — Cape  Ann,"  National 
Gallery,  Washington;  "Gloucester  Har- 
bor," City  Art  Museum,  St.  Louis; 
"Rye  Field — Shawnee  -  on  -  Delaware, 
Pa.,"  Seattle  (Wash.)  Gallery;  "Early 
Evening,"  Art  Club,  Philadelphia; 
"Near  Gloucester  Harbor,"  Montclair 
(N.  J.)  Gallery;  "Landscape,"  Brook- 
lyn Institute  Museum;  "The  Harbor," 
Art  Museum,  Montclair,  N.  J.,  "Moun- 
tain Stream,"  Youngstown  (O.)  Mu- 
seum. 

YATES,  Elizabeth  M.,  374  McKinley 
Parkway,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 
P.,  T. — Born  Stoke-on-Trent,  Stafford- 
shire, England,  May  13,  1888.  Pupil  of 
Pratt  Institute.  Member:  Buffalo 
GAA. 

YEATS,    John    B(utler),    61    Marlborough 
Road,   Donnybrook,  Dublin,  Ireland. 
P. — M  ember:      Hibernian    Academy; 
S.   Indp.   A. 

YENS,  Karl  (Julius  Heinrich),  Laguna 
Beach,  Calif. 

P.,  I.,  E.,  T. — Born  Altona,  Germany, 
Jan.  11,  1868.  Pupil  of  Max  Koch  in 
Berlin;  Constant  and  Laurens  in  Paris. 
Member:  Calif.  AC:  Calif.  Teachers' 
A.  ;Calif  P.M.  Awards  :  Bronze  and 
silver  medals,  Pan-Calif,  Int.  Exp.,  San 
Diego,  1915;  second  Black  prize,  Calif. 
AC,  1919.  Work:  Mural  decorations 
in  City  Hall,  Altona,  Germany;  Country 
Club  House,  Brookline,  Mass.;  and  in 
Duquesne  Club,   Pittsburgh,   Pa. 

YEOMANS,  Walter  C,  care  of  Art  Dept., 
Hawtin  Engraving  Co.;  h.  1261  North 
Dearborn  St.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  I.— Born  Avon,  111.,  in  1882.  Pupil 
of  AIC.  Member:  Palette  and 
Chisel  C;    Chicago   SE. 

YETO,   Genjiro.     See  Katoaka. 

YEWELL,  George  H(enry),  51  West  10th 
St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  summer.  Diamond 
Point,  Warren  Co.,  N.  Y. 
P. — Born  Havre-de-Grace,  Md.,  Jan.  20, 
1830.  Pupil  of  Thomas  Hicks  in  New 
York;  Couture  in  Paris.  Member: 
ANA  1862,  NA  1880;  A.Fund  S.  (ex- 
sec);  Century  Assoc.  Work:  "In- 
terior of  St,  Mark's  Church,  Venice," 
Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York; 
"Santa  Maria  della  Salute — Venice," 
Louisville  (Ky.)  Art  Gallery;  "Interior 
of  St.  Mark's  Church — Venice,"  Wads- 
worth  Athenseum,   Hartford;  portraits — 


Ex-Governor  of  Iowa,  Samuel  J.  Kirk- 
wood;  Major  General  Grenville  M. 
Dodge  and  Hon.  John  F.  Dillon,  His- 
torical Department,  Des  Moines,  la.; 
Cornelius  R.  Agnew,  Academy  of  Medi- 
cine, New  York,  N.  Y.;  William  H.  Pax- 
ton,  D.D.,  Presbyterian  Building,  New 
York. 

YOHN,  F(rederlck)  C(offay),  Norwalk, 
Conn. 

I. — Born  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  Feb.  8,  1875. 
Pupil  of  Indianapolis  Art  School;  ASL 
of  N.  Y.  under  Mowbray.  Member: 
SI   1901;    Guild    of   Free   Lance   Artists. 

YOUNG,  Arthur,  9  East  17th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.;  summer,  Bethel,  Conn. 
Cartoonist. — Born  Stephenson  Co.,  111., 
Jan.  14,  1866.  Pupil  of  Julian  Academy 
and  Bouguereau  in  Paris.  Cartoons  and 
illustrations  in  "Life,"  "Collier's  Week- 
ly." "Puck."  "Metropolitan  Magazine," 
"The  Liberator." 

YOUNG,     Charles)     Jac,     114    Highpoint 

Ave.,   Weehawken   Heights,   N.   J. 
P.,     E.— Born    Bavaria,     Dec.     21,     1880. 
Pupil    of    E.    M.    W^ard,    C.    Y.    Turner. 
Member:    Brooklyn  SE. ;  Calif.  PM. ; 
Salma.  C. 

YOUNG,  Charles  Morris,  Radnor,  Pa. 
Ldscp.P. — Born  Gettysburg,  Pa.,  Sept. 
23,  1869.  Pupil  of  PAFA;  Colarossi 
Academy  in  Paris.  Member:  ANA. 
Awards  :  Toppan  prize,  PAFA;  hon. 
mention,  Pan-Am. Exp.,  Buffalo,  1901; 
silver  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904;  gold 
medal,  ACPhila.  1908;  hon.  mention, 
C.I.Pittsburgh,  1910;  silver  medal,  Buenos 
Aires  Exp..  1910;  gold  medal,  P.-P.Exp., 
San  F.,  1915;  Sesnan  gold  medal,  PAFA, 
1921.  Work:  "Winter  Morning 
after  Snow,"  Pennsylvania  Academy, 
Philadelphia,  Pa.;  "The  North  Wind," 
Corcoran  Gallery,  Washington.  Repre- 
sented in  Boston  Art  Club;  St.  Louis 
Art  Club;  Budapest  National  Gal- 
lery; Albright  Art  Gallery,  Buffalo; 
Rochester  Art  Gallery;  National  Gallery, 
Santiago,    Chile. 

YOUNG,  Eliza  Middleton  Coxe,  Radnor, 
Pa.;  summer,  "Windy  Hill,"  Drifton, 
Luzerne   Co.,    Pa. 

P.— Born  Philadelphia,  Nov.  7,  1875. 
Pupil  of  Anshutz,  Charles  Morris 
Young.  Work:  "Garden  Study," 
Herron  Art  Inst.,  Indianapolis. 

YOUNG,  Grace,  Art  Academy,  Cincin- 
nati, O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

YOUNG,  Helen,  333  South  Third  Ave.,  Mt. 
Vernon,  N.  Y.     (P.) 

YOUNG,  Mahonrl  M.,  148  Prospect  St., 
Leonia,   N.  J. 

S.,  Etcher.— Born  Salt  Lake  City,  Utah, 
Aug.  9,  1877.  Pupil  of  ASL  In  New 
York;  Julian  Academy  In  Paris.  Mem- 
ber: ANA  1912;  NSS  1910;  Paris  AAA; 
Soc.of  Utah  Artists  (ex-pres.);  N.  Y. 
Arch.Lg.  1911;  Chicago  SE;  NYWCC; 
N.  Y.  SE;  Eclectics;  P-G.  Awards: 
Hon.   mention  for  etching,   Paris  AAA; 


618 


YOUNG 


WHO'S   WHO  IN  ART 


ZIMMERMAN 


I 


Barnett  prize,  NAD,  1911;  silver  medal 
for  sculpture,  P. -P.  Exp.,  San  F.,  1915. 
Work:  Etchings  and  "Man  with 
Pick,"  Metropolitan  Museum,  New  York; 
Hopi  and  Apache  groups,  American 
Museum  of  National  History,  New 
York;  bronzes,  "A  Laborer"  and  "The 
Rigger,"  and  etchings,  Newark  Museum; 
etchings,  New  York  Public  Library; 
"Sea  Gull  Monument,  Salt  Lake  City; 
bronze,  Peabody  Institute,  Baltimore, 
Md.;  Rhode  Island  School  of  Design, 
Providence;  painting  and  sculpture.  Art 
Institute  of  Utah,  Salt  Lake  City.  In- 
structor Art  Students'  League  of  New 
York. 

YOUNG,  Mary  L(ouise),  160  Milhem  Road, 
Baldwin,   L.   I.,   N.   Y. 
P. — Born  .  St.     Louis,     Mo.       Pupil     of 
Twachtman.      Member:      Greenwich 
SA. 

YOUNG,  Myrtle  M.,  2027  Hyde  St.,  San 
Francisco,  Cal.     (P.) 

YOUNG,  William  Crawford,  Comstock 
Hill,  Norwalk,  Conn. 

I. — Born  Cannonsburg,  Mich.,  March  26, 
1886.  Pupil  of  AIC  and  Chicago  Art 
Academy.  Member:  AI  Graphic  A. 
Staff  contributor  to  "Life,"  and  "N.  Y. 
Herald." 

ZARING,  Louise  E(leanor),  9  Poplar 
St.,  Greencastle,  Ind. 
P.,  S.,  C— Born  Cincinnati,  O.  Pupil 
of  Oliver  Merson,  John  Twachtman,  Mc- 
Monnies,  L.  R.  Garrido,  Charles  Haw- 
thorne; ASL  of  N.  Y.  Member: 
Paris  Woman's  AA;  Provincetown  AA; 
ASL  of  N.  Y.;  Wash.  A.  C.  W^  o  r  k  : 
First  hon.  mention,  Richmond  Art  Asso.; 
1900  and  1919. 

ZARINI,   E.   MazzonI,  9  Bisarno,  Barriera 
S.   Niccolo,    Florence,   Italy. 
E.— M  ember:    Chicago    SE. 

ZEIGLER,  Lee  Woodward,  New  Windsor- 
on-Hudson.  N.  Y.  (P.  O.  Newburgh, 
N.   Y.). 

P.,  I.,  T.— Born  Baltimore,  Md.,  May  7, 
1868.  Self-taught.  Member:  Char- 
coal C.  Award:  Gold  medal  for  paint- 
ing, St.  Paul  Inst.,  1915.  Director.  St. 
Paul  Institute  School  of  Art,  1910-18. 
Work  :  "Wake  Thee,  Titania,"  Mary- 
land Institute,  Baltimore;  "The  Knight 
Errant,"  St.  Paul  vMinn.)  Institute; 
"The  Apocalypse,"  altar  piece.  Church 
of  St.  John  the  Evangelist,  New  York; 
"Adoration  of  the  Cross,"  decoration, 
St.  Thomas'  Church,  New  Windsor; 
decorations  on  ceiling  of  St.  Paul  Pub- 
lic Library;  illustrations  for  de  luxe  edi- 
tions  of  Kingsley,    Gautier   and   Balzac. 

ZEITLIN,  Alexandre,  141  East  21st  St., 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

S.— Born  Tiflis,  Russia,  July  15,  1872. 
Member:   Wash.   AC. 

ZELL,  Ernest  N(egley),  119  Westwood 
Ave.,  Grandview,  Columbus,  O. 
P.— Born  in  Dayton,  O.,  Oct.  16,  1874. 
Pupil  of  Columbus  Art  School;  Cincin- 
nati Art  Academy;  Shinnecock  Sum- 
mer School;  summer  school,  Ohio  State 
University  at  Columbus;  under  Chase 
in  Holland.  Member:  Pen  and  Pen- 
cil C,  Columbus;  Columbus  AL.    Direc- 


tor of  Art,  School  for  the  Deaf,  Colum- 
bus,   O. 

ZENSKY,  J.,  9G0  Simpson  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 
P. — M  ember:     S.Indp.A. 

ZENNER,  Rose,  2947  Gilbert  Ave.,  Cin- 
cinnati,  O. 

P. — M  ember:  Cincinnati  Woman's 
AC. 

ZETTLER,  Emil  Robert,  4  East  Ohio  St., 
Chicago,    111. 

S.— Born  Chicago.  Studied  at  AIC;  Royal 
Academy  of  Berlin;  Julian  Academy  in 
Paris.  Awards  :  Hon.  mention,  AIC, 
1912;  medal,  Chicago  SA,  1915;  bronze 
medal,  P.-P.Exp.,  San  F.,  1915;  silver 
medal,  AIC,  1915;  Potter  Palmer  gold 
medal,  AIC,  1916;  Logan  medal,  AIC, 
1917.  Work:  Municipal  Art  Collec- 
tion. 

ZIEG,  Mrs.  W.  W.,  5739  Northumberland 
Ave.,   Pittsburgh,   Pa.      (P.) 

ZIEGLER,  Eustace  Paul,  The  Red 
Dragon,  Cordova,  Alaska. 
P.,  I.,  W.,  L.— Born  Detroit,  Mich., 
July  24.  1881.  Pupil  of  Ida  Marie  Per- 
rault,  Yale  School  of  Fine  Arts.  Illus- 
trates for   "The   Spirit  of  Missions." 

ZIM,  Marco,  64  Edgecombe  Ave.,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 

P.,  S.,  Etcher. — Born  Moscow,  Russia, 
Jan.  9,  1880.  Pupil  of  ASL  of  N.  Y. 
under  George  Gray  Barnard;  NAD 
under  Ward  and  Maynard;  Ecole  des 
Beaux-Arts  in  Paris  under  Bonnat. 

ZIMM,  Bruno  Louis,  Woodstock,  N.  Y. 
S.,  A.— Born  New  York,  Dec.  25,  1876. 
Pupil  of  J.  Q.  A.  Ward,  Augustus  Saint 
Gaudens  and  Karl  Bitter.  Member: 
NSS.  Award:  First  mention,  col- 
laborative competition,  N.  Y.  Arch.  Lg., 
1913;  silver  medal,  Paris  Exp..  1900. 
Work:  Slocum  Memorial  and  Memo- 
rial Fountain,  New  York:  Finnegan 
Memorial,  Houston;  Murdoch  Memorial, 
Wichita;  Sculpture  in  rotunda  of  Art 
Bldg.,  San  Francisco;  bust  of  Robert 
E.  Lee,  Baylor  College,  Belton,  Texas; 
panels  of  Sergt.  York  and  Paul  Revere, 
Seaboard  National  Bank,  New  York. 

ZIMMELE,  Mrs.  Margaret,  Garber  Gal- 
leries, 1210  18th  St.,  h.  2612  Connecticut 
Ave.,  Washington,  D.  C. ;  summer.  Great 
Barrington,   Mass. 

P.,  S.,  I.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Sept.  1, 
1872.  Pupil  of  Chase,  Shirlaw.  Whitte- 
more,  Lathrop,  Carlson,  Hawthorne. 
Member:  S.  Wash.  A.;  Pittsburgh 
AA.;   Wash.    SA. 

ZIMMERMAN,  Eugene  ("Zim"),  Horse- 
heads,  Chemung  Co.,  N.  Y. 
Caricaturist. — Born  Basel.  Switzerland, 
May  25,  1862.  On  staff  of  "Puck" 
since  1882;  "Judge"  since  1884.  Author 
of  "This  and  That  About  Caricature," 
"Cartoons  and  Caricatures,"  "Home 
Spun  Philosophy."  Conducts  corre- 
spondence school  of  caricature,  cartoon- 
ing and  comic  art. 

ZIMMERMAN,  M(ason)  W.,  1518  Waverly 
■St.;  h.  1522  Locust  St.,  Philadelphia, 
Pa. 


619 


ZINSER 


WHO'S  WHO  IN  ART 


ZY  LIN  SKI 


P. — Born  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  Aug.  4,  1861. 
Pupil  of  Julian  Academy.  Member  : 
Phila.  WCC;  Phila.  Sketch  C;  Salma, 
C;   Phila.  Alliance;   AWCS. 

ZINSER,  Frank,  118  East  4th  St.,  Cincin- 
nati. O. 
P. — M  ember:   Cincinnati  AC. 

ZINSER,  Paul  R.,  3229  Sheffield  Ave.;  h. 
Highland  Apts.,  Chicago,  111. 
P.,  S.,  L,  C— Born  Wildbad,  Germany, 
April  4,  1885.  Pupil  of  J.  Hopkins 
Adam.  Member:  Cincinnati  AC. 
Work:  "Evening,"  Cincinnati  Art 
Museum. 

ZIRNBAUER,  Franz  (Seraph),  Rue  Ma- 
dame 67,  Paris,  France. 
P.,  T.— Born  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Oct.  10, 
1860.  Pupil  of  Laurens,  Blanche,  Richr 
ard  Miller,  Gervaix,  in  Paris,  and  stud- 
ied in  London  and  Dublin. 

ZOGBAUM,  R(ufus)  F(airchild),  125  West 
87th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Naval  P.,  I.— Born  Charleston,  S.  C,  Aug. 
28,  1849.  Pupil  of  ASL  in  New  York; 
Bonnat  in  Paris.  Member:  AWCS; 
Century  Assoc.  Award  :  Medal,  Co- 
lumbian Exp.,  Chicago,  1893.  Mural 
decorations:  "First  Minnesota  Regiment 
at  Battle  of  Gettysburg,"  State  Capitol, 
St.  Paul;  "Battle  of  Lake  Erie,"  Federal 
Building,  Cleveland;  "Hail  and  Fare- 
well," Woolworth  Bldg.  Portraits:  "Rear 
Admiral  Taylor,"  Naval  War  College, 
Newport;  "Dr.  Henry  Loomis  Nelson," 
Williams  College,  Williamstown,  Mass.; 
"Dr.  St.  Clair  Smith,"  Flower  Hospital, 
New  York.  Illustrations  for  "Horse, 
Foot  and  Dragoons,"  "All  Hands," 
"Ships  and  Sailors." 

ZOLNAY,  George  Julian,  1738  N  St.,  N. 
W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 
S.,  T.— Born  July  4,  1863.  Pupil  of 
Imperial  Academy  of  Fine  Arts  in 
Vienna;  National  Academy  of  Bucharest. 
Member:    St.    Louis   AG    (ex-pres.); 


Wash.  AC;  Union  Inter,  des  Arts  et 
Sciences,  Paris;  S.  Wash.  A.  Awards: 
Gold  medal,  St.  Louis  Exp.,  1904; 
gold  medal,  Portland  Exp.,  1905. 
Decorated  by  the  King  of  Roumania  with 
the  Order  "Bene  Merenti"  first  class. 
Work:  "Pierre  Laclede  Monument," 
and  Confederate  monument,  St.  Louis, 
Mo.;  "Winnie  Davis"  and  "Jefferson 
Davis"  monuments,  Richmond,  Va.; 
"Soldiers  Monument"  and  "Sam  Davis 
Monument,"  Nashville,  Tenn.;  "Gen. 
Bartow"  and  "Gen.  McLaws"  monu- 
ment, Savannah,  Ga.;  "Soldiers  Monu- 
ment," Owensboro,  Ky. ;  pediment  of 
"Edgar  Allan  Poe  Monument,"  Uni- 
versity of  Virginia,  Charlottesville,  Va.; 
colossal,  "Lions,"  on  City  Gates,  Uni- 
versity City,  Mo.;  main  group,  U.  S. 
Customs  House,  San  Francisco,  Cal. ; 
Labor  Monument,  New  Bedford,  Mass.; 
'Sequoyah  Statue,  U.  S.  Capitol,  Wash- 
ington; War  Memorial,  and  sculpture  of 
the  Parthenon,  Nashville,  Tenn.  Repre- 
sented in  the  Bucharest  Royal  Institute; 
St.  Louis  Museum;  Herron  Art  Institute, 
Indianapolis. 

ZORACH,  Marguerite,  care  of  The  Daniel 
Gallery,  2  West  47th  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P.— Born  Santa  Rosa,  Calif.  Studied  in 
Paris. 

ZORACH,  William,  care  of  The  Daniel 
Gallery,  2  West  47th  St.,  New  York, 
N.   Y. 

P. — Born  in  Russia;  came  to  U.  S.  when 
4.  Studied  at  NAD  in  New  York  and 
in  Paris. 

ZYLINSKI,  Andrew,  Box  195,  Ebenezer, 
N.    Y. 

P.,  T. — Born  Zaile,  Lithuania  gov.  Su- 
valki.  May  29,  1869.  Pupil  of  Woj- 
ciech,  Gerson,  and  Warsaw  (Poland) 
School  of  Design.  Member:  St. 
Louis  AL.  Work:  "Early  Morning," 
Delgado  Art  Museum;  "Mark  Twain," 
Commercial  Club,  Hannibal,  Mo. 


620 


List  of  Sculptors 


For  addresses  and   biographical   notes    see   section  beginning   page    329 


Abbate,   Paolo   S. 

Abel,    Louise. 

Adams,   Herbert. 

Aitken,   Robert   I. 

Akeley,    Carl    E. 

Albrecht,   C.  J. 

Albright,   H.   J. 

Alexander,   Julia   Standish. 

Allen,   F.  W. 

Allen,    Gregory    S. 

Allen,  Louise. 

Amateis,  Edmond  R. 

Andersen,    Hendrick    Christian. 

Angela,   Emilio. 

Apel,   Mrs.   Marie. 

Applegate,   Frank  G. 

Appleton,    Mrs.    Eliza   B. 

Atkins,   Albert   H. 

Atkins,  Florence  E. 

Avery,     Hope. 

Azzi,   Marius   A. 

Bach,  Florence  J. 

Baker,   Bryant. 

Bakos,  Joseph   G. 

Ball,    Mrs.    Caroline    Peddle. 

Ball,    Ruth    Norton. 

Barnard,  George  Grey. 

Barnhorn,   Clement  J. 

Bartlett,    Madeline   A. 

Bartlett,    Paul   Wayland. 

Bartlett,    Truman    H. 

Bateman,   John   M. 

Bathhurst,   Clyde   C. 

Baughman,   Mary  B. 

Baylos,   Zelma. 

Bayman,   Leo. 

Beach,    Chester. 

Beck,  Raphael. 

Bedore,  Sidney. 

Bennett,    Mrs.    Emma. 

Berge,    Edward. 

Bilotti,  Salvatore  F. 

Binns,    Elsie. 

Bjurman,    Andrew. 

Blumenschein,   Mrs.   Mary   Shepard   Greene. 

Bock,   Richard  W. 

Boericke,   Johanna   M. 

Booth,    James    Scripps. 

Borglum,  Gutzon. 

Borglum,    Solon   H. 

Borgord,    Martin. 

Bowditch,    Mary    O. 

Boyle,   Gertrude. 

Braddcck,   Effie  F. 

Brasz,   Arnold   F. 

Brauner,   Olaf   M. 

Bregler,    Charles. 

Brenner,  Victor  D. 

Brewster,   Mrs.  Anna  R. 

Brewster,    George    T. 

Brindesi,  Olympio. 

Bringhurst,    Robert   P. 

Brooks,   A.   F. 

Brown,    Irene. 

Bryant,   Mrs.    Nanna   M. 

Buchanan,   Ella. 

Buck,   Charles  C. 


Buck,  Emma  G. 

Burnham,    Roger    Noble. 

Burt,   Frederick. 

Burton,  Samuel. 

Bush-Brown,  Henry  K. 

Butensky,   Jules    Leon. 

Calder,   Alexander. 

Calder,  Alexander   Stirling. 

Calewaert,    Louis   H.    S. 

Carr,   Alice  R. 

Castello,   Eugene. 

Cavacos,  Emmanuel  A. 

Cecere,    Gaetano. 

Chace,  Dorothea. 

Chamberlin,   F.  Tolles. 

Chard,   Walter. 

Charman,   Laura  B. 

Ciavarra,    Pietro. 

Clark,    Allan. 

Cohen,   Nessa. 

Cole,    Emily    Beckwith. 

Coltman,   Ora. 

Comstock,  Frances  B. 

Conkling,   Mrs.   Mabel. 

Conkling,   Paul. 

Ccnley,   Sarah   Ward. 

Conlon,   George. 

Conner,    Jerome. 

Conway,   John   S. 

Conway,   William  John. 

Cook,    May    Elizabeth. 

Cook-Smith,    Jean    Beman. 

Coonsman,   Nancy. 

Coppini,   Pompeo. 

Corbett,    Mrs.    Gail    Sherman. 

Cornwell,    Martha  Jackson. 

Couper,  Mrs.  B.  King. 

Couper,    William. 

Coy,   C.   Lynn. 

Crenier,    Henri. 

Crosby,    Katharine    V.    R. 

Crowell,   Margaret. 

Crunelle,   Leonard. 

Daggett,    Grace    E. 

Daggett,    Maud. 

Dallin,   Cyrus  E. 

Davidson,   Jo. 

Dawley,  Herbert  M. 

De   Beukelaer,   Mrs.   Laura  H. 

De   Boyeden,   O.   H. 

De   Francisci,   Anthony. 

De   Kosenko,    Stepan. 

Dellfant,    Max. 

Deming,  E.  W. 

Denslow,    Dorothea    H. 

Diederich,    Hunt. 

Dietsch,    C.    Percival. 

Di   Filippo,  A. 

Donato,    Giuseppe. 

Dougherty,    Louis   R. 

Doyle,   Alexander. 

Drevfuss,  Albert. 

Duffy,    Richard    H. 

Dunbar,   Ulric   S.   J. 

Duncan,    Frederick   A. 

Dundas,   Verde   V. 

Dunn,   Emeline  A. 


621 


622 


LIST  OF  SCULPTORS 


Eberhard,    Robert   G. 

Eberle,   Abastenia  St.    Leger. 

Edstrom,   David. 

Ellerhusen,    Ulric   H. 

Ellis,  Joseph  B. 

Elmendorf,    Stella. 

Elwell,   F.   Edwin. 

Elwell,  John  H. 

Ennis,     Mrs.     Georgia    L. 

Enquist,     Mary    B. 

Erskine,    H.    P. 

Evans,  Rudulph. 

Everett,  Herbert  E. 

Eyre,  Louisa. 

Fairbanks,  Avard  Tenneson. 

Farnham,   Sally  James. 

Fasano,   Clara. 

Fenton,  Beatrice. 

Ferguson,   Eleanor   M. 

Ferrari,  Febo. 

Finkle,   Melik. 

Fiorato,  Noe. 

Fisk,    Mary    Stella. 

Fjelde,  Paul. 

Flanagan,   John. 

Fleming,   Henry   S. 

Fletcher,  Calvin. 

Foster,   Enid. 

Frank,  Herman. 

Franklin,    Dwight. 

Eraser,  James  E. 

French,   Daniel  C. 

Frey,    Erwin    F. 

Friedlander,    Leo. 

Frishmuth,    Harriet    Whitney. 

Fromen,  Agnes  Valborg. 

Fry,   Sherry. 

Fuchs,   Emil. 

Gafill,   Mrs.  J.  J. 

Gage,  Robert  M. 

Ganiere,    George   Etienne. 

Gardin,  Laura. 

Garrett,   Mrs.   Clara  P. 

Garrison,   Robert. 

Gelert,  Johannes. 

Gendrot,   Felix  Albert. 

George,   Margaret. 

Gleeson,   Mrs.  Adele   S. 

Glenny,  Mrs.  Alice  Russell. 

Glinsky,   Vincent. 

Goddard,   Ralph. 

Goldbeck,  W.  D. 

Goodelman,    Aaron. 

Goodwin,  Frances. 

Gosselin,    L.    H. 

Gotthold,    Rozel. 

Grabach,  John  R. 

Grafly,    Charles. 

Graham,   Miss   Payson. 

Gregory,  John. 

Griffith,    Mrs.    C.    F. 

Grimes,  Frances. 

Grub,  Henry. 

Gruppe,   Karl  H. 

Gudebrod,   Louis  A. 

Guernsey,    Eleanor    L. 

Haag,  Charles. 

Hale,    Mrs.  , William. 

Hall,   Mrs.  Frances  D. 

Hall,     Susan. 

Hammer,   Trygve. 

Hammon,   Walter   E. 

Hammond,  Edith. 

Hannaford,   Mrs.   Alice  Ide. 

Harley,    Charles   R. 

Hartley,  Joseph. 

Harvey,  Eli. 


Harwood,   Sara  B. 

Haswell,  Ernest  Bruce. 

Hawks,    Rachel    Marshall. 

Hayes,   Louisa. 

Hazen,  Wilhelmina. 

Heber,  Carl  A. 

Heidel,  Mrs.  Edith  O. 

Heinzelmann,    Samilla. 

Heller,  Eugenie  M. 

Helmuth,  Jessie  L. 

Hering,    Mrs.    Elsie   Ward. 

Hering,    Henry. 

Herzel,  Paul. 

Hibbard,   Frederick   C. 

Hibben,    Helene. 

Higgins,  Eugene. 

Hill,    Clara. 

Hinton,  Charles  Louis. 

Hiramoto,     M. 

Hitchcock,    D.    H. 

Hoard,    Margaret. 

Hoffman,   Malvina. 

Hoffman,    Maximilian  A. 

Hollister,    Antoinette    B. 

Holm,  Victor  S. 

Holsman,  Elizabeth  T. 

Holzer,  J.  A. 

Holzhauer,   Emil. 

Honig,  George  H. 

Hopkins,   Mark. 

Hovenden,  Martha. 

Howland,  Edith. 

Hubbell,    Katherine. 

Humphreys,  Albert. 

Humphriss,    Charles    H. 

Hunt,  Esther. 

Hunter,    David. 

Hyatt,   Anna   Vaughn. 

Jackson,    Mrs.    May    H. 

Jacobs,   Michel. 

Jaegers,   Albert. 

Jaegers,   Augustine. 

Jennewein,   Paul. 

Jenny,  .Charles  O. 

Jewett,    Mrs.    Edward    H. 

Jirouch,   Frank  L. 

Johnson,    Mrs.   Adelaide. 

Johnson,  Burt  W. 

Johnson,   Grace   Mott. 

Johnston,    Winant    P. 

Joseph,  Adelyn  L. 

Judd,    Neale    M. 

Jusko,  Jeno. 

Kagann,    Theo. 

Kaldenberg,   F.   R. 

Karfunkle,   David. 

Kaufman,    Jean    F. 

Keck,   Charles. 

Kelly,  James  E. 

Kendall,   Elisabeth. 

Kendall,   William    Sergeant. 

Kern,  Josephine  N. 

Keyser,   Ephraim. 

Keyser,    Ernest    Wise. 

Kilenyi,  Julio. 

Kimball,    Isabel   M. 

Kitson,    Henry    Hudson. 

Kitson,  Theo  Alice  Ruggles. 

Klauder,   Mary. 

Knight,   Charles  R. 

Kohler,    Rose. 

Kohlmann,    Mrs.   Rena  Tucker. 

Kohus,    Frank. 

Konti,  Isidore. 

Korbel,    Mario   Josef. 

Kownatzki,  Hans. 

Kuemmel,  Cornelia  A. 


LIST  OF  SCULPTORS 


623 


Ladd,  Mrs.  Anna  Coleman. 

Laessle,  Albert. 

Lalonde,    J.    W. 

Lang,   Charles   M. 

Langley,   Mrs.    Sarah. 

Langton,   Mrs.    Berenice   Frances. 

Lathrop,    Elinor    L. 

Laurent,  Robert. 

Laurie-Wallace,  John. 

Lawrie,   L.  O. 

Lawson,  Jessie   M. 

Lawson,   Mrs.  Katharine   Stewart, 

Laybourn-Jensen,   L.    P. 

Lee,  Arthur. 

Lentelli,  Leo. 

Lenz,  Alfred  David. 

Linding,  Herman  N. 

Link,   B.    Lillian. 

Livezey,    W.    E. 

Lober,  Georg  J. 

Long,   Ellis  B. 

Longman,   Evelyn  B.      (Mrs.   Batchelder.) 

Lorenzani,    Arthur    E, 

Lovett-Lorski,  Boris. 

Lucas,  Albert   P. 

Lucius,   Florence   G. 

Lukeman,   Augustus. 

Luther,   Jessie. 

MacDonald,  Harold  L. 

MacMonnies,  Frederick  W. 

MacNeil,   Mrs.   Carol   Brooks. 

MacNeil,  Hermon  A. 

Mahoney,    John    H. 

Manship,    Paul   H. 

Marafifi,  Luigi. 

Marqulies,   Pauline. 

Martino,   Michel. 

Martiny,    Philip. 

Matthews,    Anna    Lou. 

Matzen,    Herman    N. 

Matzkin,    Meyer. 

May,  Beulah. 

Mayer,   Casper. 

Mayer,   Louis. 

Mayor,   Mrs.   Harriet  Hyatt. 

Mazur,   Wladyslaw. 

McCartan,  Edward. 

McClure,  Maud  Quinby. 

McCormack,    Mrs.   Nancy. 

McKenzie,   R.   Tait. 

McKinstry,   Grace   E. 

Meagher,    M.   T. 

Mege,  Violette. 

Meliodon,    Jules   Andre. 

Mellon,   Eleanor. 

Meyenberg,  John  C. 

Meyer,  A.   W. 

Meyer,   Enno. 

Mielziner,  Leo. 

Mikkelson,   Gwendolyn. 

Milione,   Louis. 

Miller,    Joseph    Maxwell. 

Milroy,    Harry    C. 

Miserendino,    Vincenzo. 

Mish,   Charlotte  R. 

Mitchell,  Eva  B. 

Mitchell,   Mrs.   Gladys  Vinson. 

Montana,    Pietro. 

Moore,    Mrs.    Lou    Wall. 

Morahan.    Eugene. 

Morse,    Jean    H. 

Mott-Smith,    May. 

Mowbray-Clarke,   John   F. 

Muller,   Mrs.   Olga  Popoff. 

Mundy,    Ethel    F.      (Wax    Portraits.) 

Murphy,    M.    Thomas. 

Murray,    Samuel. 


Musselman-Carr,   Myra  V. 

Myers,   Mrs.   Ethel. 

Nadelman,  Eli. 

Neal,   Grace  P. 

Neandross,    Sigurd. 

Nebel,    Berthold. 

Needham,  Charles  Austin. 

Newman,  Allen  G. 

Nichols,    Peggy. 

Nicolosi,    Joseph. 

Niehaus,   Charles   H. 

Noble,   W.   Clark. 

Norton,  Elizabeth. 

Novani,  Cossado. 

Novani,    Guilio. 

O'Connor,  Andrew,  Jr. 

Operti,   Albert. 

Ormond,   M.   Georgia. 

Packer,    Francis    H. 

Paddock,   Willard  D. 

Paeff,  Bashka. 

Paine,    Richard  G. 

Paolo,    C.    S. 

Paramino,  John  F. 

Parker,    John    F. 

Parsons,   Mrs.  E.  B.   Stevens. 

Partridge,   William   Ordway. 

Patigian,  Haig. 

Paulding,   John. 

Pell,   Ella   Ferris. 

Perera,  Gino. 

Perry,   Clara   G. 

Perry,   R.  Hinton. 

Perry,  Walter  Scott. 

Peterson,    Mrs.    Elsa   Kirpal. 

Philbin,   Clara. 

Piccirilli,    Attilio. 

Piccirilli,   Furio. 

Pierce,  Rowena  Elizabeth. 

Pietz,    Adam.      (Medalist.) 

Pitkin,    Caroline    W. 

Pogany,    W.    A. 

Polasek,  Albin. 

Pollia,   Joseph    P. 

Pope,   Alexander. 

Porter,  Bruce. 

Porter,    James. 

Porter,    Raymond    Averill. 

Portnoff,  Alexander. 

Potter,  Edward  C. 

Potter,    Nathan    D. 

Poupelet,    Jane. 

Pousette-Dart,   Nathaniel  J. 

Prahar,     Renee. 

Prasuhn,   John   G. 

Prendergast,    Charles   E. 

Proctor,  A.    Phimister. 

Putnam,    Arthur. 

Putnam,  Brenda. 

Quinn,    Edmond   T. 

Raab,   George. 

Rannus,   A.   W. 

Rathbone,   Edith    K. 

Raul,  Harry  Lewis. 

Ray,    Man. 

Rea,   John   L. 

Recchia,   Richard  H. 

Reinhart,   Stewart. 

Renzetti,   Aurelius. 

Rhind,   J.    Massey. 

Ricci,  Ulysses  A. 

Rice,  William  C. 

Richards,  Lee  Greene. 

Richards,    Mrs.    Lucy. 

Richards,  Myra  R. 

Ricketson,    Walton. 

Rider,   Charles  Joseph. 


624 


LIST  OF  SCULPTORS 


Rieppel,   Edwig. 

Ripley,  Lucy  Perkins. 

Risque,    Caroline    Everett. 

Riswold,    Gilbert    P. 

Robinson,   Alonzo  Clark. 

Robinson,    H.    L. 

Robinson,   Kathleen   B. 

Romano,   Nicholas. 

Rosenstein,    A. 

Roth,  F.  G.   R. 

Ruckstull,    F.   W. 

Rumsey,   Charles   Cary. 

Russell,    Charles    M. 

Ryden,  Henning. 

Ryerson,  Mary  M. 

Sabatini,    Raphael. 

Sahler,  Helen. 

Saint  Gaudens,  Annetta  Johnson. 

Saint  Lanne,  Louis. 

Salerno,   Vincent. 

Salvatore,    Victor. 

Sanford,   Edward   F. 

Sargent,    Margarett    W. 

Saville,   Bruce   Wilder. 

Sawtelle,   Mildred. 

Sawyer,  Edward  W. 

Scarpitta,    G.    S.    Cartaino. 

Schaafif,    Anton. 

Schlesinger,   Louis. 

Schoenfeld,    Lucille. 

Schonhardt,  Henri. 

Schuler,   Hans. 

Schweizer,   J.   Otto. 

Scofield.   William  B. 

Scott,   Charles   T. 

Scudder,  Janet. 

Serrao,  Mrs.   Luella  Varney. 

Severance,    Julia    G. 

Sherwood,  Ruth. 

Shonnard,    Eugenie   F. 

Shrady,    Henry    M. 

Shramm,   Paul    H. 

Sievers,  F.  William. 

Simmons,  Will. 

Simons,  Amory  C. 

Sims,   Ralph. 

Skoog,  Karl  F. 

Sleeth,    Mrs.    L.    MacD. 

vSloman,    Joseph. 

Smith,    Ishmael. 

Snyder,    Corydon   G. 

Sorenscn-Dieman,   Mrs.   Clara  B.   L. 

Spencer,   Edna  I. 

Spicer-Simson,    Theodore. 

Stackpole,    Ralph. 

Stagg,    Jessie    A. 

Stamato,   Frank. 

Stanson,  George  C. 

Stea,  Caesar. 

Stearns,   Mrs.   Neilson. 

Stephens,   George   Frank. 

Sterling,    Mrs.   Lindsey   Morris. 

Sterne,  Maurice. 

Stetson,  Katherine  B. 

Stimscn,  Anna   K. 

Stokes,   Frank  W. 

Stone,  Frank  F. 

Storrs,    John. 


Stouffer,   J.   Edgar. 
Stout,  Ida  McClelland. 
Strunk,   Herbert. 
Taake,    Daisy. 
Taft,   Lorado. 
Tew,    Marguerite. 
Theobald,   Mrs.   Elisabeth   S. 
Thompson,   Frederic   L. 
Thompson,   Nellie  L. 
Tilden,  Douglas. 
Torrey,    Mrs.    Mable    L. 
Troubetzkoy,  Paul. 
Tudor,    Rosamond. 
Turnbull,    Grace   H. 
Tyson,  Carroll  S.,  Jr. 
Urich,   Louis   J. 
Usher,  Leila. 
Vagis,    P.   G. 
Valentien,  Albert  R. 
Valentien,  Anna   M. 
Valentine,    Edward   V. 
Van  Wart,  Ames. 
Vedder,   Elihu. 
Von   der   Lancken,   Frank. 
Vonnoh,    Mrs.   Bessie  Potter. 
Wagner,  Frank  H. 
Wagner,    Mary   North. 
Walker,    Mrs.    Marian    D.    B. 
Walker,  Nellie  V. 
Walker,   Sophia  A. 
Ward,  Winifred. 
Warrick,  Mrs.  Meta  Vaux. 
Washburn,    Mary. 
Weber,  F. 
Webster,  Mary  H. 
Weinert,   Albert. 
Weinger,   Maria   P. 
Weinman,  Adolph  A. 
Weir,  John  F. 
Wells,    Charles    S. 
Wells,   Newton  A. 
Wendt,    Mrs.   Julia   M.   Bracken. 
Weston,    Morris. 
Wheeler,    E.    Katharine. 
Wheelock,    Mrs.    Lila   Audubon. 
Whitney,    Mrs.    Gertrude    V. 
Whitney,   Margaret  K. 
Wiechmann,   Margaret  H. 
Will,  Blanca. 
Williams,  Walter  Reid. 
Winn,  James  H. 
Winter,    Mrs.    Alice    B. 
Wolcott,  Frank. 
Wood,    Grant. 
Woodruff,    Mrs.   Corice. 
Worden,  Laicita  W. 
Wright,    Alice    Morgan. 
Yandell,  Enid. 
Young,    Mahonri  M. 
Zaring,  Louise  E. 
Zeitlin,    Alexandre. 
Zettler,   Emil   Robert. 
Zim,   Marco. 
Zimm,  Bruno  Louis. 
Zimmele,   Mrs.   Margaret. 
Zinser,   Paul   R. 
Zolnay,  George  Julian. 


List  of  Illustrators 


For   addressess  and   biographical   notes,   see  section  beginning  page   329 
Including  etchers,   engravers,    cartoonists. 


Abbott,   Mrs.  Elenore  Plaisted. 

Abbott,  S.  N. 

Abdy,    Mrs.    Rowena   Meeks. 

Abrahamsen,    Christian. 

Addams,    Clifford.       (Etcher.) 

Ahrens,    Ellen    W. 

Aid,   George    C.    (and   Engr.) 

Aikman,  Walter  M.      (Wood  Engr.) 

Albright,    Mrs.   Gertrude   P.      (Etcher.) 

Aldrich,    G.    Ames.      (Etcher.) 

Aldrich,    Mrs.   Cornelia  W. 

Allenderj   Mrs.   Nina  E. 

Alexander,   C.   Grear. 

AUiscn,   Merle. 

Ament,    R.    S.      (Etcher.) 

Amick,    Robert. 

Andersen,    Martinus. 

Andersen,   Ellen  Graham,      (and  Etcher.) 

Anderson,   Frederic  A. 

Anderson,  Harold. 

Anderson,  Karl. 

Anderson,    Percy    E. 

Anderson,  Ronald. 

Andreasen-Lindborg,    Mrs.    I.     (Etcher.) 

Andrew,   Richard.      (Etcher.) 

Ansbacher,  Jessie.      (Etcher.) 

Arlent-Edwards,  S.   (Engr.) 

Armfield,   Maxwell. 

Armington,  Frank  M.      (Etcher.) 

Armington,    Mrs.    Caroline   H.      (Etcher.) 

Arms,   John   Taylor.      (and   Etcher.) 

Armstrong,  'Sam. 

Armstrong,  Voyle   N. 

Arnold,   F.   Mcintosh. 

Arthurs,   Stanley   M. 

Asanger,  Jacob.      (Etcher.) 

Ashe,  Edmund   M. 

Aspell,  S.   B. 

Avinoff,   A.      (Etcher.) 

Aylward,  William  J. 

Babcock,  E.  J. 

Babcock,  R. 

Baer,   Herbert   M.      (Engr.) 

Bailey,   Henry    Lewis.      (Etcher.) 

Bailey,    Henry    T. 

Bailey,   Minnie   M. 

Bailey,   Vernon  Howe. 

Bains,  Ethel  F.  B. 

Baker,    George    O. 

Balano,    Mrs.    Paula. 

Balcom,   Lowell,      (and    Etcher.) 

Baldridge,   C.  L. 

Baldwin,  B.  C. 

Balfour,   Mrs.   Helen. 

Balink,  H.  C.     (Etcher.) 

Ball,    Linn    B. 

Ball,    Robert. 

Ballinger,    H.   R. 

Bancroft,   Milton   H. 

Barclay,    McClelland. 

Barile,   X.   J.      (and   Etcher.) 

Barns,   Cornelia. 

Barone,  Antonio.        (Etcher.) 

Barr,  William. 

Barratt,  Watson. 

Barry,   John    J.      (Etcher.) 

Bartlett,  Dana,      (and  Etcher.) 


Bartlett,  Minnie  E. 

Barton,   Loren.      (Etcher.) 

Barton,   Ralph. 

Batchelor,  C.  D. 

Bates,   Mrs.   Bertha  Corson  Day. 

Baum,  Walter  E. 

Baumann,    Gustave.      (Engr.   and   I.) 

Bayha,    Edwin   F. 

Beall,   C.   C. 

Beard,   Alice. 

Beard,   Daniel   Carter. 

Beard,  Lina. 

Beatty,  John  W.     (Etcher.) 

Becher,  Arthur  E. 

Beck,  Raphael. 

Becker,    R.   C.      (Cartoonist.) 

Belcher,  Hilda. 

Belcher,   Mrs.   Martha  W.      (Etcher.) 

Benda,  W.   T. 

Bender,   R.   T. 

Beneker,    Gerrit   A. 

Bennett,   Francis  I. 

Benson,    Frank   W.      (Etcher.) 

Benson,   Leslie   L. 

Benton,   Harry   Stacy. 

Berninghaus,    Oscar   E. 

Berryman,  Clifford  Kennedy. 

Bettis,    Charles   H. 

Betts,  Anna  Whelan. 

Bevans,   M.   T. 

Bevans,   Mrs.   M.  T. 

Bicknell,   W.   H.   W.      (Etcher.) 

Biesel,    H.    Fred. 

Bigelow,   Charles  C. 

Biggs,  Walter. 

Birch,  Reginald  B. 

Bird,   L.  P. 

Bishop,    Harold    S.      (Etcher.) 

Black,    Norman   I. 

Blair,  E.  R. 

Blake,    Donald. 

Blake,  James  Henry. 

Bleil,   Charles.      (Etcher.) 

Blondheim,  Adolphe   W.      (and   Etcher.) 

Blum,   Alex.   A.      (Etcher.) 

Blumenschein,  Ernest  L. 

Blumenthal,    M.    L. 

Boebinger,    Charles   W. 

Boger,  Fred. 

Bohnert,   Herbert. 

Bonsall,   Elizabeth   F. 

Bonsall,   Mary  W. 

Booth,  Franklin. 

Booth,  Hanson. 

Borein,   Edward.      (Etcher.) 

Borglum,  Gutzon. 

Bosworth,   Winifred.      (Etcher.) 

Both,   Armand. 

Both,  W.  C.     (Etcher.) 

Botke,   Mrs.   Jessie   Arms. 

Bouclie,    Louis.      (Etcher.) 

Bowdoin,   Harriette. 

Bower,    M.    L. 

Boyd,    Rutherford. 

Bradbury,    Charles   Earl. 

Bradley,   Will. 

Brandegee,  Robert  B. 


625 


626 


LIST  OF  ILLUSTRATORS 


Bransom,   Paul. 

Brasz,   Arnold  F.      (and   Etcher.) 

Braunhold,    Louis.      (Etcher.) 

Braxton,  William   E. 

Break,  Joseph. 

Bredin,  Christine  S. 

Brehm,  George. 

Brehm,  Worth. 

Breitmayer,   M.   V.      (Etcher.) 

Bremond,   Jean   Louis.      (Etcher.) 

Brennen,  Charles. 

Brett,   Harold  M. 

Breuer,   H.  J. 

Breul,   Harold  G. 

Brewster,   Mrs.   Anna  Richards, 

Bridge,    Mrs.    Evelyn.      (Etcher.) 

Briggs,  C.  A.      (Cartoonist.) 

Brigham,    William    Edgar. 

Brinkerhofif,  Robert  Moore. 

Britton,   James,      (and   Engr.) 

Brock,  Emma  L. 

Brodzky,   Horace,      (and  Etcher.) 

Broedel,  Max. 

Brooks,  Amy. 

Broun,  Aaron. 

Brown,    Arthur  _  William. 

Brown,   Benjamin   C.      (Etcher.) 

Brown,    Bolton.      (Etcher.) 

Brown,    Mrs.    Charlotte   Harding. 

Brown,  Ethel  P. 

Brown,   Grace  E. 

Brown,  G.   M. 

Brown,   Harold   Haven. 

Brown,   Howard   V. 

Brown,  Howell  C.     (Etcher.) 

Brown,  Ray. 

Brown,   Roy  H. 

Brown,   Ted.      (Cartoonist.) 

Brown,   Walter   Francis. 

Browne,   Belmore. 

Browne,  George  E.     (Etcher  and  Lith.) 

Browne,   Margaret  F. 

Browning,   G.   Wesley. 

Brubacker,  J.   O. 

Brundage,   William  T. 

Brunner,  F.  Sands. 

Buck,    C.    C.      (Etcher.) 

Budd,  Charles  Jay. 

Budd,   Katherine   Cotheal. 

Budell,  Ada. 

Buffington,   Eliza. 

Buffum,    Katharine   G. 

Bull,    Charles   Livingston. 

Bunner,    Rudolph    F. 

Burd,    Clara   M. 

Burdick,   Doris. 

Burleigh,  Sydney  R. 

Burlingame,    Charles   A. 

Burnham,  Mrs.  Anita  W.   (Etcher) 

Burr,   George   Elbert,      (and  Etcher.) 

Burton,    S.    C.       (and    Etcher.) 

Button,  Albert  Prentice. 

Buzby,   Rosella  T. 

Byram,  Ralph  S. 

Cady,  Harrison. 

Cahan,   Samuel. 

Cahill,   Arthur. 

Caldwell,  C.  H. 

Calewaert,  Louis.      (Etcher.) 

Calkins,   Loring   Gary.      (Etcher.) 

Cameron,  W.  R. 

Campbell,    Floy. 

Campbell,  Heyworth. 

Carleton,   Clifford. 

Carlsen,   John   H.      (Etcher.) 

Carlson,  Mrs.  Margaret  M. 

Carnell,  Althea  J. 


Carpenter,  D.   S. 

Carpenter,   Mrs.   Helen   Knipe. 

Carr,  Gene. 

Carr,   Michael  Carmichael.      (Engr.) 

Carter,  Pruett  A. 

Caseau,   Charles   H. 

Caser,  Ettore.      (Etcher.) 

Casey,  F.  deSales. 

Casey,  John. 

Cassatt,  Mary.      (Etcher.) 

Cassell,   John   H.    (Cartoonist). 

Cassidy,   I.   D.    Gerald. 

Catalano,  Guiseppi.     (Etcher.) 

Chamberlin,  F.  Tolles.      (Etcher.) 

Chambers,  C.  Bosseron. 

Chambers,  Charles. 

Chambers,  Robert  W. 

Chandler,    George   W.      (Etcher.) 

Chandler,  Helen  C.   (and  Etcher.) 

Chapin,   Archibald  B.      (and   Cartoonist.) 

Chapman,  Carlton  T. 

Chapman,    C.    Durand. 

Chapman,   Charles   S. 

Chapman,  Kenneth  M. 

Chase,  Edward  L. 

Chase,  Mrs.  Elsie  R.   (and  Etcher.) 

Chase,   Sidney  M. 

Chase,   Wendell   W.      (Etcher.) 

Cheney,  Mary  Moulton.      (Des.) 

Chouinard,   N.   M. 

Christy,  Howard  Chandler. 

Church,    Frederick    S.      (and    Etcher.) 

Churchhill,   Francis   G.    (and   Etcher.) 

Clapp,   William   H.      (Etcher.) 

Clark,  Alson   Skinner. 

Clark,  Herbert  F.   (and  Etcher.) 

Clark,    Sarah    L. 

Clarke,    Mrs.    Corneille.      (Des.) 

Cleland,   T.    M. 

Clement,    Carl    F. 

Clinedinst,    B.   West. 

Closson,   William   B.      (Wood  Engr.) 

Clute,  Mrs.  Beulah  Mitchell. 

Coan,  Helen  E. 

Coe,  Ethel  Louise. 

Cole,  Timothy.      (Wood  Engr.) 

Coleman,   Glenn    O. 

Coleman,  Ralph  P. 

Coles,  Ann  C. 

Colson,   Frank  V.      (Etcher.) 

Colwell,   Elizabeth,      (and  Etcher.) 

Comstock,   Enos. 

Comstock,   Frances   B. 

Conley,   Sarah  Ward. 

Conneley,  Marc. 

Conrey,  Lee  F. 

Cook-Smith,   Jean    Beman. 

Cooke,    Edna. 

Cooke,    Jessie    Day. 

Coolidge,  John. 

Cooper,  F.   G. 

Cootes,   F.  Graham. 

Copeland,    Charles. 

Cornwell,  Dean. 

Corson,   Mrs.   Katherine  Langdon. 

Cotton,  John  W.      (I.  and  Etcher.) 

Coulter,   Mary  J. 

Covey,  Arthur  S.   (Etcher.) 

Cowen,   Perc. 

Cowles,   Edith  V. 

Cowles,  Genevieve  A. 

Coxe,  Reginald.      (Etcher.) 

Coyne,  Will,      (and  Etcher.) 

Cram,   Allen   Gilbert,      (and   Etcher.) 

Cramer,  Conrad.      (Etcher.) 

Crampton,  R.   McM. 

Crank,  James  H. 


LIST  OF  ILLUSTRATORS 


627 


Crawford,    Mrs.    Brenetta   H. 

Crawford,  Earl   Stetson. 

Crawford,   Isabel. 

Crise,   S.   S. 

Cronenwett,    Clare    (Etcher.) 

Crooks,  Forest  C. 

Crosby,   Raymond  M. 

Crossman,  W.  H.     (Etcher.) 

Crowell,   Margaret. 

Crummer,   Mary.      (Etcher.) 

Cucuel,  Edward. 

Culbertson,  Queenie. 

Culter,  Richard. 

Currier,    Cyrus   B. 

Currier,    Walter    Barron.      (Etcher.) 

Curtis,    William   Fuller. 

Dahlgreen,  Charles  W.     (Etcher.) 

Daingerfield,   Elliott. 

Daland,   Katharine   Maynadier. 

Damianakes,   Cleo.      (Etcher.) 

Damrosch,  Helen  T. 

Darling,  Jay  Norwood. 

Dart,  Harry  G. 

Daughertv,  James,      (and  Etcher.) 

Davis,   Charles   Percy. 

Davis,  Stuart. 

Davis,  William  S.      (Etcher.) 

Davis,  W.   Triplett. 

Dawson-Watson.      (Engr.) 

Dayton,  F.   E. 

Dayton,  Mrs.  Helena. 

Decker,    Mrs.    E.    Bennett. 

De   Cordoba,    Mathilde.      (Etcher.) 

De    Kruif,    Henri    G.      (Etcher.) 

De  Land,  Clyde  Osmer. 

de  Leslie,  Paul. 

De  Mar,  John  L. 

De    Maris,    Walter. 

Deming,  Edwin  W. 

Deremeaux,   Irma. 

Desch,   Frank  H. 

De  Thulstrup,  Thure. 

Detwiller,  F.  K.      (I.  and  Etcher.) 

Dewey,  Alfred  J. 

Dewey,    Mrs.   Julia   Henshaw. 

De  Witt,  Jerome  P. 

De  Wolf,   Wallace   L.      (Etcher.) 

Dial,    May. 

Diedricksen,  Theodore,  Jr.   (and  Etcher). 

Dielman,   Frederick,      (and  Etcher.) 

Dieterich,   Waldemar  F. 

Dillaye,   Blanche    (and  Etcher.) 

Dinsmore.   E.   J. 

Dismant,   Marion. 

Dixon,  Maynard. 

Dodd,    M.    D.      (Etcher.) 

Dodge,   Chester  L. 

Dodge,  Ozias.      (Etcher.) 

Donahey,    James    H.      (and    Cartoonist.) 

Donaldson,   Alice   W. 

Donlevy,  Alice  H. 

Doolittle,   Harold   L.      (Etcher.) 

Doran,   Robert  C.      (Etcher.) 

Doskow,  Israel. 

Dow,  A.  W.     (Etcher.) 

Drake,  Frank  C. 

Drake,  Will  H. 

Drayton,   Mrs.   G.   G. 

Dreyfuss,  Byron  G. 

Dryden,  Helen. 

Drysdale,  A.   J. 

Du  Brau,   Gertrud. 

Du  Mond,  F.   Melville. 

Du   Mond,   Frank  Vincent. 

Dunbar,  Harold  C. 

Duncan,  Charles  W. 


Duncan,   Geraldine  R.      (Etcher.) 

Dunn,  Harvey  T. 

Dunton,  W.  Herbert. 

Duphiny,   Wilfred. 

Dupre,   E. 

Dwiggins,    W.    A.      (Etcher.) 

Dyer,  H. 

Easley,  Jo. 

Eastman,   Ruth. 

Eaton,  Hugh  M. 

Eaton,    Mrs.    Margaret   Fernie. 

Eby,   Kerr,      (and  Etcher.) 

Eddy,  H.  B. 

Edholm,  C.  L. 

Edrop,    Arthur   N. 

Edwards,  Edward  B. 

Edwards,   George  Wharton. 

Edwards,  Harry  C. 

Edwards,   Robert. 

Eland,    John    Shenton.      (and    Etcher.) 

Elder,  Arthur  J. 

Elliott,   Elizabeth   Shippen   Green. 

Elliott,   Hannah. 

Elwell,  John  H.     (Etcher.) 

Emerson,  Arthur  W.      (and  Etcher.) 

Emerson,   C.    Chase. 

Emerton,  James  H. 

Emmet,  Lydia  Field. 

Emrich,  Harvey. 

Engler,    Arthur.       (Engr.) 

Enright,   Mrs.    Maginel  Wright. 

Enright,  Walter  J. 

Ertz,  Edward  F.     (and  Etcher.) 

Ertz,  Gordon. 

Eskridge,   Robert  L.      (Etcher.) 

Essig,  George  Emerick. 

Evans,  Grace  L. 

Evans,  John  W.     (Wood  Engr.) 

Fairbanks,  J.   Leo.      (Etcher.) 

Fairchild,  C.  Willard. 

Falls,   Charles  Buckles. 

Falls,  De  Witt  Clinton.     (Comic.) 

Fangel,  Henry  Guy. 

Fangel,  Mrs.  Maud  Tousey. 

Paris,  Ben  Howard. 

Farnham,   Paul. 

Farnung,   Helen   M.      (Etcher.) 

Farrell,    Mrs.    Katherine    Levin.      (Etcher.) 

Fassett,  Truman  E. 

Faulkner,   Herbert   W.      (and   Engr.) 

F'ay,   Clark 

Fay,   Nancy. 

Felker,  Ruth  Kate. 

Fellows,  A.   P.      (Etcher.) 

Fenderson,   Mark. 

Ferguson,    Elizabeth   F. 

Fernbach,    Agnes   B.      (Etcher.) 

Ferriss,  Hugh,      (and   Etcher.) 

Field,  Hamilton  Easter.      (Etcher.) 

Fincken,  James  H.      (Etcher.)    • 

Fink,    Denman. 

Fiorentino-Valle,  Mrs.   Maude. 

Firestone,   I.   L. 

Fischer,  Anton  Otto. 

Fischer,  Mrs.  M.  E.  S. 

Fisher,  Bud. 

Fisher,   Harrison. 

Fisher,  William  E. 

Fisk,  H.  T. 

Fiske,  Gertrude.      (Etcher.) 

Fitsch,  Eugene   C.      (Etcher.) 

Fitts,    Mrs.    Clara    Atwood. 

Fitzpatrick,    Daniel    Robert.       (Cartoonist.) 

Flagg,  James  Montgomery. 

Fleming,   Henry  S. 

Fogarty,  Thomas. 


628 


LIST  OF  ILLUSTRATORS 


Foote,    Mary. 

Forbell,    Charles. 

Forbes,    Helen    K.      (Etcher.) 

Foringer,  A.  E. 

Foster,  Ralph  L. 

Foster,  W.   F. 

Forsythe,    Clyde. 

Fournier,   Alexis  J. 

Fox,    Fontaine.      (Cartoonist.) 

France,   J.    L. 

Frantz,    Marshall. 

Eraser,    Malcolm. 

Frederick,    Edmund. 

French,  Frank,      (and  Wood  Engr.) 

Fries,   Charles  Arthur. 

Frost,  Arthur  B. 

Frost,    John. 

Frueh,  Alfred  J. 

Frye,   Mary  H. 

Fuertes,  Louis  Agassiz. 

Fuhr,    Ernes':. 

Fuller,  Arthur  D. 

Fuller,   Ralph   Briggs. 

Furlong,   Charles. 

Gag,  Wanda  H. 

Gage,    George   W. 

Gaghon,  Clarence  A.      (Etcher.) 

Gale,  Walter  R. 

Gallagher,    Sears.      (Etcher.) 

Galli,  Alfredo. 

Garbett,  Mrs.  Cornelia  B. 

Gardiner,    Eliza    D.      (Engr.) 

Gardner,    Donald. 

Gardner,   Hamlin. 

Garratt,  Arthur. 

Garrett,   Anna. 

Garrett,  Edmund  H.      (and  Etcher.) 

Garrett,  Theresa  A.      (Etcher.) 

Gasbarro,   Nicola. 

Gaul,   C.  G. 

Gaul,  Gilbert. 

Gaylor,   Wood.      (Etcher.) 

Gearhart,    Frances    H.      (Etcher.) 

Gearhart,  May.      (Etcher.) 

Gerstle,  Miriam  Alice,      (and  Etcher.) 

Getchell,   Edith   Loring.      (Etcher.) 

Gettier,   C.   R. 

Gibbs,  George. 

Gibson,   Charles  Dana. 

Giddings,   Albert    F.      (Etcher.) 

Giddings,   Frank. 

Gieberich,   O.    H.      (Etcher.) 

Gilbert,   C.   Allen. 

Gilbert,  Caroline.      (Etcher.) 

Giles,   Howard. 

Gillespie,   Jessie. 

Gilmore,   Ada.      (Wood    Engr.) 

Glackens,   William   J. 

Gleeson,  C.   K.      (Etcher.) 

Goddard,    Florence    M.      (Etcher.) 

Godwin,  Frank. 

Goetsch,  Gustav  F. 

Goldbeck,    Walter    Dean.      (Etcher.) 

Goldberg,   R.   L.      (Cartoonist.) 

Goldthwaite,    Anne.      (Etcher.) 

Goodwin,  Arthur  Clifton. 

Goodwin,  Philip  R. 

Gordon,  F.   C. 

Gore,   Thomas  H.      (Des.) 

Goss,  John. 

Graeff,  Robert  A. 

Graham,   Miss  Payson. 

Grant,  Blanche  C.      (and  Etcher.) 

Grant,    Frederic    M.      (and    Etcher.) 

Grant,  Gordon  H. 

Green,  Bernard  I.     (Etcher.) 

Green,   H.    H.      (and   Etcher.) 


Green,    Mildred   C. 

Greenberg,   Maurice. 

Greenberg,   Morris.      (Etcher.) 

Greend:,  Albert  V. 

Greening,  Harry  Cornell. 

Greenleaf,   Ray. 

Greer,  Blanche. 

Griflfin,  James  Martin.      (Etcher.) 

Griffith,    Louis    Oscar.      (Etcher.) 

Grigware,   Edward   T. 

Groome,-  Esther   M,      (Etcher.) 

Grosbeck,  Dan. 

Grosvenor,  Thelma  C. 

Grcut,    H.   L. 

Grub,   Henry. 

Gruppe,   Emile  A. 

Guarino,    S.   A.      (Etcher.) 

Guenther,    Lambert. 

Guerin,  Jules, 

Gunn,   Archie. 

Gutmann,   Bernhard. 

Hackett,   Grace  E. 

Hafifner,  F.  J. 

Haines,  B.  Aylesworth. 

Haines,  Marie  B. 

Hake,  Otto  E. 

Hale,   Robert.    (Etcher.) 

Halladay,  Milton  R. 

Hallowell,   George   H. 

Hambidge,   Jay. 

Hamilton,  George  T. 

Hamilton,  John   McLure. 

Hamilton,    Norah.      (Etcher.) 

Hamilton,  W.  D. 

Hammersmith,    Paul.      (Etcher.) 

Handy,    Ray   D.    (Clartoonist). 

Hanna,   Thomas  King. 

Hansen,    Armin    Carl.       (Etcher.) 

Hanson,    Henry. 

Hapgood,    Alice    H. 

Harbeson,    Mrs.    Georgiana    N. 

Harding,   George. 

Hardy,  Charles. 

Hardy,   Walter   M. 

Hare,    J.    Knowles. 

Harer,    Frederick   W.      (Etcher.) 

Harhberger,  Mrs.  F.  E.   S. 

Harrison,   L.    Birge. 

Harriton,   Abraham.      (Etcher.) 

Harshe,   Robert  B.      (Etcher.) 

Harting,   G.   W. 

Hartman,  Sydney  K. 

Hartwell,    George    K. 

Harvey,    George   W.      (Etcher.) 

Haskell,  Ernest.      (Etcher.) 

Hassam,    Childe.      (Etcher.) 

Hatherell,   W. 

Haweis,    Stephen.      (Etcher.) 

Hayes,    Lee.       (Etcher.) 

Hazell,  Frank. 

Hazeltcn,   I. 

Hazen,   Bessie   E.    (Etcher.) 

Heath,   Howard. 

Heil,  Charles  E. 

Heintzelman.   A.   W.      (Etcher.) 

Hekking,    William    M. 

Held,  Jack,      (and  Etcher.) 

Helwig,  A.  M. 

Heinzman,   Samilla. 

Heming,  Arthur. 

Hencke,    Albert. 

Hendrickson,   David. 

Henry,  J. 

Hentschel,   W.   E.      (Etcher.) 

Herman,  Leonora  O.      (Etcher.) 

Herzel,   Paul. 

Hess,  Alexander. 


i 


LIST  OF  ILLUSTRATORS 


629 


Heuermann,   Magda. 

Heustis,  Louise  L. 

Heyer,   H. 

Heyler,   Mrs.    Mary  P.   G. 

Higgins,  Eugene.     (Etcher.) 

Hilder,   G.    Howard. 

Hill,    Pearl    L. 

Hill,    R.    Jerome. 

Hill,    Sara    B.      (Etcher.) 

Hill,  W.  E. 

Hiller,   Le   Jaren. 

Hinchman,  Margaretta  S. 

Hintermeister,    Henry. 

Hinton,   Charles  Louis. 

Hirschberg,  Carl. 

Hitchcock,  D.   Howard. 

Hitchcock,    Lucius   W. 

Hittle,   Margaret  A.      (Etcher  and  I.) 

Hoban,  Frank  J. 

Hobart,    Clark.      (Etcher.) 

Hoffman,   G.  A.      (Etcher.) 

Holloway,   Edward   Stratton. 

Holloway,   Mrs.   Ida  H. 

Holmes,    Mrs.    Harriet   M.      (Etcher.) 

Holmes,    Ralph. 

Honore,   Paul,      (and   Etcher.) 

Hooper,  Mrs.  Annie  Blakeslee. 

Hooper,  Will   Phillip. 

Hopkins,    C.    E.      (Etcher.) 

Hopkins,    Edna   Boies.      (Engr.) 

Hoppe,  Leslie  F.     (Des.) 

Hopper,  Edward. 

Hopson,   William   F.      (Etcher   and   Engr.) 

Hornby,   Lester  G.      (and   Engr.) 

Horter,   Earl. 

Howard,  Eloise.      (Etcher.) 

Howitt,   John   Newton. 

Hubbard,    C.    D. 

Hubbard,   Kin. 

Huf,  Karl. 

Hufifington,   John   C. 

Hull,  Mrs.  Marie  A. 

Humphrey,   David  W. 

Hunt,   Leigh.      (Etcher.) 

Hunt,   Mrs.   Una   Clarke. 

Hunter,    Isabel. 

Hurley,  E.  T.      (Etcher.) 

Hurst,  L.   E. 

Hurtt,    Arthur    R. 

Hutaf,    August   W. 

Hutchison,   D.   C. 

Hyde,    Russell   Taber.      (Etcher.) 

Illian,    George. 

Ingham,   Mrs.  Elizabeth. 

Inglis.  John  J. 

Ingraham,  George  H.      (Etcher.) 

lorio,   Adrian   J.      (Etcher.) 

Ireland,    William. 

Irvin,   Rea. 

Ivins,   Mrs.   Florence  W.      (Engr.) 

Ivory,  P.   V.   E. 

Jackson,   Chevalier. 

Jackson,   Elbert  M. 

Jackson,   John  E. 

Jacoby,   Helen   Eaton. 

Jacques,    Bertha   E.      (Etcher.) 

James,  Arthur  E. 

Jameson,  Arthur  E. 

Jemne,    Mrs.    Elsa   L. 

Jenkins,    Mattie    M. 

Jessup,  Josephine. 

Johnson,   Frank  Tenney. 

Johnson,   Herbert. 

Johnson,   Margaret. 

Johnson,   Merle   De   Vore. 

Johnson,  P.  D. 

Johnson,  Robert. 


Johnston,  Robert  E. 

Jones,   Bayard. 

Jones,   Seth  C. 

Joseph,    Adelyn    L. 

Junge,    Carl    S. 

Justice,    Martin. 

Kaiser,    August. 

Karfunkle,   David.      (Etcher.) 

Katoaka,   Genjiro. 

Katzieff,   Julius  D.      (Etcher.) 

Kauffman,   G.   F. 

Kaufman,    Jean    Francois.      (Etcher.) 

Kearfott.   Robert. 

Keeler,   Charles   B.      (Etcher.) 

Kehrer,  F.   A. 

Keister,    Roy   C. 

Keith,    Mrs.    Dora    Wheeler. 

Keller,  Arthur  I. 

Keller,    Marie. 

Kellogg,   Edmund  P. 

Kelly,   James   E. 

Kelman,   Ben. 

Kemble,  E.  W. 

Kemp,   Oliver. 

Kendall,    Elisabeth. 

Kerns,  Fannie. 

Kevx,   George. 

Ketten,   Maurice. 

Keys,   Harry  J. 

Kidder,    B.    I. 

Kimball,  Alonzo   Myron. 

Kimball.  Katharine,      (and  Etcher.) 

King,    Charles   B.      (Etcher.) 

King,   Hamilton. 

King,   James   S.      (Etcher.) 

King,  W.  B. 

Kinney,   Mrs.   Margaret  West. 

Kinney,  Troy,      (and  Etcher.) 

Kirby,   C.  Valentine.      (Etcher.) 

Kirkpatrick,   W.   A. 

Klages,   Frank  H. 

Klein,   Isidore.      (Etcher.) 

Klepper,   Frank  X.    (Etcher.) 

Kline,   George. 

Kline,    Hibbard. 

Kline,   William   F. 

Klopper,   Zan   D. 

Knecht,   K.    K.      (Cartoonist.) 

Knight,  Charles  R. 

Knight,   Clayton. 

Knowles.   F.   McG. 

Koch,   William. 

Roller,  E.  Leonard. 

Krehbiel,   Mrs.    Dulah   Evans. 

Kroll,    Elise    M. 

Kromer,   E.  A. 

Kurtz,    Wilbur    G. 

Kusche.    Carlton   J. 

Lahey,   Richard  F. 

Lamb,    Mrs.    Ella  Condie. 

Lang,   Charles  M. 

Langlev,   Mrs.   Sarah. 

Larsen,    Charles    P.      (Etcher.) 

Lauber.   Joseph,      (and  Etcher.) 

Laurie-Wallace,   John. 

Lazzell,    Blanche.      (Etcher   and    Engr.) 

Leach,    Bernard.      (Etcher.) 

Leake,    Gerald. 

Learned,   Arthur   G. 

Le  Blanc,  Marie  de  Hoa. 

Lee,   Homer.      (Engr.) 

Lee.    Selma   V.    P.      (Etcher.^ 

Leich,    Chester.      (Etcher.) 

Leigh,   William   R. 

Leitner,    Leander. 

Lemos,    Frank   B.      (Etcher.) 

Lemos,    Pedro  J.      (and   Etcher.) 


630 


LIST  OF  ILLUSTRATORS 


Leppert,  Rudolph  E. 

Lester,   William   H.      (and   Etcher.) 

Lever,    Hayley.      (Etcher.) 

Levering,  Albert. 

Levy,    Alex    O. 

Levy,    Beatrice    S,      (Etcher.) 

Levy,    William    Auerbach.      (Etcher.) 

Lewis,  Allen,      (and  Etcher,  Engr.) 

Leyendecker,  Frank  X. 

Leyendecker,  G. 

Leyendecker   J.    C. 

Lincoln,    F.    Foster. 

Lindenmuth,  Tod.      (Etcher.) 

Lindsley,  E.  E. 

Linson,  Corwin  Knapp. 

Litle,   Arthur. 

Little,    Philip.      (Etcher.) 

Litzinger,   Dorothea  M.    (Etcher.) 

Livezey,    Will    E. 

Lloyd,   Mrs.  Lucile.      (Etcher.) 

Locke,   Charles  W.      (and  Etcher.) 

Loeb,   Dorothy.      (Etcher.) 

Logan,   Maurice. 

Logan,  Robert  Fulton. 

Loomis,    Chester. 

Lorraine,    Helen.      (Medical.) 

Lothrop,  Gertrude  Fay. 

Louderback,  Walter. 

Loven,    Frank   W. 

Low,   Will  H. 

Lowell,    Orson. 

Lowenheim,  F. 

Lum,   Mrs.   Bertha.      (Etcher.) 

Lund,   Harold. 

Lundborg,    Florence. 

Lungren,   Fernand. 

Luquiens,   Hue.   M.      (Etcher.) 

Lynd,   J.    Norman. 

Macdonald,   Arthur  N.      (Engr.) 

Macdonald,   Frank  E. 

MacDonald,  Harold  L. 

MacDonall,   Angus. 

MacGregor,    Mrs.    Sara   Newlin. 

MacKenzie,   Roderick  D. 

MacLaughlin,   Donald   S.      (Etcher.) 

MacLellan,    Charles   A. 

MacLeod,    A.    S.      (Etcher.) 

Mackall,    R.    McGill.      (Etcher.) 

Mackay,  William  A. 

Mahony,   Felix. 

Malm,    Gustav    N. 

Malone,  Mrs.  Laetitia  H. 

Manley,  Thomas   R.      (Etcher.) 

Manoir,    Irving    K. 

Mansfield,    Louise    B. 

Mansfield.   Mrs.    Blanche   McManus. 

Manual,    Margaret.       (Etcher.) 

Marcus,    Edwin.      (Cartoonist.) 

Marcus,   Peter.      (Etcher.) 

Margulies,   Joseph.      (Etcher.) 

Marin,  John.      (Etcher.) 

Marr,   Carl. 

Mars,  Ethel.      (Engr.  and  Wood  Blocks.) 

Marschener,    Arthur    A.       (Etcher.) 

Marsh,   Charles  H.      (Etcher.) 

Marshall,  Frank  W. 

Martinez,    Xavier.      (Etcher.) 

Mason,  Robert  Lindsay. 

Masters,   Frank  B. 

Mathews,   F.    S. 

Mathews,  Mrs.  Lucia  K. 

Mathieu,   Hubert. 

Mathus,   Henry.      (Lith.) 

Matthews,   Anna   Lou. 

Mattocks,   Muriel. 

Matzke,   Albert. 

May,  Thomas.      (Cartoonist.) 


Mayer,   "Hy."      (Caricaturist.) 

Mayfield,    Robert    B.      (Etcher.) 

Mayhew,   Nell   Brooker.      (Etcher.) 

McAlister,   R.    F. 

McAllister,   Ethel   Louise. 

McBey,    James.      (Etcher.) 

McBurney,    James    E. 

McCarter,   Henry. 

McCarthy.   C.  J. 

McCay,   Winsor.      (Cartoonist.) 

McClellan,   Mary, 

McComb,  M.  L. 

McConnell,   Emlen. 

McCormick,    Howard.         (and    Engr.) 

McCormick,    Katherine   H. 

McCouch,  Gordon  Mallet.     (Etcher.) 

McCutcheon,    John    T.      (Caricaturist.) 

McEwen,  Alexandrine. 

Mclntire,    Katherine   A.      (Etcher.) 

McKell,  James  C. 

McKernan,  Frank. 

McKinnon,    Mrs.    Mary. 

McLaughlin,   Charles  J. 

McLellan,    Ralph.    (Etcher.) 

McManus,    George.      (Cartoonist.) 

McMein,    Neysa    M. 

McMillen,   Mildred.      (Wood  Engr.) 

Mears,   Henrietta  Dunn. 

Meinshausen,  George,      (and  Wood  Engr.) 

Meissner,  Alfred. 

Melcher,   Mrs.  Bertha  Corbett. 

Mente,    Charles. 

Mentel,   Lillian. 

Mero,  Lee. 

Merrick,   Arthur  T. 

Merrill,   Hiram   C.      (Wood  Engr.) 

Merrill,    Katharine.      (Etcher.) 

Merritt,    Mrs.   Anna   Lea.      (Etcher.) 

Meteyard,   Thomas   B. 

Meyer,   Enno. 

Meyer,    Herbert. 

Meyerowitz,    William.     (Etcher.) 

Meyers,  Harry  M. 

Meylan,   Paul  J. 

MeyTier,  Walter. 

Micks,  J.  Rumsey. 

Mielziner,  Leo. 

Milhau,   Zella  de.      (and   Etcher.) 

Miller,    Richard   E. 

Miller,  William.     (Wood  Engr.) 

Mills,    Thomas   Henry,      (and   Etcher.) 

Milne,  David  B. 

Minard,   Florence   H. 

Mish,   Charlotte. 

Mitchell,   G.   Bertram. 

Moch,   Gladys  A.      (Etcher.) 

Modjeska,    Marylka   H.      (Etcher.) 

Monahan,  P.  J. 

Moore,  Benson  B. 

Moore,    Cecil    G. 

Moore,   Edwin  A.    (Etcher.) 

Moore,    Guernsey. 

Moorepark,  Carton. 

Mora,  F.  Luis. 

Moran,  E.  Percy.     (Etcher.) 

Moran,    Thomas.      (Etcher   and    Engr.) 

Morey,    Bertha    G.      (Etcher.) 

Morgan,   F.   Townsend.      (and   Etcher.) 

Morgan,   Lynn  T. 

Morgan,  Wallace. 

Morrison,  Zaidee. 

Morse,  Anne  Goddard. 

Mowat,   H.   J. 

Mulford,  Stockton. 

Munro,   Albert  A. 

Mura,   Frank. 

Murphy,  Mrs,  Ada  C. 


I 


LIST  OF  ILLUSTRATORS 


631 


Murphy,  H.  Dudley. 

Murphy,  Mrs.  Nelly  L. 

Musser,   Byron  J.      (and   Etcher.) 

Mutton,    Hilda.      (Etcher.) 

Myers,  Mrs.  Ethel. 

Myers,   E.   E.      (Etcher.) 

Myers,   O.   Irwin. 

Nankivell,   Frank  A. 

Nash,    Edgar    S. 

Needham,   Charles  Austin. 

Neill,   Frances  I.      (Etcher.) 

Neill,   Tohn  R. 

Nell,   Miss  Tony. 

Nelson,  G.  Patrick. 

Neubauer,    Frederick   A. 

Newell,  Peter. 

Newhall,  Harriot  B.      (Etcher.) 

Newman,  Anna  M. 

Nicholls,    Mrs.    Rhoda   Holmes. 

Nichols,   H.   D. 

Nichols,   Hobart. 

Nichols,  John  W.      (Etcher.) 

Nichols,    Spencer  B. 

Nicolson,    Mrs.    Edith    R. 

Nikolaki,  Z.  P.      (and  Etcher.) 

Niven,    Frank    R. 

Noll,    Arthur    H.      (Etcher.) 

Nordfeldt,    B.    J.    O.      (Engr.    and    Etcher.) 

Norris,  W.  J. 

Northcote,    Stafford   M.      (Wood   Engr.) 

Norton,  Clara  M. 

Nosworthy,   Mrs.   Florence  England. 

Nuderscher,  Frank,      (and  Etcher.) 

Nuyttens,  J.  P.      (Etcher.) 

Nye,  Elmer  L.     (Etcher.) 

Oakley,   Thornton. 

Oakley,    Violet. 

Oberhardt,    William.      (and    Etcher.) 

O'Connor,  Henry   M.      (Etcher.) 

Ogden,   H.  A. 

Ogden,    Lyman   G. 

Operti,  Albert. 

Opper,   Frederick   Burr.      (Comic.) 

Organ,  Marjorie   (Mrs.   Henri.)      (Cartoonist.) 

Orr,    Alfred    E. 

Orwig,   Louise. 

Osborn,   Frank.      (Etcher.) 

Osgood,    Harry    H.      (Etcher.) 

Otis,    S.    D.      (and    Etcher.) 

Outcault,    Richard   F.      (Comic.) 

Palmer,  Herman. 

Pancoast,   Morris  Hall. 

Pape,  Eric. 

Parker,   Cora. 

Parker,    Cushman, 

Parker,   Emma  A. 

Parkhurst,   Mrs.  Anita. 

Parkhurst,   C.    E. 

Parkhurst,    Thomas    Shrewsbury. 

Parrish,   Mrs,  Clara  Weaver.      (Etcher.) 

Parrish,    Maxfield. 

Parrish,    Stephen.      (Etcher.) 

Partridge,   Roi.      (Etcher.) 

Pattee,    Elsie    Dodge. 

Patterson,    Margaret. 

Paul,     Charles    R. 

Pauli,   Corinne. 

PauUin,    Telford. 

Paulus,   Francis   P.      (Etcher.) 

Paxon,  Edgar  S. 

Paxson,    Mrs.    Ethel. 

Pearce,    Edgar    L.      (Etcher.) 

Pearson,   Ralph  M.      (Etcher.) 

Peck,   Mrs.   Anne   Merriman. 

Peck,    Henry   J. 

Peets,   Orville  H.      (Etcher.) 

Pegram,  Fred. 


Peirce,    H.    Winthrop. 

Peixotto,    Ernest    C. 

Pell,    Ella    Ferris. 

Penfield,    Edward. 

Pennell,    Joseph.      (and    Etcher.) 

Perard,    Victor    S.      (and    Etcher.) 

Percy,    Mrs.    Isabelle    Clark. 

Perkins,    Mrs.   Lucy   Fitch. 

Perrett,   A.    Louise. 

Perrett,    Galen    J. 

Perry,    Raymond. 

Pescheret,    Leon   R.      (Des.) 

Peters,   C.   F. 

Peters,    Clinton. 

Petremont,   Clarice   M. 

Peugeot,    George    I. 

Peyton,   Alfred   C. 

Peyton,    Mrs.    Ann    Moon. 

Pfeiffer,  Fritz. 

Pfiefer,    Herman. 

Phelps,  Edith   C. 

Phillips,   Bert. 

Phillips,   John   Henry. 

Piazzoni,    Gottardo    F.    P.      (Etcher.) 

Pierce,  Anna  Harriet. 

Pirson,   Elmer   W. 

Plaschke,  Paul  A. 

Plowman,  George  T.     (I.  and  Etcher.) 

Plummer,  Mrs.   Ethel  M. 

Pogany,   W.   A.      (and    Etcher.) 

Polley,  Frederick.     (Etcher.) 

Pooke,    Marion    L. 

Poole,   Bert. 

Poole,    F.    V. 

Poole,   H.    Nelson,      (and   Etcher.) 

Poore,   Henry   R. 

Pope,    Mrs.    Marion   H. 

Popini,   Alexander. 

Post,   May  Audubon. 

Potter,   H.    S. 

Potthast,    Edward    H. 

Pousette-Dart,    Nathaniel.      (Etcher.) 

Powell,   Caroline  A.      (Wood  Engr.) 

Powell,  Doane. 

Powers,    John   M. 

Prather,  Ralph  Carlyle. 

Pratt,  Philip  H. 

Prendergast,  Charles  E.      (Etcher.) 

Prendergast,    Maurice  B. 

Preston,   Mrs.    Mary   Wilson. 

Price,    Edith    B. 

Price,  Margaret  E. 

Price,   Norman. 

Prince,   William   Meade. 

Prior,   Charles  M.      (Des.  and  Etcher.) 

Pullinger,    Herbert. 

Putnam,    Stephen    G.      (Wood   Engr.) 

Quinlan,   Will   J.      (Etcher.) 

Rae,    John. 

Rakeman,   Carl. 

Raleigh,   Henry. 

Ramsey,  L.  A. 

Randall,   D.   Ernest. 

Randall,    Paul    A. 

Randolph,   Lee.      (Etcher.) 

Rannells,  Will. 

Raschen,   Carl   M. 

Rau,  William. 

Raymond,  F.  W.     (Engr.  and  Etcher.) 

Reade,   Frank  E. 

Reed,   Earl  H.      (Etcher.) 

Reich,    Jacques.      (Etcher.) 

Reid,   Albert  Turner. 

Reindel,    William   G.      (Etcher.) 

Reinhart,   Stewart.      (Etcher.) 

Relyea,    Charles   M. 

Resler,  George  Earl.     (Etcher.) 


632 


LIST  OF  ILLUSTRATORS 


Reuterdahl,  Henry. 
Reynard,   Grant. 

Reynolds,    Frederick.      (Etcher.) 
Rhead,  Louis. 
Rice,  William  C 
Rice,    William    S. 
Richards,    George    M. 
Richards,    Harriet   R. 
Richards,    Lee    Greene. 
Richardson,   Clara  V. 
Richardson,  Frederick. 
Richardson,    Marion.      (Etcher.) 
Richter,  Wilmer  S. 
Riesenberg,    Sidney. 
Rigby,   Joseph   P. 
Riis,  Anna  M.      (Des.) 
Rion,   Mrs.   Hanna. 
Robbins,   F.   W.      (Etcher.) 
Robbins,  John  W.   (Etcher  and  Cartoonist.) 
Roberts,    Mrs.    Violet    K. 
Robinson,    Boardman. 
Robinson,    David. 
Roche,  M.  Paul.     (Etcher.) 
Rochon,   Louise. 
Rockwell,   Norman. 
Roderick,    Lulu   Zita. 
Rogers,   Barksdale. 
Rogers,  John  A.      (Etcher.) 
Rogers,   Louise   De   G.      (Etcher.) 
Rogers,    William   Allen.      (Caricaturist.) 
Rohn,    Ray. 
Root,    Robert    M. 
Rosenmeyer,    B.    J. 
Rosenthal,   Albert.      (Etcher.) 
Rosenthal,    David. 
Ross,  Gordon. 

Roth,    Ernest    David.      (Etcher.) 
Roth,    Herbert. 

Rowe,    Clarence,     (and    Etcher.) 
Rubins,  H.   W.      (Etcher.) 
Rungius,    Carl. 
Rush,   Olive. 
Russell,    Charles    M. 
Ruyl,   Louis  H.      (and   Etcher.) 
Ruzicka,   R.      (and   Etcher  and   Wood   Engr.) 
Ryan,  Douglas. 
Ryan,   Edward. 
Ryden,  Henning. 
Ryder,   Worth.      (Etcher.) 
Ryerson,    Margery.      (Etcher.) 
Ryland,  Robert  K. 
Sacker,  Amy   M. 
Saint,   Lawrence.      (Etcher.) 
Saint  John,  J.  Allen. 
Sandzen,    S.    Birger.      (Etcher.) 
Sanger,   William.      (Etcher.) 
Sarg,    Tony. 
Sarka,    Charles. 
Sartain,   Emily.      (Engr.) 
Sawyer,    Wells    M. 
Sax,    Carol    M.      (Des.) 
Schabelitz,    R.    F. 
Schell,    F'.    Cresson. 
Schick,    Fred    G. 

Schiffer,  Mrs.  Ethel  B.     (and  Etcher  and  Engr.) 
Schilling,  A.    O. 
Schmidt,  O. 
Schmidt,  O.   F. 
Schmitt,  Carl.    (Etcher.) 
Schnackenberg,   Henry  E.      (Etcher.) 
Schneider,    Arthur. 
Schneider,    Otto   J.    (and    Etcher.) 
Schoonover,    Frank   E. 
Schwab,   Eloise  M.      (Etcher.) 
Schwankovsky,    Frederick   J. 
Schwartzkopf,   Earl   C. 
Scott,  John  G. 


Seawell,    H.    W. 

Seipp,  Alice. 

Selden,    Miss   Dixie. 

Senecal,    Ralph   L. 

Senseney,  George.      (Etcher.) 

Seton,  Ernest  Thompson. 

Severance,   Julia   G.      (Etcher.) 

Seymour,    Ralph   F.      (I.    and   Etcher.) 

Shafer,   L.  A.      (and  Etcher.) 

Shannon,  Howard  J. 

Sharp,    J.    H. 

Sharpe,  Julia  G.      (Des.) 

Shaver,  J.  R. 

Sheffer,  Glen  C. 

Shepherd,  C.  G. 

Shepherd,   Clinton. 

Shepherd,  J.  C. 

Sheridan,   Frank  J.,  Jr. 

Sheridan,  John  E. 

Sherwood,    Mary   Clare. 

Sherwood,   William.      (Etcher.) 

Shilling,  Alexander.      (Etcher.) 

Shinn,    Florence    Scovel. 

Shope,   Henry   B.      (Etcher.) 

Shorey,    George   H. 

Shrader,  E.  Roscoe. 

Shramm,  Paul  H. 

Shuster,   William  H. 

Sibert,  Edward  S.      (Etcher.) 

Siemsen,    Frederick  F. 

Simmons,   Will,      (and  Etcher.) 

Simpson,    Mrs.    Clara    Davidson. 

Simpscn,   Maxwell   S. 

Sindelar,    Thomas   A. 

Skelton,   Leslie  J. 

Skidmore,  Lewis  P. 

Skidmore,  Thornton  D. 

Sloan,  J.   Blanding.      (and  Etcher.) 

Sloan,  John,      (and  Etcher.) 

Sloman,    Joseph. 

Small,   F.   W. 

Smedley,   Will   Larymore. 

Smillie,    George    F.      (Engr.) 

Smith,  Albert  A. 

Smith,  Albert  E. 

Smith,  Alice  R.   H.      (Engr.   and   Etcher.) 

Smith,  Dan. 

Smith,   Duncan. 

Smith,   E.    Boyd. 

Smith,   F.   Berkeley. 

Smith,    Howard. 

Smith,    Ishmael. 

Smith,  J.  Andre.      (Etcher.) 

Smith,  Jessie  Willcox. 

Smith,    W.    Granville. 

Smith,  Wuanita. 

Smyth,    S.    G. 

Snapp,  Frank. 

Snead,   Mrs.   Louise  W. 

Snyder,    Corydon   G.      (and   Etcher.) 

Sommer,   Julius   G. 

Sonn,    Albert    H. 

Sonnichsen,   Yngvar. 

Sottek,    Frank,      (and    Etcher.) 

Southwick,   Katherine. 

Spackman,    Cyril.      (Etcher.) 

Spader,  W.  E. 

Sparks,  H.   L. 

Sparks,   Will.      (Etcher.) 

Speakman,   Mrs.  Anna. 

Spencer,  Edna  I. 

Spencer,  Guy   Raymond.      (Cartoonist.) 

Spencer,  Hugh. 

Spero,   M.   J. 

Spradling,   Frank. 

Squire,   Maud   H.      (and   Etcher.) 

Squires,   C.   Clyde. 


LIST  OF  ILLUSTRATORS 


633 


Stackpole,   Ralph.      (Etcher.) 

Stahr,    Paul    C. 

Stanlaws,  Penrhyn. 

Stanley,  Frederic. 

Stark,    Otto. 

Stebbins,  Roland   S. 

Steele,  Frederic  Dorr. 

Steele,   Mrs.   Z.  de  L. 

Stephens,  Mrs.  Alice  Barber,    (and  Wood   Engr.) 

Stern,    Ethel   Louise.      (Etcher.) 

Sterne,   Maurice.      (Etcher.) 

Sterner,  Albert. 

Stevens,  Dalton. 

Stevens,    Dorothy.      (Etcher.) 

Stevens,   E.   D. 

Stevens,   Mrs.   Helen  B.      (Etcher.) 

Stevens,  Thomas  Wood.     (Etcher.) 

Stevens,   W.    D. 

Stevens,   Will   Henry.      (Dcs.) 

Stewart,  Le  Conte. 

Stewart,  Robert  W. 

Stimson,   John    Ward. 

Stoddard,    Frederick   L. 

Stone,  Walter  King. 

Stoner,  Harry. 

Stoops,  Herbert  M. 

Storrs,   John.      (Etcher.) 

Stover,    Allan    James. 

Stowell,    M.    Louise. 

Strahan,    Alfred    W. 

Straus,    Mitteldorfer. 

Street,   Frank. 

Stringfield,    Vivian    F. 

Strohl,  Clififord  H. 

Strothman,    Fred. 

Stroud,  Clara. 

Stroud,   Mrs.  Ida  W.     (Des.) 

Stubbs,    Mary    H. 

Stuever,  Celia  M.     (Etcher.) 

Sturgeon,    Ruth.      (Etcher.) 

Sturges,   Dwight   C.      (Etcher.) 

Sturges,    Lee.      (Etcher.) 

Sturtevant,   Louisa  C. 

Suhr,   F.  J. 

Sullivant,   T.    S. 

Summers,   Dudley. 

Summers,    Ivan    F. 

Swain,   Francis  W.    (Etcher.) 

Swan,  Florence  W. 

Sweeney,  W.  K. 

Swift,    Ivan.      (Etcher.) 

Swift,   Ted   S.      (and   Etcher.) 

Swisher,  P.  M. 

Sykes,    C.    H. 

Tafts,   C.   H. 

Tallmadge,    Thomas    E.       (Etcher.) 

Taylor,   Charles  J. 

Taylor,  Edgar  J. 

Taylor,   H.    W. 

Taylor,   William   F. 

Taylor,  W.  L. 

Teague,  W.  D. 

Telling,   Elizabeth.      (Etcher.) 

Ten    Eyck,    John   A.      (Etcher.) 

Thiede,  Henry  A. 

Thiem,   Herman   C. 

Thompson,  F.  Leslie.     (Etcher.) 

Thompson,  G.  A.      (Des.) 

Thompson,    Hannah.      (Etcher.) 

Thompson,  John  Edward. 

Thomson,    Rodney. 

Thomson,  William  T. 

Thrasher,   Leslie. 

Thum,   Patty  P. 

Titcomb,  M.  Bradish. 

Tittle,  Walter. 

Titus,  Aime  B. 


Tobin,    George   T. 

Tolman,   R.      (Etcher.) 

Tolson,   Norman.      (and   Etcher.) 

Townsend,   Harry   E.      (and   Etcher.) 

Train,    H.    Scott. 

Trask,   J.   E.   D. 

Treidler,   Adolph. 

Triggs,   Floyd   W.      (Cartoonist.) 

True,   Allen   Tupper. 

Tschudy,    H.    B. 

Tuttle,  Mrs.  Mildred  J. 

Tyler,  Ernest  F.      (Des.) 

Tyler,   James   G. 

Ullman,    Mrs.   Alice  Woods. 

Ulp,   Clifford   M. 

Underwood,  Clarence  F. 

Upton,    Florence    K. 

Valentine,  DeAlton. 

VanBuren,  Rae. 

Van  Dresser,  William. 

Van    Gorder,    L.    Emerson. 

VanSloun,   Frank  J.      (Etcher.) 

VanWerveke,  George. 

Varian,   George. 

Varian,    Lester   E.      (Etcher.) 

Vedder,  Elihu. 

Venanzi,    Carlo   Gino.      (Etcher.) 

Ver   Beck,    Frank. 

Verbeek,  Gustave.      (Etcher.) 

Verheyden,    Francois.      (Etcher.) 

Verrees,   J.    Paul.      (Etcher.) 

Vetter,   Mrs.   Cornelia  C.      (Etcher.) 

Vice,  H.  S. 

Vivian,    Calthea.      (Etcher.) 

Voight,  Charles  A. 

Von    der   Lancken,    Frank. 

Vondrous,  John  C.      (and  Etcher.) 

Von  Gottschalck    O.  H. 

Von   Hofsten,   H. 

Von'Schmidt,  Harold. 

Wack,   Henry  W. 

Wadsworth,   Wedworth. 

Wager-Smith,    Miss    Curtis. 

Wagner,  Frank  H. 

Wagner,  Mary  N. 

Wagner,   Rob. 

Walker,  A.   B. 

Walker,    Dugald    S. 

Walker,  Sophia  A.     (Etcher.) 

Walker,   William   H.      (Caricaturist.) 

Walkowitz,    Abraham.      (Etcher.) 

Wall,  Bernhardt.      (Etcher.) 

Ward,    E.    F 

Wargy,  Armand.      (Etcher.) 

Warner,    Everett    L.       (Etcher.) 

Warren,   Harold   B. 

Warrick,    Mrs.    Meta    Vaux. 

Washburn,   Cadwallader.      (Etcher.) 

Watkins,    W.    Reginald. 

Watson,  Agnes  M. 

Watson,  Amelia  Montague. 

Watson,   Ernest  W. 

Watson,  Mrs.  Eva  Auld. 

Watson,   Henry    S. 

Watt,    Barbara    H. 

Watt,    William   G.      (Wood   Engraver.) 

Waugh,   Coulton.    (Etcher.) 

Waugh,   Frederick   J. 

Webb,    Margaret   Ely.      (and   Etcher.) 

Weber,  F.      (Etcher.) 

Weber,    Mrs.    Sarah   S.    S. 

Webster,    Harold   T. 

Webster,    Herman   A.      (Etcher.; 

Weddell,   Iris.      (Etcher.) 

Weedell,  Hazel,      (Etcher.) 

Weill,  Edmond.      (Etcher.) 

Weinrich,   Agnes.      (Etcher.) 


634 


LIST  OF  ILLUSTRATORS 


Weldon,    Charles    D. 

Wells,   Newton  A. 

Welsh,   H.    Devitt.      (and   Etcher.) 

Wentworth,   Adelaide   E.      (Etcher.) 

Werntz,  Carl  N. 

Wesselhoeft,   Mary   Eraser. 

Westerman,    Harry    James.      (and    Cartoonist.) 

Wetherell,   E.   K.   K. 

Wheeler,  Cleora. 

Wheeler,    Laura. 

White,  Alden.      (Etcher.) 

White,  Gilbert. 

Whiteham,   May. 

Whitehead,    Walter. 

Whiting,  John  D. 

Whitmoor,   Robert  H. 

Whitney,  Isabel  L. 

Wiggins,   Sidney.      (Etcher.) 

Wilder,   Ralph.      (Caricaturist.) 

Wildhack,  Robert  J. 

Wilimovsky,    Charles   A.      (Etcher.) 

Wilke,   William  H.      (Etcher.) 

Will,    Blanca. 

Williams,    Mrs.   Clara   Elsene. 

Williams,  Charles    D. 

Williams,  Gaar. 

Williams,  John  A. 

Williams,   John   Scott.      (Etcher.) 

Williams,  Reed.      (Etcher.) 

Williamson,   J.    Maynard,   Jr. 

Wilson,    Edward   A. 

Wilson,    Frederick. 

Wilson,  Mrs.  Rose  C.  O'Neil. 

Wilson,  Vaux. 

Winkler,   John   W.      (Etcher.) 

Winner,  Margaret  F. 

Winslow,   Mrs.   Eleanor  C. 

Winslow,  Henry.     (Engr.  and  Etcher.) 

Winstanley,  John  B. 

Winter,   Mrs.  Alice  Beach. 

Winter,    Charles   A. 

Winter,  Ezra. 

Winter,    Milo. 

Wirth,    Anna    M. 


Wittmark,  Edgar  F. 

Wolever,  Adeleine. 

Wolcott,  Frank.     (Etcher.) 

Wolf,  Mrs.  Eva  M.  N. 

Wolfe,  George. 

Wolflf,    Otto. 

Womrath,   A.    K. 

Wood,   Franklin  T.      (Etcher.) 

Wood,  Jessie  P. 

Wood,  Virginia  H.      (Etcher.) 

Woodbury,    C.    O. 

Woodward,   Ellsworth. 

Woodward,  J.  Douglas. 

Woodward,  Stanley  W.     (and  Etcher.) 

Woolrych,   Mrs.   Bertha  H. 

Woolrych,  F.  Humphrey  W. 

Worcester,  Albert.     (Etcher.) 

Worden,    Laicita    W. 

Wores,  Theodore. 

Workman,    David    Tice.      (Etcher.) 

Wray,  Henry  R.      (Etcher.) 

Wrenn,    Charles    L. 

Wright,   Charles  H. 

Wright,  Charles  L. 

Wright,    George    H. 

Wright,    Margaret    Harden.      (Etcher.) 

Wright,    Mrs.    M.    Louise. 

Wyeth,  N.  C. 

Yens,  Karl  (and  Etcher.) 

Yeomans,  Walter  C.     (Etcher.) 

Yohn,  F.  C. 

Young,    Arthur.      (Cartoonist.) 

Young,   C.  Jac.      (Etcher.) 

Young,  Mahonri  M.     (Etcher.) 

Young,  William  C. 

Zarini,   E.    Mazzoni.      (Etcher.) 

Zeigler,  E.   P. 

Zeigler,  Lee  Woodward. 

Zim,   Marco.      (Etcher.) 

Zimmele,   Mrs.   Margaret. 

Zimmerman,  Eugene.     (Caricaturist.) 

Zinser,  Paul  R. 

Zogbaum,  Rufus  F. 


List  of  Portrait  Painters 

For  addresses  and  biographical  notes,  see   section  beginning  page   329 


Adam,  David  L. 
Albright,  Adam  E. 
Allen,  Greta. 
Allen,  Mrs.   Marion  B, 
Anderson,  A.  A. 
Archambault,  A.   MargarettJ 
Baer,  William  J. 
Baker,  Mrs.  E.  G. 
Barnard,   Elinor  M. 
Baxter,  Martha  W. 
Beaux,  Cecilia. 
Beck,  Otto  Walter. 
Belcher,  Hilda. 
Bellows,  George. 
Benson,  Frank  W. 
Benziger;  August. 
Betts,  Louis. 
Blackman,   Mrs.  Carrie. 
Blum,  Alex.  A. 
Bohm,  Max. 
Bonsall,   Mary  W. 
Borie,  Adolphe. 
Boston,  Joseph  H. 
Boynton,  G.  R. 
Brandegee,  Robert. 
Breckenridge,  Hugh. 
Bredin,  R.  Sloan. 
Brewer,  N.  R. 
Brush,   G.   de  Forest. 
Bryant,  Wallace. 
Burbank,  E.  A. 
Burd,  Clara  M. 
Burdette,  Hattie  M. 
Burdick,   Doris. 
Burdick,  Horace  R. 
Bush-Brown,   Mrs.   H.   K. 
Cahill,  Arthur. 
Caliga,  I.  H. 
Calvert,  E. 

Campbell,   Blendon  R. 

Campbell,  Mrs.  H.  E.  O. 

Cauldwell,  Leslie  G. 

Chambers,  C.   B. 

Chapin,  Lucy  C. 

Chase,  Mrs.  Adelaide  C. 

Chase,  Joseph   C. 

Chittendon,  Alice  B. 

Clark,  Adele. 

Clarkson,  Ralph  E. 

Claus,  W.  A.  J. 

Cole,  Griffith  B. 

Cole,  Thomas  C. 

Cole,  Timothy. 

Coles,  Anne  C. 

Colles,  Gertrude. 

Comins,  Eben. 

Conkling,  Mrs.  Mabel. 

Conrow,  Wilford. 

Cotton,  William. 

Cox,  Mrs.  Louise. 

Crampton,   R.   McN. 

Crawford,  Mrs.   Brenetta. 

Crawford.  Earl  Stetson. 

Curran,  Charles  C. 

Curtis,    Constance. 

Davey,  Randall. 

Davis,  Cecil  Clark. 


DeCamp,  Joseph. 
DeGroot,  Adriaan. 
Dieterich,  L.   P. 
Dieterich,  W.  F. 
Dunbar,   Harold  C. 
Duphiney,  Wilfred. 
Edwards,  Kate  F. 
Emerson,   Edith. 
Emmet,  Lydia  F. 
Farjeon,   Eliot. 
Fehrer,  Oscar. 
,    Fellows,   Mrs.   Cornelia. 
Foote,   Mary. 
Franzen,  August. 
Frechette,   Marie  M. 
French,   Frank. 
Funk,  Wilhelm. 
Geer,   Grace  W. 
Gerrer,   Robert  G. 
Gies,  Joseph  W. 
Gilbert,  Caroline. 
Gimeno,  P. 

Griffith,  Mrs.  C.  B.  V. 
Haines,   Marie  B. 

Hamilton,  John  McLure. 

Hart,  Letitia  B. 

Hasselbusch,  Louis. 

Hawthorne,   Charles  W. 

Hazard,  Arthur  M. 

Hecht,   Victor  D. 

Henri,   Robert. 

Herter,  Albert. 

Holsman,    Elizabeth   T. 

Honig,  George  H. 

Hopkins,  James  R. 

Hopkinson,  Charles   S. 

Horter,  Earl. 

Hulbert,  Charles  A. 

Hutchens,   Frank  T. 

Hyde,  William  H. 

Ingham,  Elizabeth  H. 

Ipsen,  Ernest. 

Jacobs,  Michel. 

Jacobson,  Oscar  B. 

James,  Alexander  R. 

Jongers,  Alphonse. 

Kahili,  Joseph   B. 

Kaufifmann,  Jean  F. 

Kelly,  J.  Redding. 

Ketcham,  Susan  M, 

King,  Albert  F. 

Kiralfy,  Verona  A. 

Kopman,   Benjamin. 

Lang,  Charles  M. 

Lathrop,   Mrs.  Ida  P. 

Laughlin,  Alice   D. 

Leisenring,   Mrs.   Mathilde. 

Levy,  William  A. 

Lichtenauer,  J.   M- 

Lloyd,   Mrs.   Mary  W. 

Lockman,  DeWitt. 

Loomis,  Chester. 

Low,  Mrs.  Mary  F. 

Lynch,  Anna. 
MacChesney,   Clara  T. 
MacKay,  Edwin. 

McKinstry,  Grace  E. 

635 


636 


LIST  OF  PORTRAIT  PAINTERS 


McLane,  Jean.     (Mrs.  Johansen.) 

Maesch,    Ferdinand. 

Maynard,   Richard   F. 

Meiss.ner,  Alfred. 

Melvill,    Mrs.    Antonia. 

Meyerowitz,   Mrs.   Jennie. 

Meyvis,  Aime  L. 

Miller,   Richard  E. 

Miller,  William  H. 

Moch,    Gladys  A. 

Mohlte,  J.  A. 

Montague,   MJrs.   H.   L.  T. 

Mora,  F.  Luis. 

Nave,   Royston. 

Nelson,  George  L. 

Newman,  Anna   Mary. 

Newman,   Mrs.  Willie  B. 

Nitzsche,   Elsa  K. 

Nyholm,  Arvid  F. 

Olinsky,   Ivan   G. 

Page,   Mrs.   Marie  D. 

Paolo,   C.   S. 

Parker,  Lawton. 

Patterson,  Ambrose. 

Paxton,   William   M. 

Peck,   Mrs.   Anne   M. 

Perkins,  Mrs.  Mary  S. 

Perry,   Mrs.  Lilla  C. 

Philipp,   Robert. 

Place,   Mrs.  Vera  C. 

Piatt,  Alethea  H. 

Poole,  Abram. 

Poole,  Frederic  V. 

Pope,  Alexander. 

Raditz,  Lazar. 

Rand,   Mrs.   Filing  G.  E. 

Ravenscroft,    Ellen. 

Reaser,   Wilbur. 

Reevs,  George  M, 

Reid,  Robert. 

Reynolds,  Wellington. 

Richardson,  Frank  H. 

Richardson,    Margaret   F. 

Richardson,   Mary   Neal. 

Rittenberg,    Henry   R. 

Rockwell,   Evelyn   E. 

Rogers,  Louise. 

Root,   Robert  Marshall. 

Rouland,   Orlando. 

Saint,   Lawrence. 

Sandona,   Matteo. 

Sargent,  John  Singer. 

'Schevill,   W.  y. 

Scott,   Katharine. 

Seideneck,  George. 


Sherman,   Mrs.   Ella  B. 
Shulz,  Mrs.  Ada  W. 
Simpson,   M.   Stewart. 
Smith,  F.   Carl. 
Smith,  Howard. 
Smith,  Jessie    Wilcox. 
Solomon,   Harry. 
Sonnichsen,  Yngvar. 
Speicher,  Eugene. 
Stanton,   Lucy   May. 
Stearne,   Maurice. 
Sterner,  Albert. 
Story,   George  H. 
Streatfeild,  Josephine. 
Taggart,   George  H. 
Taylor,  Ida  C. 
Thomas,   P.  K.   M. 
Thomas,   S.   S. 
Thompson,  Juliet. 
Thorne,  William. 
Tidden,   John    C. 
Timmons,   E.  J. 
Tolman,   Stacy. 
Troccoli,  G.  B. 
Trotta,    Guiseppe. 
Tschudi,   Rudolf. 
Turner,  Helen   M. 
Tuttle,  Ruel  C. 
Tyler,  Bayard  H. 
Ufer,  Walter. 
Ullman,  Eugene  P. 
Volk,  Douglas. 
Vonoh,   Robert. 
Vcs,  Hubert. 
Vysekal,   Mrs.   Ella  B. 
Wager-Smith,   Miss  Curtis. 
Wagner,   Frank  Hugh. 
Walker,  Ferdinand  G. 
Walker,  H.  O. 
Walker,  Sophia  A. 
Walter,  Martha. 
Weir,   John  F. 
Wetmore,  M.  M, 
Whitfield,   Emma  M. 
Whittemore,  _W.  J. 
Wicks,   Heppie   En  Earl. 
Wieczorek,   Max. 
Winter,  Mrs.  Alice  E. 
Woelfle,  Arthur  W. 
Woolf,  S.  J. 
Woolrych,  F.   H.  W. 
Wright,   George. 
Yeweli,   George  H. 
Zcgbaum,  R.  F. 
Zylinsky,  Andrew, 


Who's  Who  Among  Art  Dealers 


NEW   YORK   CITY 


Abbott,     W.    H.,     46    Greenwich    Ave. 
Tablets. 

Ackerman     Galleries,    10    E,    46th    St. 
Sporting-  paintings   and  prints. 

Aimone    Galleries,     42    East    49th    St. 
Paintings. 


AINSLIE    GALLERIES, 

615  Fifth  Ave.,  at  49th  St. 
Paintings    by 
George     Inness 

Advertigcment Page  XI 


Albert's  Art  Shop,  306  Columbus  Ave. 

Etchings,  Frames. 
Allen,     Louis    L.,     521     Madison    Ave. 

Antiques. 

AMERICAN  ART  ASSOCIATION, 
AMERICAN   ART    GALLERIES, 

Madison  Square  South, 
Entrance  6  E.   23rd  St. 

Public    Sales    and    Appraisals    of 
Art   and    Literary    Property. 

AMERICAN     ART     NEWS     CO.,     Inc., 

786  Sixth  Ave. 
Publishers  of  "The  American  Art 
News,"  weekly  newspaper  of  the 
art  world.  Subscription  $4.00;  single 
copies  15  cents.  Advertising  rates 
on  application. 

ANDERSON,    GALLERIES,    THE, 

Park  Avenue  and  59th  St. 
Auction    sales    of    paintings,    books, 
prints,    furniture    and    all    classes    of 
art    objects.      Expert    appraisals    for 
insurance  and  tax  purposes. 

Appleton  &  Cox.,  1  S.  William  St. 
Insurance. 

Arden  Gallery  (Arden  Studios,  Inc.), 
599  Fifth  Ave.  Decorative  Antiques, 
Objects  d'  Art. 

ARLINGTON    GALLERIES, 

274  Madison  Ave.  bet.  39th  and  40th 
Sts.  Important  American  and  For- 
eign Paintings.  Special  Exhibitions 
during    the    season. 

Art  House,  Inc.,  The,  12  E.  41st  St. 
Chinese  Porcelains;  American  Por- 
traits. 

Artists'    Framing   Co.,    57   E.    59th    St. 

Artists'  Packing  and  Shipping  Co.,  139 
W.  54th  St. 

Atkinson  Mentzer  &  Co.,  80  E.  11th 
St.    Art  Publishers. 


BABCOCK,  E.,  C. 

Est.    by   John    Snedecor 
19  East  49th  Street 
FINE    PAINTINGS 
Restoring,  Regilding,  Artistic  Fram- 
ing,   Bi-weekly    Exhibitions   of   work 
by  American   Artists. 

Baumann,  A.  O.,  54  W.  37th  St    Ivory. 

Beers     Brothers,     110     W.     30th     St., 
Frames. 

Belmaison        Gallery,        Wanamaker's, 
Broadway  and   9th   St. 

Binney    &    Smith    Co.,    81    Fulton    St. 
Crayons   and   Chalks   for   every  use. 

Bohne,    J.,    34    W.    28th    St.      Framer, 
Restorer. 

Bonaventure,  E.  F.,   536  Madison  Ave. 
Pictures,  Objects  of  Art. 

Boswell-Frankel     Agency,     786     Sixth 
Ave.     Art  Publicity  Service. 

Bourgeois,     Stephan,     668    Fifth    Ave. 
Paintings. 

Bower,    A.     C,    665    Fifth    Ave.      Old 
Drawings,  Paintings. 

Bradley,  Milton,  23  Wash.  Place.  Sup- 
plies. 

Braus    Galleries,    358    Fifth    Ave.    and 
422  Madison  Ave.     Pictures,  Frames. 

Brentano,     Fifth    Ave.     and    27th     St. 

Books,   Photographs. 
Brown,  Mrs.  Lucy  Fletcher,  22  E.  60th 

St.     Japanese  Prints. 
Brown-Robertson     Co.,      415     Madison 

Ave.     Pictures,   Prints,    Frames. 
Brummer,     Joseph,     43     E.     57th     St., 

Antique      Sculpture,      French      and 

American  Modern  Paintings, 

BUDWORTH,   W.   S.   and   Son,   424  W. 

52d  St.  Telephone  Circle  7510. 
Collecting,  Packing  and  Shipping 
Exhibitions  a  Specialty.  Paintings, 
Sculpture,  Bric-a-Brac,  etc.,  care- 
fully handled.  Agents  for  The 
American   Federation   of   Arts. 

Burlingham,  H.,  6  E.  49th  St.     Oriental 
Objects. 

Busse,   George,   20   E.   48th  St.     Prints. 

BUTLER,  D.  B.  &  Co.,  601  Madison 
Ave.;  bet.  57th  and  58th  Sts. 
Mezzotints,  Etchings  and  Color 
Prints  (limited  editions)  by  noted 
engravers.  Artistic  Framing  of  all 
Periods.  Regilding.  Paintings  cleaned, 
varnished,   restored  and  transferred. 


637 


638 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


New   York  City — Continued 


Cabaret,  Paul  E.,  &  Co.,  126  Eleventh 
Ave.     Bronze  Works. 

Caldarazzo  of  Naples,   130  E.   54th   St. 
Rugs,  Tapestries. 

Calo,     D.,     &     Sons,     128    W.     49th    St. 
Paintings,   Frames. 

Canessa,    C.    &    E,    1    West    50th    St. 
Antiques. 

Carvalho    Brothers    of    Portugal,     520 
Madison  Ave.     Antique   Textiles. 

Casteras  Brothers,  667  Lexington  Ave. 
Plaster  Casts. 


Chait,     S., 
Antiques. 


E.     41st     St. 


Chinese 
An- 


Charles  of  London,  2  W.  56th  St 
tiques. 

Chiantelli,  Charles,  678  Lexington  Ave. 
Restoration  of  Paintings,  Reproduc- 
tion of  carved  furniture  and  frames. 

Cipriani,    H.,    518    Madison    Ave.      Old 

Paintings  and  Furniture. 
Clarke's    Art    Rooms,    42    E.    58th    St. 

Auctioneer. 


CLAPP   &   GRAHAM    CO., 

420  Madison  Avenue. 


Antiques, 
Paintings. 


Cluny   Gallery,   1   E.    47th   St. 
antiques. 


French 
Collectors'  Galleries,   40  E.  50th  St. 


CONSIGNiVIENT   ARTS,    INC., 
A.  J.  Halow,  President, 
222   West   59th    St. 

Objects  of  Art, 
Paintings,    Rugs,    etc. 

Crichton  Brothers,  636  Fifth  Ave.  Old 
English  silver  and  Reproductions. 

Daniel,  Charles,  2  West  47th  St. 
American  paintings. 

Dawson,  H.  F.,  9  E.  56th  St.  Tapes- 
tries, Antiques. 

Day  &  Meyer,  Murray  &  Young,  Inc., 
304  E.  61st  St.  Packing  and  Ship- 
ping. 


Detroit  Publishing  Co.,   471  Fifth  Ave. 
Photographs. 

DEVOE  &  RAYNOLDS  CO.,   INC., 

101  Fulton  St.,  New  York. 

The  oldest  and  largest 

Manufacturers  of  Artists*  Materials. 

Established    1754. 


Fifth     Avenue. 
68   W.  58th   St. 


De     Zayas,     M.,     630 
Paintings. 

Dillon,    Charles  F,   P., 
Restorer. 

Di   Salvo   Brothers,    443   Madison  Ave. 
Antique  Furniture. 

Dreher  &  Co.,  507  W.  43rd  St.    Frames. 

Dubernet,  L.  A.,  44  E.  8th  St.     Minia- 
ture Frames  and  Cases. 

DUDENSING    GALLERIES, 

MODERN   PAINTINGS 
Water  Colors 

45  West  44th  Street  New  York 


Durand-Ruel 
ings. 

Duveen  Brothers,   720  Fifth  Ave. 
tiques. 


12    E.    57th    St.,    Paint- 
An- 


EHRICH    GALLERIES, 

707   Fifth   Avenue 
0\t  Masiitxsi 

Advertisement    Page    VIII 


English  Antique  Co.,  578  Madison  Ave, 
ELMORE   STUDIOS, 

Edward  N.  Elmore, 

3-5   West   28th   Street. 

Garden    Furniture, 

Antiques  and  Reproductions. 

FARMER,    EDWARD   I.,    Inc., 

Chinese   Antiques 

and   Arts, 

Lamps  and   Shades, 

15   East  56th   St.  New  York 

Favor,    Ruhl    &    Co.,    43    W.    23rd    St. 
Artists'  Materials. 


DEMOTTE   OF   PARIS, 

8  East  57th  Street. 

Works    of    Art    of 
the    Middle    Ages. 

Advertisement Page  VI 


FEARON    GALLERIES, 

25  West  54th   St.,   New  York. 

PORTRAITS,    PRIMITIVES, 

LANDSCAPES,   DRAWINGS. 

Walter  P.  Fearon, 

Successor  to  Cottier  &  Co.       Founded  1873. 

Advertisement    Page  IX 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


639 


New   York  City — Continued 


PENNING,    JOHN, 

15  East  39th  Street 

PAINTINGS 
AVORKS   OP  ART 

FERARGIL    GALLERIES, 

(T.  H.  Russell,    F,  N.  Price) 

607   Fifth   Avenue 

American    Paintings, 

Tapestries   and    Works   of   Art. 

Fifth     Avenue     Auction     Rooms,     333 
Fourth  Ave. 

Fishel.    Adler  and   Schwartz   Co.,    338- 
342    E.    59th   St.     Engravings. 

FOLSOIVI    GALLERIES, 

104  West  57th  Street 
American    Paintings 
H.    G.    Dearth,    L.    P.   Dessar.   Bruce 
Crane,  J.  Alden  Weir,  Emil  Carlsen, 
W.  H.  Singer,  etc. 


Gordon,    W.   Lindsay,    1931    Broadway. 
Photographs,    Pictures,    Prints. 


FRENCH    AND    COMPANY, 
6    East    56th    Street, 
Antique  Tapestries, 
Furniture,  Textiles 

Advertisement    Page    V 


FRIDENBERG,  ROBERT,  22  West 
56th  Street. 
Engravings.  Largest  stock  in  the 
world  of  old  portraits,  historical 
documents,  autographs.  Broadsides, 
etc. 


H.  &  A.   C,   9   Central 
Artists'      Materials, 


Friederichs,  E. 
Park  West. 
Frames. 


FRINK,  I.  P.,  INC.,  239-43  Tenth  Ave., 
at  24th  St. 
Individual  Picture  Reflector.  Gallery 
Reflectors.  Picture  Lighting  Stand- 
ards. Special  attention  given  to  the 
lighting  of  individual  paintings. 
Send  for  catalague  422. 

Getz,    Edward    G.,    390    Madison    Ave. 
Chinese  Porcelains. 


GALLERIE    INTIME,  Anne  Pinneo, 
749  Fifth  Ave 
Paintings   by   Contemporary 
American    Artists. 

Gallery   open    Evenings   and    Sundays. 

Ginsburg    &    Levy,    397    Madison    Ave. 

Antique  Furniture. 
Glaenzer,     Eugene,    &    Co.,    705    Fifth 

Ave.     Antiques. 


GORHAM  CO.,  Fifth  Ave.  at  36th  St. 
Sculpture,  Sundials,  Fountains,  Ec- 
clesiastical Art.  Chalices,  Stained 
Glass  and  Sacred  Vessels.  Gorham 
Silver  Tableware,  Period  Silver,  Sil- 
ver Loving  Cups  and  Trophies. 

Advertisement   Page  XIV 


Greater  N.   Y.    Slide  Co.,   209  W.   48th 

St.     Lantern  Slides. 
Guerry,    Prosper,    360    West    55th    St. 

Restorer. 
Haas,  Joseph,  127  E.  59th  St.     Frames. 
Haas,     Julius    G.,     522    W.     157th     St. 

Pictures,   Frames. 
Hammacher,     Schlemmer    &    Co.,    133 

Fourth  Ave.     Tools. 
Hanfstaengl,    E.    F.,    153    W.    57th    St. 

Modern  Paintings,  Batiks,   Imported 

Reproductions. 
Harlow,    Arthur   H.,    «&    Co.,    712    Fifth 

Ave.  Etchings,  Engravings,  Paint- 
ings. 

Hartmann,  M,  H.,  39  E.  28th  St.  Ar- 
tists' Materials. 

Hawkes,  Joseph,  662  Sixth  Avenue. 
Photographer,  maker  of  Lantern 
Slides. 

Healey,     Sumner,     785     Madison    Ave. 

Antiques. 
Heaton,    Butler    &    Bayne,    437    Fifth 

Ave.     Stained  Glass. 
Heinigke    &     Smith,     26    E.     13th     St. 

Stained  Glass. 
Helburn.    William,    418    Madison    Ave. 

Publisher  Architectural  Books. 
Herter  Looms,   The,   841  Madison  Ave. 

American  Textiles,   Tapestries,   etc. 
Hudson  Forwarding  and  Shipping  Co., 

24  State  St. 

INTERNATIONAL    STUDIO,     Inc., 

786    Sixth   Ave. 

Publishers  of  "The  International 
Studio,"  monthly  magazine  of  art. 
Subscription  $6.00;  single  copies  60 
cents.  Advertising  rates  on  appli- 
cation. 

James  Dudley,  617  Lexington  Ave. 
Oriental   Art. 

Jarnow  &  Co.,  13  University  Place. 
Mirrors,  Frames. 

JULEY,  PETER  A.,  219  E.  39th  St. 
Photographer  to  the  National  Acad- 
emy of  Design,  Art  Students' 
League,  Architectural  League,  Water 
Color  Societies,  and  most  of  New 
York's   best   known   Artists. 

Kaldenberg's,  F.  W.,  Sons,  95  Fifth 
Avenue.     Ivory  Carvings. 

Kelekian,  Dikran,  709  Fifth  Ave.  Ori- 
ental Antiques. 


640 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


New  York  City — Continued 


Kendall  Studios,  2  E.  23d  St.  Paint- 
ings Photographed. 

Kennedy  &  Co..  613  Fifth  Ave.  Etch- 
ings,  Engravings. 

Keppel,  Frederick,  &  Co.,  4  E.  39th  St. 
Etchings,    Engravings. 

Keuffel  &  Esser  Co.,  127  Fulton  St. 
Drawing  Materials. 

Kingore,  H.  Grant,  668  Fifth  Ave. 
Paintings. 

Klrby-Champeau,  Inc.,  2  E.  23d  St. 
Gallery  lighting. 

Klackner,  George  C,  7  W.  28th  St. 
Modern  Paintings  and  Prints. 


KLEINBERGER     GALLERIES,     INC., 

725    Fifth    Ave.,    between    56th    and 
57th   Sts. 

Paintings  by  the  Primitives, 

ITALIAN 

DUTCH  AND  FLEMISH 

Advertisement Page    IV 


KNOEDLER,     M.,     &     CO.,     556     Fifth 
Ave.  at  45th  St. 

Oil  Paintings  by  Modern  and  Old 
Masters,  select  Water  Colors, 
choice  Engravings  and  Etchings, 
Artistic  Framing,  Regilding,  Paint- 
ings  Cleaned   and   Restored. 

Advertisement Poge     I 


Kouchakji     Freres,      707     Fifth     Ave. 
Oriental  Antiques. 

KRAUSHAAR,    C.    W., 

Art  Galleries 

680   Fifth   Avenue  New   York 

Paintings,    Etchings   and   Bronzes 

Lamb,  J.  &  R..  25  Sixth  Ave.    Ecclesi- 
astical and  Memorial  Art. 

LANDAU      (TONI)      PHOTOGRAPHIC 

CO.,  1  East  45th   Street. 
Reproductions    de    Luxe    from    both 
Old  and  Modern  Masters  in  color  or 
black  and  white,  framed  or  unframed. 
Etchings,  Lithographs,  Block  Prints. 

Lans     Curiosity     Shop,     554     Madison 
Ave.     Antiques. 

Laurent,  Robert,  106  Columbia  Heights, 
Brooklyn.     Hand  carved  frames. 

Laurier,    Joseph,    7th    Ave,    S.W.    cor. 
11th  St.     Artists'  Materials. 

Lawlor,     Frederick    A.,     238     Madison 
Ave.     Antiques,  Objects  of  Art. 

Lebrun,  L.,  48  W.  46th  St.     Frames. 

Lemcke  &  Buechner,  30  East  20th  St. 
Art  Books. 


LESCH,   RUDOLF,  13  West  42d  St. 
Highly  Artistic  Reproductions  of  Old 
and  Modern   Masters  of  All   Nations 
in  the  Exact  Coloring  of  the  Original. 
Each  25  to  40  cents  and  upward. 

Lewis     &     Simmons,     612     Fifth    Ave. 
Antiques. 


LEVY,    JOHN, 

559   Fifth   Avenue, 

Modern    Paintings 

Advertisement    Page   XII 


Little     Gallery,     The.     4    E.     48th     St. 
Crafts,   Exhibitions  and   Salesroom. 

Long   Sang   Ti   &   Co.,    323    Fifth   Ave. 
Chinese  Curios. 


LOUIS   XIV   ANTIQUE    CO.,    INC., 
9   East   55th   St.        C.   V.    Miller. 
Paintings,    Brocades,    Silks,    Velvets, 
Banners,     Chinese     Carvings,      Por- 
celains,   Chinzes,    Jewels,    Costumes, 
Laces,   Tapestries. 

McAllister-Keller   Co.,    176    Fulton    St. 
Lantern   Slides. 


MACBETH   GALLERY,  450  Fifth  Ave. 
at   40th   St. 

AMERICAN  PAINTINGS. 

Advertisement Page  II 


Madison    Galleries,     106    W.     57th    St. 
Paintings. 

Malcom      Gallery,      114      E.      66th      St. 
Exhibitions. 

MEDALLIC    ART   CO., 

137    East   29th   St. 

Medals,  Plaquettes,  Galvanos,  In- 
signias.  Reproductions  of  all  plaster 
models,    perfectly   made. 

Meder,  Ferdinand,  950  Broadway.     Old 
Prints,    Portraits. 

Melillo,  A.  F.,  265  Canal  St.    Paintings, 
Bindings. 

METROPOLITAN  MUSEUM  OF  ART. 
Fifth  Ave.  at  82d  St. 
Catalogues,  Photographs,  Color 
Prints,  Casts,  and  Post  Cards  of 
Works  of  Art.  Send  for  circulars 
giving   full   description   and   prices. 

Middelkoop,    Frans,    507   Madison   Ave. 
Dutch  Antiques. 

Milch,  D.,   131  W.   41st  St.     Frames. 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


641 


MILCH       GALLERIES      (E.      and 
Milch,   Inc.),  108  West  57th  St. 
American    Paintings    and    Sculpture. 
Etchings,  Framing.     Special  Exhibi- 
tions during  the  Season. 

Milch    &     Sm.alls,     939     Madison     Ave. 
Frames,   Pictures. 


New   York   City — Continued 
A. 


(See  Louis  XIV  Antique 


Miller,   C.   V. 
Co.) 


Minassian,    Kirkor,    18    East    57th    St. 
Antiques. 


Monif,     R.     Khan,     28 
Persian   Antiques. 


East    61st     St. 


MONTROSS      GALLERY,       550       Fifth 
Ave.,  above  45th  St. 

PAINTINGS,   SCULPTURE, 
WORKS  OF  ART. 
Advertisement Page 


III 


Mussmann,  Robert  B.,  144  W.  57th  St. 
Paintings,  Etchings,  Frames. 

NEWCOMB-MACKLIN     &    CO., 

233    Fifth    Ave.,    New    York 

Distinguished   Picture  Frames, 

Antique  Mirrors 

Decorative   Specialties 

Galleries,   Salesrooms   and  Factory 

State  and  Kinzie   Streets,   Chicago 

Nonnenbacher    &    Co.,    34   W.    36th    St. 
Mirrors,   Frames. 

Oberwalder's  Sons,  Charles,  716  Madi- 
son Ave.     Paintings. 


Of.      George     F., 
Frames. 

Olivotti,  A.,    &    Co. 
Objects  of  Art. 

Palette   Art   Co.,    The,    327   Fifth   Ave. 
Artists'  Material,  Frames. 


274     Madison     Ave. 
,    867   Madison   Ave. 


Parish-Watson, 
Chinese  Art. 


560  Fifth  Ave. 


Early 
St. 


Partridge,     Frank,      6     W.      56th 
English  and  Chinese  Antique. 

Plaza  Art  Rooms,  Inc.,  (Edward  P. 
O'Reilly),  5  and  7  E.  59th  St.  Auc- 
tion Sales. 

Prang  Co.,  30  Irving  Place.  Art  Pub- 
lishers,  Supplies. 

Price,  Frederic  Newlin,  607  Fifth  Ave. 
American  Paintings. 

Ralston,  Louis,  4  E.  46th  St.  Modern 
Paintings. 

Rehn,  F.  K.  M.,  6  W.  50th  St.  Ameri- 
can   Paintings. 

Reinhardt,  Henry  &  Son,  606  Fifth 
Ave.     Paintings. 


Reinthal  &  Newman.  59  West  19th  St. 
Pictures,   wholesale  only. 

Reynolds.  Fred.  154  East  38th  St. 
Printer  of  Etchings. 

Riley  Optical  Instrument  Co.,  40  W. 
20th  St.  Stereopticons.  Lantern 
Slides,    Moving    Picture    Machines. 

Robinson,  James.  721a  Fifth  Ave. 
Old  Silver,   Antiques. 

ROHLFS,    HENRY    D.    G.,   JR., 

991  and  944  Fulton  St.,  Brooklyn. 

Gallery   of  Fine    Arts. 

HIgh-Grade    American    Art. 

Roman  Bronze  Works,  Inc.,  275  Green 
St.,   Greenpoint,   Brooklyn. 

Rose,   L  A.,   31  E.  33d   St.     Frames 

Rosenbach  Co.,  273  Madison  Ave. 
Objects  of  Art,   Paintings,   Prints. 

ROUGERON,    M.    J.,    94    Park   Ave. 
Restoration    of    Paintings. 

Studio   founded    1840. 
Established  in  New  York  1907. 


Russell,  Thomas  Henry,  607  Fifth  Ave. 
American   Paintings. 


Saito,    G.    F. 
antiques. 


Sarti.   Lucchesi  &  Co 
Plaster  Casts. 


Satinover    Galleries, 
Old   Paintings. 


48   E.    57th    St.      Chinese 
113  E.   34th   St. 


27    W.     56th     St. 


SCHULTHEIS   CO.,    HENRY, 

Paintings  by  American  and  Foreign 
Artists.      Framing,    Prints. 

142  Fulton   St.,   Near  Broadway. 

SCHWARTZ    GALLERIES, 

Publishers  and   Importers 
Modern  Paintings  and  Prints 

14   East    46th    Street. 


SCOTT    &    FOWLES, 

667    Fifth   Avenue. 

Paintings. 

Advertisement   Page  VII 


642 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


New  York  City — Continued 
(ARNOLD),     REY     . 


SELIGMANN, 
CO., 

7    West    36th    St. 

Paris,    23    Place    Vend6me. 

High  Class  Ancient  Works  of  Art 


Selig-mann,   (Jacques)  &  Co. 
Avenue.     Antiques. 


705  Fifth 
Steel 


Senft,   Gustave,   503   Fifth   Ave 
Die   Engraving, 

Sherk  Brothers,  297  Fulton  St., 
Brooklyn.  Paintings,  Fraining,  Re- 
storing. 


&   Son,    40   E.   45th   St. 


Silo,   James  P. 
Auctions. 

Slater,  Edwin  C,  118  E.  59th  St. 
Carved  wood  and  composition  frames. 

Sloog,  Maurice,  713  Madison  Ave. 
Prints,  Manuscripts,  Books  of  refer- 
ences. 


51   W.    10th 


Smith,    H.    A.    Hammond, 
St.     Restoring. 

Smith,  Herbert  M.,  110  William  St. 
Insurance  of  works  of  Art. 

Snedeker,  Milton  Corp.,  2  State  St. 
Foreign  forwarders. 

Soltmann,  Inc.,  E.  G.,  202  E.  42  St. 
Drawing  Materials,   Compo  Board. 

Spanish    Antique    Shop,    768    Madison 
Ave. 

Stechert.  G.  E..  &  Co.,  151  W.  25th  St. 
Art  Books  and  Periodicals. 

Sterling  Bronze  Co.,   18  E.   40th  St. 

Strauss,  J.  H.,  275  Fifth  Avenue. 
Modern  Paintings,  Frames. 

Sunwise  Turn  51  East  44th  St.  Books 
Pictures.  Sculpture,  Druet  Prints, 
Omega   Textiles. 

Suval,  Philip,  746  Madison  Ave.  Pic- 
tures,  Frames. 

Symons,  Henry,  56  W.  45th  St. 
Antique  Furniture,   Textiles,    etc. 

Thomason,  Frederic  B.,  64  Wall  St. 
Insurance. 

Thompson,  Lewis  M.,  29  Broadway. 
Rare  Books,  Paintings,  Prints, 
Chinese  water  colors,  Indian  photo- 
graphs. 


Stained 
Fifth  Ave.  at  37th  St. 


Tiffany  Studios,  46  W.  23d  St 
Glass. 

Tiffany  &  Co. 
Sculpture. 

Tooth,  Arthur  &  Sons,  709  Fifth  Ave. 
18th  Cent.  Portraits,  Paintings  by 
Barbizon   School. 

TRASK,    JOHN    E.    D., 

52  East  53d  Street. 
American    Paintings   and    Bronzes. 


Truesdell,  Winfred  Porter,  154  E.  38th 
St.     Print  publisher. 

Vernay,  Arthur  S.,  12  E.  45th  St.     An- 
tiques. 

Wadsworth,   Howland  &  Co.,  Inc.,   101 
Park  Ave.     Artists'  Materials. 


Walpole     Galleries, 
Auctioneers. 


12     W.     48th     St. 


WARWICK    HOUSE,    LTD., 

45    East    57th    Street, 

Antique  Furniture 

Tapestries  Paintings 


Wenzel,    Paul,    31  E. 
tectural  Books. 


12th    St.     Archi- 


Weston  Galleries,   622  Lexington  Ave. 
Old  Masters. 

Weyhe,    E.,    710    Lexington    Ave.  •    Art 
Books,  Prints. 

Wildenstein     &     Co.,     647    Fifth    Ave. 
Old  and  Modern  Paintings. 


Williams,   Jno.,    Inc., 
Bronze  Foundry. 


556   W.    27th    St. 


Williams, 
Prints. 


Max,      538     Madison     Ave. 


Winsor    &    Newton, 
Artists'  Materials. 


31    E.     17th     St. 


Wyanoak  Publishing  Co..  The.   136  W. 
52d  St.  Photographic  Reproductions. 

Yamanaka     &     Co.,     680     Fifth     Ave. 
Japanese  and   Chinese  Objects. 

Yandell,   Charles  R.,  &  Co.,  450  Madi- 
son Ave.     Leather. 


YOUNG,    HOWARD, 

620  Fifth  Ave.,  near  50th  St.    Impor- 
tant   Examples    by    American    and 
Foreign   Masters. 
Advertisement    Page   X 


CALIFORNIA 


Berkeley 

Swasey,    H..    S.,    2291 
Paintings,  Prints. 


Shattuck    Ave. 


Los   Angeles 

CANNELL    &    CHAFFIN,    INC., 

720   West    Seventh    St. 

PAINTINGS 

Prints,    Antiques,    Objects   of   Art. 


Duncan,  Vail  Co.,  732  S.  Hill  St. 
tures.    Frames,    Supplies. 


Pic- 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


643 


Los  Angeles — Continued 

Green's  825  South  Hill  St.  Objects  of 
Art. 

Hoover  Art  Company,  6321  Hollywood 
Boulevard.  Paintings,  Photographs, 
Prints,  Frames. 

Kamps,  F.  H.,  744  South  Hill  St. 
Artists'  Materials. 

Kanst  Art  Gallery.   826  S.  Hill  St. 
Paintings,   Frames,    Exhibitions. 

Little,  A.  E.,  &  Co.,  426  S.  Broadway. 

Pictures,   Frames,   Objects  of  Art. 

Rausom,  W.  E.,  1722  Fourth  Ave. 
Objects  of  Art. 

Royar,  U.  S.,  &  Co.,  516  S.  Hill  St. 
Pictures,  Frames,  Artists'  Materials. 

Oakland 

Saake,  E.  J.,  531  Thirteenth  St. 
Paintings,    Objects   of   Art. 

San    Diego. 

Orr,  Frank  C,  1157  Fourth  St.  Pic- 
tues,   Frames,    Supplies. 

Smith's  Art  Store,  1250  Fifth  St. 
Objects  of  Art. 


Vail,    E.    J.,    &   Co.,    2235   Fillmore   St. 
Paintings,   Prints,  Frames. 

Vickery,   Atkins   &  Torrey.   550   Sutter 
St.    Paintings,  Frames,  Oriental  Art. 

Worden,  Willard  E.,  312  Stockton  St. 
Photogfiraphs,    Paintings,    Frames. 


COLORADO 

Colorado  Springs 

Craftwood  Shops,  R.  L.  Boutwell,  di- 
rector.     Crafts,    Paintings,    Frames. 

Grimwood's  24  N.  Tejon  St.  Pic- 
tures, Frames,  Pottery. 

Hardy's  Art  Store,  16  North  Tejon 
St.  Paintings,  "OfHcial"  Gallery  in 
Colorado  Springs  for  the  Taos  Art- 
ists'   Society. 

Denver 

Boutwell,  Cyrus,  201  16th  St.  Paint- 
ings,  Prints,   Frames. 

Dow  Art  Co.,  1623  Welton  St.  Paint- 
ings, Frames,  Pottery. 

Meininger,  H.  R.,  409  16th  St.  Artists' 
Materials. 


San    Francisco 

Ansbro,  M.  C,  165  Post  St.  Paintings, 
Prints. 

Bentz,  Nathan,  &  Co.,  570  Sutter  St. 
Oriental  Antiques. 

Clayes,  Miss,  284  Post  St.  Oriental 
Art  Objects. 

Curtis,  H.  Taylor,  359  Sutter  St. 
Salesrooms,  Paintings,  Antiques. 

Courvoisier,  E.  B.'  315  Sutter  St. 
Paintings,  Frames,   Supplies. 

Elder,  Paul  &  Co.,  239  Post  Ave. 
Books,  Pictures  and  Art  Objects. 

Falvy,  A.,  578  Sutter  St.     Antiques. 

Freeman  Art  Co.,  386  Sutter  St. 

Helgesen,  R.  N.,  345  Sutter  St.  Paint- 
ings, Objects  of  Art. 

Gump,  S.  &  G.  Co.,  246  Post  St. 
Paintings,  Antiques. 

Marsh,  G.  T.  &  Co.,  400  Post  St. 
Oriental  Art. 

Meiji,  The,  Grant  Ave.  near  Bush  St. 
Oriental  Art. 

Print  Rooms,  540  Sutter  St.  Paint- 
ings, Prints. 

Rabjohn  &  Morcom,  230  Post  St. 
Paintings,  Reproductions,  Frames, 
Supplies. 

Sanborn,  Vail  &  Co.,  557  Market  St. 
Pictures,  Frames,   Supplies. 


CONNECTICUT 
Hartford 

Moyer,  Curtis  H.,  105  Pratt  St.  Pic- 
tures, Frames,  Objects  of  Art. 

Wiley,  L.  A.,  &  Sons.  732  Main  St. 
Paintings,  Prints,  Frames,  Packing 
and   Shipping. 

Waterbury 

Curtis  Art  Co.,  25  W.  Main  St.  Paint- 
ings, Prints,  Frames,  Reproductions. 


DISTRICT    OF    COLUMBIA 

Wasfilngton 

Jane  Bartlett,  1337  Connecticut  Ave., 
N.  W.  Crafts. 

Brooke,  Mrs.  M.  E.,  730-15th  St.,  N.  W. 
Frames,  Crafts. 

Buckingham,  C.  O.,  723  Tenth  St., 
N.  W.     Supplies. 

Gift  &  Craft  Shop,  1228  Connecticut 
Ave.,   N.  W. 

Hays,  Fred  C.  &  Co.,  Inc..  1237  Q  St.. 
N.  W.     Pictures,  Frames. 

Hisada,  1143  Connecticut  Ave.  Ori- 
ental   Paintings. 

Jarvis,  Charles  B.,  1309  G  St.,  N.  W. 
Pictures,   Frames. 

Little  Art  Shop,   Inc.,   622  F  St.,   N.W. 

Muth,  George  F.,  and  Co.,  Inc.,  710 
Thirteenth  St.,  N.  W.  Artists'  and 
Draftsmens'   Supplies. 


644 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


Washington,  D.  C. — Continued 

Niepold,    John  W.,    &    Son,    913   F   St., 
S.  W.     Pictures,  Frames,  Antiques. 

Rare    Print    Shop,    1614   I    St.,    N.    W. 
Paintings,  Prints,   Frames. 

Sherratt's     Art     Store,     608-13th     St., 

N.  W. 

Studio  Shop,  1725  L  St.,  N.  W. 

Veerhoff   Galleries,   1320   F   St.,   N.   W. 
Paintings,  Prints,  Frames. 


GEORGIA 
Atlanta 

Goodhart-Tompkins   Co.,    83   Peachtree 
St.     Gift  Shop. 


ILLINOIS 
Aurora 

Stolp's  Art  Shop,  22  Island  Ave. 
Pictures,  Frames,  Artists'  Materials. 

Chicago 

Ackermann,  Arthur  &  Son,  Inc.,  408  S. 
Michigan  Ave.  Rare  prints,  paint- 
ings. 

Albert  Rouillier  Art  Galleries,  410 
South  Michigan  Blvd.     Etchings. 

Anderson  Art  Galleries,  426  S.  Michi- 
gan Ave.     Paintings. 


Marshall     Field     &      Co.       Paintings, 
Prints,  Frames.     Exhibitions. 

NEWCOMB,    MACKLIN    &    CO., 

N.   W.   cor.    State  and  Kinzie   Sts. 

Frames,  Mirrors,  Cornices  and 

Decorative  Specialties. 

Northern     Picture     Frame     Co.,     1816 
West  Fulton  St. 

O'BRIEN   ART  GALLERIES 

670       North       Michigan       Boulevard, 
Chicago.     Paintings,  Etchings,  Mez- 
zotints,  Antique  Furniture. 
Paintings     Cleaned     and     Restored. 

Practical  Drawing  Co.    Art  Publishers. 

Prang    Company,    1922    Calumet    Ave. 
Publishers,    Art   Books,    Supplies. 

Reinhardt,      Henry     &      Son,      536     S. 
Michigan  Ave.     Paintings. 

THURBER  ART  GALLERIES, 

75  East  Washington   St.,   Chicago. 
Robert  H.   Doran,   Pres. 

Harry  L.   Engle,    Sec. 
American      and      Foreign      Paintings. 

Paintings  cleaned  and   restored. 

Rockford 

Norris,  H.  F.,  Art  and  Gift  Shop,   221 
East  State  St. 


BRASOR  ART  STORE, 

5607  Broadway. 
Paintings,  Etchings,  Mezzotints,  and 
Woodblocks.  Highest  grade  Frames. 
Candlesticks,  Book-ends,  Hand 
painted  Screens,  Pottery,  and  high 
grade  Bric-a-Bac. 


Bryden,  F.  A.  &  Co.,  217  S.  Wabash 
Ave.      Pictures,    Frames. 

Carson,  Pirie,  Scott  &  Co.,  State, 
Madison  and  Wabash  Ave.  and  1 
South  State  St.     Pictures,  Frames. 

Devoe  and  Raynolds  Co.,  Inc.,  14-16 
W.    Lake    St.     Artists'    Material. 

Dunbar,  Thomas  Whipple,  Kinzie  and 
North  State  Sts.  American  Paint- 
ings. 

Fritts,  D.  H.,  &  Co..  414  N.  Wood  St. 
Mouldings,   Frames. 

Hempstead,  Joseph  L.,  4  E.  Ohio  St. 
Etchings,    Photogravures. 

Ho  Ho  Shop  (Bess  B.  Dahlquist, 
Prop.),  673  North  Michigan  Blvd. 
Crafts,   Antiques. 

Mages,  George  C,  Co.,  1750  Fulton 
St.  Frames,  Mouldings,  Pictures, 
Supplies. 


INDIANA 
Indianapolis 

Lieber.   The  H.,   Co.,   24  W.  Washing- 
ton St.    Paintings,  Etchings,  Frames. 

L3^man     Bros.,     223     East     Ohio     St. 
Frames,   Mouldings,    Supplies. 

Lafayette 

Foster  Shops,  The.  116  N.  3d  St.    Pic- 
tures,   Frames,    and    Gift   Articles. 


Terra   Haute 

Kadel's  Art  Shop,  125  S.  7th  St. 
tures.   Frames,   Supplies. 


Plc- 


lOWA 
Cedar    Rapids 

Morris  Sanford  Co.     Prints,  Frames. 

Des    Moines 

Odd    Shop     (Miss    Weaver    and    Miss 

Tupper),     805     Locust     St.       Prints, 
Paintings,  Objects  of  Art. 

Iowa  City 

University  Bookstore,  2  S.  Clinton  St. 
Pictures,    Frames. 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


645 


KANSAS 
McPherson 

Smalley,    Carl    J.,    Paintings,    Prints, 
Frames. 


LOUISIANA 

New  Orleans 

Antique  Dome,  403  Royal  St.  An- 
tiques,  Paintings. 

Parish  Art  Store,  Common  at  Univer- 
sity Place.  Pictures,  Frames, 
Artists'   Materials. 

Marx  Art  Store,  228  Royal  St.  Pic- 
tures,  Frames. 

Newcomb    Pottery,    Audubon    Place. 

Waldhom  Co.,  343  Royal  St.  Antique 
Furniture,    Jewelry,    Objects   of   Art. 


MAINE 
Portland 

Laing,    Adam    M..    &    Son,    134    Spring 
St.     Pictures,  Frames. 

Thompson    Art    Co..    151    Brackett    St. 
Photo-crafters,    Pictures,    Frames. 


MARYLAND 
Baltimore 

Bendann.  David.  105  E.  Baltimore  St. 
Frames,  Paintings,   Bronzes. 

Benson,  C.  J.  &  Co.,  Charles  and 
Franklin  Sts.     Objects  of  art. 

Dulany-Vernay  Co.,  339  N.  Charles 
St.     Prints,  Frames,  Supplies. 

Furst  Bros.  &  Co.,  38  Hopkins  PI. 
Pictures,  Mirrors,  Frames. 

Hirshberg  Art  Co.,  418  N.  Howard 
St.  Prints,  Frames,  Artists'  Sup- 
plies. 

Jones  (W,  E.),  Art  Galleries,  Inc.,  330 
N.  Charles  St.  Pictures,  Frames, 
Bronzes. 

Knipp,  John  C,  &  Sons,  343  North 
Charles  St.     Paintings,   Etchings. 

Limerick,  J.  Arthur  Co.,  960  North 
Howard   St,     Bronzes. 

Lycett,  317  N.  Charles  St.  Prints, 
Paintings,   Frames. 

Pitt,  Paris  C,  912  N.  Charles  St.  Old 
and  Modern  Paintings,   Antiques. 

Purnell  Art  Co.,  407  N.  Charles  St. 
Paintings,    Etchings,    Antiques. 

Schon,  Carl,  109  W.  Saratoga  St.  Art 
Jewelry. 

Vogt  &  Holmes,  329  North  Charles  St. 
Paintings,  Sculpture,  Engravings. 


MASSACHUSETTS 
Ashland 

Nutting,  "Wallace.     Prints. 


Boston 

Arts  and  Crafts  Society,  9  Park  St. 
Blgelow,  L.  A.,  11  Bromfleld  St.     Pic- 
tures,  Paintings,   Antiques,   Jewelry. 

Boston  Sculpture  Co.,  400  Boylston  St. 

Casts. 
Brooks,  Reed,  Gallery,  19  Arlington  St. 

Paintings,  Etchings,  Antiques. 

CARRIG-ROHANE    SHOP 

394    Boylston    St.,    Boston. 
H.   Dudley   Murphy,   Designer. 

Original      Carved      Frames      of     the 
Highest   Class.     Each   Frame   Espe- 
cially Designed  for  the  Picture, 
Caproni.   P.  P..   &  Bro..   1914  Washing- 
ton St.     Casts. 

Cobb,  C.  E.,  Irving-Casson-Davenport 
Co.,   Copley   Sq.     Exhibitions. 

Curtis  &  Cameron,  Pierce  Bldg..  Cop- 
ley Sq.  Copley  Prints,  Reproduc- 
tions   of   American    Art. 

Dartmouth  Gallery,  168  Dartmouth  St. 
Paintings,  Objects  of  Art. 

Doll  &  Richards.  71  Newbury  St. 
Paintings,  Bronzes,  Frames,  Exhibi- 
tions. 

Foster  Bros.,  4  Park  Sq.  Prints,  Re- 
productions, Frames. 

Gill,  James  D.,  372  Boylston  St. 
American  Paintings. 

Goddard,  James  B.,  30  Huntington 
Ave.  Paintings,  Frames,  Japanese 
Objects. 

Goodspeed's  Book  Shop,  5a  Park  St. 
Rare  and  Historical  Prints,  Etch- 
ings, Woodcuts. 

Grace  Home's  Gallery,  146  Stuart  St., 
Trinity  Court.     Paintings,  Sculpture. 

Lawrence,  Amos,  85  Chestnut  St.  An- 
tiques. 

Leonard  &  Company,  48  Bromfleld  St. 
Auction  Sales. 

Medici  Society,  755  Boylston  St.  Medici 

Print     Reproductions     of    the    Great 

Masters. 
Robey,    French    Co.,    38    Bromfleld    St. 

Pictures,  Frames. 
Schervee     Studios,     356     Boylston     St. 

Etchings,  Frames. 

Stedman  &  Wilder.  103  Newbury  St. 
Hanging,  Packing. 

V   O   S   E,       R.       C.       and        N.        M. 

394-398  Boylston  St.,  Boston 

High-Class    Paintings 

American,  Barbizon, 

Modern   Dutch.  Early   English. 

Restoring,    Gilding    and    Framing. 

Established    1841. 

Wadsworth,  Howland  &  Co.,  Inc.,  139 
Federal  St.     Artists'   Materials, 

Yamanaka  &  Co.,  456  Boylston  St. 
Oriental  Objects  of  Art. 


646 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


Cambridge,    Mass. 

Hammett,  J.  L.,  Co.,  Kendall  Sq. 
Industrial  Art   Supplies. 

Canton 

Hatfield,  J.  H.,  15  Beaumont  St. 
Artists'  Materials. 

East   Gloucester 

Grace  Home's  Gallery,  1  Eastern 
Point  Road.  Sculpture,  Etchings, 
Exhibitions. 


Inc.,    101   Ferry    St. 
Lantern         Slides, 


Maiden 

GramstorfC  Bros. 
Reproductions, 
Frames. 

Perry  Pictures  Co.  Reproductions  of 
the  World's  Masterpieces. 

Provincetown 

Herring-,  John  Chester,  373  Commercial 
St.  Paintings,  Etchings,  Handi- 
crafts. 

Newton 

UNIVERSITY   PRINTS,  THE 

11  Boyd  St.,  Newton. 
Over  3,000  subjects  of  Painting, 
Sculpture  and  Architecture.  Half- 
tone Reproductions  and  Lantern 
Slides  for  Art  S^:udy.  School  and 
College  orders  our  specialty. 

North    Attleboro 

Herring,  John  Chester,  469  Broadway. 
Paintings,   Prints,   Crafts. 

Springfield 

Miller,  J.  H.,  Co.,  Inc.,  21  Harrison 
Ave.      Paintings,    Frames. 

Taber-Prang  Art  Company.  Repro- 
ductions, Frames. 

Taunton 

Reed  &  Barton.     Bronze. 


Sault  Ste.   Marie 

Young's  Photo,  Gift  and  Art  Shop,  544 
Ashmun  St.  Photographs,  Pictures, 
Frames. 


MINNESOTA 
Minneapolis 
Beard  Art  Galleries,   The.     Tenth  and 

Nicollet    Sts.      Paintings,    Etchings, 

Engravings,   Frames. 

St.  Paul 

St.  Paul  Art  and  Gift  Shop,   354  Min- 
nesota St.     Pictures,  Prints,  Frames. 


MISSOURI 
Kansas  City 
Hug  &   Sarachek  Art  Galleries,   lOllA 

Grand      Ave.         Paintings,       Prints, 

Frames. 

St.   Louis 

Dietrich   Art   Galleries,    4341   Olive   St. 
Paintings. 

Healy,     Francis     D.,     4516     Olive     St. 
Paintings,   Frames. 

McCaughen    &    Bur,     909     Locust    St. 
Pictures,    Frames,    Restoring. 

NEWHOUSE,    M.   A.,   &  SON, 

4398    Olive    St.,    St.    Louis. 

Art   Importers,    Original   Water    Color 

and    Oil    Paintings, 

Hand   Carved  Frames 

Noonan-Kocian  Co.,  10th  &  Locust  St. 
Paintings,    Frames,    Objects    of  Art. 

Wacha  &  Co.,  4398  Olive  St.     Pictures, 
Frames. 

Weber    &    Co..    825    Washington    Ave. 
Artists'  Supplies. 


MICHIGAN 

Detroit 

Detroit    Photographic   Co.,    332   Wood- 
ward Ave. 

Hanna,     James    E.,     &    Bros.,     David 
Whitney   Bldg.     Pictures,    Frames. 

O'Leary,   William,    &    Co.,    2540   Wood- 
'  ward     Ave.        Paintings,      Etchings, 
Frames. 

Wayne  Publishing  Co.,  1042  Cass  Ave. 
Art   Publishers. 


NEBRASKA 
Lincoln 

Miller  &   Paine,   Inc.,   13th  and  O   Sts. 
Pictures,    Frames. 

Omaha 

Darling,      Milton,      1810     Farnam      St. 
Pictures,  Frames. 

NEW  JERSEY 
Elizabeth 

Campbell    Art    Company,    1144    Eliza- 
beth Ave.     Pictures   in   Color. 


Grand    Haven 

Japana  Specialty  Co.,  Old  engravings. 
Mezzotints,  Artists'  Supplies. 

Grand    Rapids 

Hefner,    Jacob,    Metz   Bldg.      Pictures, 
Frames. 


Irvington 

Talens     &     Son,     1091     Clinton     Ave. 
Artists'   Materials. 

Newark 

Keer's   Sons,   Frederick,   917  Efroad  St. 
Paintings,  Frames.  Prints. 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


647 


NEW   YORK 
Albany 

Cadby  Bros.,  31  Maiden  Lane.  Pic- 
tures, Pottery,  Frames. 

Glenn,  J.  A.,  76  Columbia  St.  Photo- 
graphs, Lantern  Slides, 

Binghamton 

Bump,  Austin  S.,  180  Washington 
St.     Paintings,    Frames,    Supplies. 

Buffalo 

Benson,  George  W.,  81-83  Allen  St. 
Antiques,   Frames,   Handicrafts. 

Brodericlc  Galleries,  436  Virginia  St. 
Uid  and  Modern  Paintings,  Prints, 
Bronzes. 

Meibohm,  Carl  H.,  326  Connecticut  St. 
Pictures,  Frames. 

Sevin,  Theodore,  327  Franldin  St. 
Paintings,  Frames. 

Ithaca 

Smith,  E.  F.,  State  St.  Pictures, 
Frames. 

New  York  City.     See  page  637. 

Rochester 

Bailey,  George,  8  Caledonia  Ave.  Pic- 
tures,   J^'rames,    Antiques. 

Brodhead,  George  H.,  150  East  Ave. 
Pictures,   Frames,  Antiques. 

Syracuse 

Hendriclcs,  Francis  Co.,  Inc.,  116  E. 
Fayette  St.  Pictures,  Frames,  Sup- 
plies. 

Thompson  Publishing  Co.,  232  W.  Jef- 
ferson St.  and  12a  Walton  St.  Blue 
prints  for  illustration  of  history  and 
literature. 

Varney  Art  Store,  481  S.  Salina  St. 
Pictures. 

Utica 

Cadby  Bros.,  234  Genesee  St.  Pic- 
tures, Pottery,  Frames,  Artists' 
Supplies. 


OHIO 

Cincinnati 

Closson,  A.  B.,  Jr.,  &  Co.,  110  West 
4th  St.     Pictures,  Supplies,  Frames. 

Traxel  Art  Co.,  132  W.  4th  St.  Pic- 
tures, Jb'rames,  Supplies. 

Rookwood  Pottery. 

Cleveland 

Gage,  George  E.,  2258  Euclid  Ave. 
Paintings,   Etchings,   Bronzes.  , 

Columbus 

Roessler,  Lee,  109  So.  High  St.  Pic- 
tures,  Frames,  Materials. 

Dayton 

Barlow,  John  H.,  227  S.  Main  St.  Pic- 
tures. 


Toledo 

Mohr  Art  Galleries,   915  Madison  Ave. 
Pictures,  Frames. 

OKLAHOMA 
Oklahoma    City 

Yunt  Art  and  Gift  Shop,  Broadway  at 
First   St.     Paintings,   Frames, 


PENNSYLVANIA 
Harrlsburg 

Saltzgiver's  Art  and  Antique  Store, 
223  N.  2d  St.  Paintings,  Frames, 
Antiques. 

Philadelphia 

Arts  and  Crafts  Guild,  237  So.  Eleventh 
St. 

Barr,  J.  E.,  &  Co.,  1124  Walnut  St. 
Old   Prints,    Boolcs,   Autographs. 

Campbell,  William  J.,  1731  Chestnut 
St.     Old   Portraits,   Prints. 

Davis  &  Harvey,  910  Walnut  St. 
Paintings,  Auction  Sales. 

Farr,  Daniel  H.,  1626  Walnut  St. 
Paintings,    Objects   of   Art. 

Faser,  Christian,  203  So.  Watts  St. 
Restorer. 

Florentine  Art  Plaster  Co.,  2210  Chest- 
nut St.     Casts. 

Forsythe  &  Co.,  922  Walnut  St. 
Frames. 

Freeman,  Samuel  T.  &  Co.,  1519  Chest- 
nut   St.     Auctions. 

Kane,  Franli  D.,  234  N.  13th  St. 
Frames,  Pictures. 

McClees,  J.  E.,  &  Co.,  1507  Walnut  St. 
Pictures,    Prints,    Frames. 

Newman,  Adolph,  1732  Chestnut  St. 
Pictures. 

PHILADELPHIA    ART    GALLERIES, 

S.    E.    Cor.    15th   and   Chestnut   Sts., 
Reed    H.    Walmer,    Auctioneer. 

Public  Sales  of  Art,  Literature  and 
Furniture.  Collections  Appraised 
and  Catalogued. 

Rosenbach  Company,  1320  Walnut  St. 
Objects  of  Art,   Paintings,   Prints. 

Ross,  H.  L.,  14  S.  18th  St.     Frames. 

Staton  Bros.,  5402  Germantown  Ave. 
Prints,    Restoring,    Frames. 

Taws,  Henry  M.,  920  Arch  St.  Sup- 
plies. 

Walz  &  Co.,  Edward,  1622  Chestnut  St. 
Pictures,  Frames. 

Weber,  F.,  Co.,  Inc.,  1125  Chestnut  SL 
and   1220   Buttonwood   St.      Supplies. 

Weil,  J.  H.,  &  Co.,  1300  Arch  St. 
Drawing  Materials. 


648 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


Philadelphia,    Pa. — Continued 

Williams,  Brown  &  Earle,  918  Chest- 
nut St.  Drawing  Materials,  Lantern 
Slides. 

Pittsburgh 

Gillespie,  J.  J.,  &  Co.,  422  Wood  St. 
Paintings,  Engravings,  Frames. 

Knight  &  White,  201  Union  Arcade. 
Paintings,  Mezzotints,  Rugs. 

Wunderley  Art  Galleries.  512  Wood  St. 
Paintings,  Etchings,  Frames. 


RHODE  ISLAND 
Providence 

Crooker  Co.,  230  Weybosset  St.  Pic- 
tures, Objects  of  Art. 

Davidson,  David,  57  Whitmarsh  St. 
Prints,  Frames,  New  England  His- 
torical Photographs. 

Miller,  Frank  W.,  121  Angell  St. 
Plaster    reproductions. 

Tilden-Thurber  Co.,  292  Westminster 
St.     Pictures,  Frames. 


TENNESSEE 
Nashville 

Frank,   A.,   &   Co.,  3rd  Ave.,   N.     Pic- 
tures, Frames,   Supplies. 


TEXAS 
Austin 

Bradford,  C.  A.,  &  Co.,  705  Congress 
Ave. 

Downie,  Janet,  906  Trinity  St.  Pic- 
tures, Prints. 

Jordan  Co.,  615  Congress  Ave. 

Miller,  C.  M.,  807  Congress  St.  Pic- 
tures, Artists'  Supplies. 

University  Co-operative  Society,  2210 
Guadalupe  St.     Artists'    Supplies. 

Ye  Qualitye  Shoppe,  1104  Colorado  St. 
Paintings,   Prints,   Crafts. 

Dallas 

Campbell  Glass  &  Paint  Co.,  1215  Elm 
St.  Pictures,  Frames,  Artists'  Mate- 
rials. 

Colonial  Gift  Shop  and  Tea  Room,  303 
Marvin  Bldg. 

Costura  Shop,  1016  Elm  St. 

O'Connor    &    Goldberg,    1405    Elm    St. 

Oriental  Art  Co.,  1312  Elm  St. 

PRACTICAL    DRAWING    CO., 

1911    Bryan    Street,    Dallas, 

Chicago,  Atlanta. 

Publishers  of  Practical  Drawing  and 
Practical  Writing  for  public  schools. 
Dealers  in   School  Art  Materials. 


Rookwood     Pottery     Co.,     Field      St., 
Sanger  Bros. 

Fort  Worth 

Campbell  Glass  Paint  Co.,  108  Houston 
St.     Artists'  Supplies. 

Collins  Art  Co.,  110  Houston  St.    Paint- 
ings, Frames,  Supplies. 

Dixie  Shop,  111  East  7th  St. 

Fair,   The,  Fifth  and  Houston   Sts. 

Norvell's    600    Houston    Ct.      Antiques, 
Crafts. 

Galveston 

Maurer  Studio,  418-23rd  St. 

Purdy     Brothers.     Pictures,      Frames, 
Supplies,  Exhibitions. 

Wittig  Art   Store,   2015  Ave   "E." 

Houston 

Bute,     James     &     Co.     Reproductions, 
Frames,   Supplies. 

Munn,   W.   C,   &  Co.    Pictures. 

Randolph  Paint  Co.  Pictures,  Frames, 
Supplies. 

San   Antonio 

Collins      Co.,      110      E.      Houston      St. 
Photographs. 

Doyle  Decorating  Co.,  102  West  Com- 
merce St. 

Fox    Co.,    209    Alamo    Plaza.      Prints, 
Frames. 

Hummert,  Fred.,  517  East  Houston  St. 

Waco 

Cameron    &    Co.,    William,    624   Austin 
Ave. 

Thompson,  E.  E.,  404  Austin  Ave. 


UTAH 
Ogden 

Moore,  Felix,  Art  Shop,  2464  Washing- 
ton Ave. 

Salt  Lake  City 

Gift   Shop,    8   South   Main   St.     Crafts, 
Jewelry. 

Intermountain  Art  Co.,  336  South  Main 
St.     Pictures,   Casts,  Frames. 

McConahay,    W.    M.,    64    South    Main 
St.     Paintings,  Sculpture,  Jewelry. 

Savage,     C.     R.,     12     South    Main     St. 
Frames,   Artists'   Supplies. 

White    House   Drapery    Co.,    45    South 
Main  St.     Pictures,  Frames. 


VIRGINIA 
Richmond 

Richmond    Art    Company,    Grace    and 
First  Sts.     Pictures,  Frames. 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


649 


Richmond,  Va. — Continued 

Young's  Art   Shop,    415  East  Franklin 
St.     Paintings,  Prints,  Frames. 


WEST    VIRGINIA 
Huntington 

Abbott,  D.  E.,   &  Co.     Frames,  Paint- 
ings. 


WASHINGTON 
Seattle 
Seattle     Art     Co..     1423     Third     Ave. 

Prints,    Frames,    Supplies. 
Spokane 
Graham,    John    W.,    Co.,    707    Sprague 

Ave.     Pictures,   Frames,   Supplies. 


WISCONSIN 
Milwaukee 

Bresler,  F.  H.,  Co.  Galleries,  423  Mil- 
waukee St.  Prints,  Paintings,  Por- 
celains,  Art  Furniture. 

Dunbar,  Thomas  Whipple,  2819  Dun- 
bar PI.     American  Paintings. 


CLASSIFIED  TRADE  LIST  OF  ADVERTISERS 


AMERICAN     PAINTINGS 
New  York  City 

AINSLIE,     GEORGE     H.,      615     Fifth 
Ave. 

DUDENSING  GALLERIES,  45  W.  44th 
St. 

FEARON     GALLERIES      (Walter     P. 
Fearon),   25  W.   54th  St. 

FERARGIL  GALLERIES   (F.  N.  Price 
and  T.  H.  Russell),  607  Fifth  Ave. 

FOLSOM  GALLERIES,  104  W.  57th  St. 

KNOEDLER,  M.,  &  CO.,  556  Fifth  Ave. 

LEVY,    JOHN,    559   Fifth   Ave. 

MACBETH  GALLERY,  450  Fifth  Ave. 

MONTROSS,    N.    E.,    550    Fifth   Ave. 

ROHLFS,  HENRY  D.  G.,  Jr.,  944  Ful- 
ton St.,  Brooklyn. 

TRASK,   JOHN   E.    D.,   52   E.   53rd   St. 

YOUNG,  HOWARD,  620  Fifth  Ave. 

AMERICAN    PAINTINGS,    EARLY 
New  York  City 

EHRICH  GALLERIES,  707  Fifth  Ave. 
LEVY,   JOHN,   559  Fifth  Ave. 
MACBETH  GALLERY,  450  Fifth  Ave. 

ANTIQUES 
New  York  City 
CLAPP  &  GRAHAM  CO.,  420  Madison 

Ave. 
DEMOTTE  of  Paris,   8  E.  57th  St. 
FRENCH  &  CO.,   6  E.   56th   St. 
MILLER,   C.  v.,   9  E.   55th  St. 
WARWICK  HOUSE,  LTD.,  45  E.  57th 

St. 

APPRAISING 
New  York  City 

AMERICAN        ART       ASSOCIATION, 

6  E.   23rd  St. 
FEARON     GALLERIES      (Walter     P. 

Fearon),  25  W.   54th  St. 


AUCTIONS 
New  York  City 

AMERICAN  ART  ASSOCIATION,  6  E. 

23rd  St. 

ANDERSON  GALLERIES,   Park  Ave. 

and  59th   St. 

Pennsylvania 

PHILADELPHIA    ART    GALLERIES, 
S.  E.  Cor.  15th  and  Chestnut  Sta. 


BRONZES 

New  York  City 

GORHAM  COMPANY.  Fifth  Ave.  and 
36th  St. 

KNOEDLER,  M..   &  CO.,  556  Fifth  Ave. 

MACBETH  GALLERY,   450  Fifth  Ave. 

MONTROSS,   N.  E.,  550  Fifth  Ave. 


CHINESE     ANTIQUES 

New  York  City 

DEMOTTE   of  Paris,    8  E.   57t1j   St. 
FARMER,    EDWARD    I.,    INC.,    16    E. 

56th  St. 


DRAWINGS 

FEARON     GALLERIES      (Walter     P. 
Fearon),  25  W.   54th  St. 


ECCLESIASTICAL    ART 

New    York    City 

GORHAM   COMPANY,   Fifth  Ave.   and 
36th    St. 


650 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


ETCHINGS  AND  ENGRAVINGS 
New  York  City 
BUTLER,    D.   B.,    &   CO.,   601   Madison 

Ave. 
FRIDENBERG,   ROBERT,   22  W.    56th 
St. 

KRAUSHAAR,  C.  W.,  680  Fifth  Ave. 
KNOEDLER.  M.  &  CO.,  556  Fifth  Ave, 
MONTROSS,  N.  E..  550  Fifth  Ave. 

EXHIBITIONS 
New    York    City. 

AINSLIE.  GEORGE  H.,  615  Fifth  Ave. 
GORHAM  COMPANY,   Fifth  Ave.  and 

36th  St. 
KLEINBERGER,  725  Fifth  Ave. 
LEVY,  JOHN,  559  Fifth  Ave. 
KNOEDLER,  M..  &  CO.,  556  Fifth  Ave. 
MACBETH.  WILLIAM,  450  Fifth  Ave. 
MONTROSS,    N.    E.,    550    Fifth   Ave. 
SCOTT  &  FOWLES,   667  Fifth  Ave. 
YOUNG,    HOWARD,    620    Fifth    Ave. 

EXPERTISING    AND    APPRAISING 

New  York  City 

ARLINGTON  GALLERIES,  274  Madi- 
son Ave.,   between  39th  and  40   Sts. 

EHRICH  GALLERIES,   707  Fifth  Ave. 

FEARON  GALLERIES  (Walter  P. 
Fearon),   25  W.   54th  St. 

KLEINBERGER,   725  Fifth  Ave. 

KNOEDLER,  M.  &  CO.,  556  Fifth  Ave. 

MACBETH  GALLERY,  450  Fifth  Ave. 

FOREIGN    PICTURES 
New  York  City 

DEMOTTE    of   Paris,    8    E.    57th    St. 
KLEINBERGER  GALLERIES,  F.,  725 

Fifth  Ave. 
KNOEDLER,  M.,  &  CO.,  556  Fifth  Ave. 
LEVY,  JOHN,   559  Fifth  Ave. 
SCOTT  &  FOWLES,   667  Fifth  Ave. 
YOUNG,  HOWARD,  620  Fifth  Ave. 

FRAMES 
New  York  City 

BUTLER,    D.    B.    &   CO..    601   Madison 

Avenue. 
KNOEDLER,  M.,  &  CO.,  556  Fifth  Ave. 
NEWCOMB-MACKLIN      &      CO.,'     233 

Fifth  Avenue. 

Chicago,    III. 

NEWCOMB,  MACKLIN  CO.,  State 
and  Kinzie  Sts. 

Massachusetts 

CARRIG-ROHANE  SHOP,  394  Boyl- 
ston  St.,  Boston. 


GARDEN    FURNITURE 
New  York  City 
ELMORE    STUDIOS,    3    W.    28th    St. 


GLASS,    STAINED 
New   York   City 

DEMOTTE    of   Paris,    8    E.    57th    St. 
GORHAM  CO.,  Fifth  Ave.  and  36th  St. 

GILDING 
New  York  City 

BUTLER,   D.   B.,   &  CO..   601  Madison 
Avenue. 

LANTERN     SLIDES 
Massachusetts 
UNIVERSITY  PRINTS.  Newton. 

LIGHTING   FOR  PICTURES 
New   York   City 

PRINK,    L    P.,    439-43    Tenth  Ave.,    at 
24th  St. 

MATERIALS     FOR    ARTISTS 
New  York  City 

DEVOE  &  RAYNOLDS  CO.,   INC., 
101  Fulton  St. 

Texas 

PRACTICAL   DRAWING   CO.,    Dallas. 
School  Art  Materials. 

MEDALS 
New    York   City 

GORHAM  CO.,  Fifth  Ave.  and  36th  St. 
MEDALLIC  ART  CO.,   137  E.   29th  St. 

OBJECTS    OF    ART 
New  York  City 

CONSIGNMENT    ARTS,    INC.     (A.    J. 

Halow,   Pres.),  222  W.   59th  St. 
DEMOTTE    of   Paris,    8    E.    57th    St. 
FRENCH  &  CO.,  6  E.  56th  St. 
GORHAM  COMPANY,  Fifth  Ave.  and 

36th    St. 

Los   Angeles,   Cal. 

CANNELL     &     CHAFFIN,     INC.,     720 
W.   Seventh  St. 

OLD     MASTERS 
New  York  City 

DEMOTTE    of   Paris,    8    E.    57th    St. 
EHRICH  GALLERIES,   707  Fifth  Ave. 
FEARON      GALLERIES      (^Walter     P. 

Fearon),   25   W.    54th   St. 
KLEINBERGER       GALLERIES,       F., 

725   Fifth   Ave. 
KNOEDLER.  M.,  &  CO.,  556  Fifth  Ave. 
SCOTT  &  FOWLES,  667  Fifth  Ave. 
SELIGMANN      (ARNOLD),      REY     & 

CO.,   7   W.   36th   St. 

PACKING    AND    SHIPPING 
New  York  City 

BUDWORTH,   W.    S..    &   SON.    424   W. 
52d   Street. 


WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 


651 


PAINTINGS 

New  York  City 

AINSLIE,  GEORGE  H.,  615  Fifth  Ave. 

ARLINGTON  GALLERIES,  274  Madi- 
son Ave.,   bet.  39th  and  40th  Sts. 

BABCOCK,  E.  C.,   19  E.  49th  St. 

DEMOTTE    of   Paris,    8    E.    57th    St. 

DUDENSING  GALLERIES,  45  W.  44th 
St. 

EHRICH  GALLERIES,  707  Fifth  Ave. 

FEARON  GALLERIES  (Walter  P. 
Fearon),   25   W.    54th   St. 

GALLERIE  INTIME  (Anne  Pinneo), 
749    Fifth   Ave. 

KLEINBERGER  GALLERIES.  725 
Fifth  Ave. 

KNOEDLER,  M.  &  CO.,  556  Fifth  Ave. 

KRAUSHAAR,   C.   W.,    680  Fifth  Ave. 

LEVY,    JOHN,    559    Fifth    Ave. 

MACBETH  GALLERY,  450  Fifth  Ave. 

MILCH  GALLERIES,   108  W.   57th  St. 

MONTROSS,  N.  E.,  550  Fifth  Ave. 

SCOTT  &  FOWLES,  667  Fifth  Ave. 

SCHULTHEIS  CO.,  HENRY  142  Ful- 
ton St.,  near  Broadway. 

YOUNG,  HOWARD,  620  Fifth  Ave. 

Illinois. 

THURBER  ART  GALLERIES,  75  E. 
Washington   St.,   Chicago. 

Massachusetts 

VOSE,  R.  C.  &  N.  M.,  394  Boylston 
St.,   Boston. 

Missouri 

NEWHOUSE,  M.  A.  &  SON,  4398  Olive 
St.,   St.   Louis. 


PHOTOGRAPHERS     OF     PAINTINGS 

New   York   City 

JULEY,    PETER   A.,    219   E.    39th    St. 


PICTURES,    PRINTS 
New  York  City 
BUTLER.   D.   B.,   &  CO.,   601   Madison 

Avenue. 
SCHWARTZ,  SAMUEL,  SONS  &  CO., 

14  E.  46th  St. 

Illinois 

O'BRIEN,    M.   &   SON,   334   So.   Michi- 
gan Blvd.,  Chicago. 

PRINT    PUBLISHERS 
Massachusetts 

UNIVERSITY        PRINTS,         THE, 
11    Boyd    St.,    Newton. 

Texas 

PRACTICAL     DRAWING     PUBLISH- 
ING   COMPANY.    Dallas. 

PUBLISHER,    BOOKS    OF    ART 

DEMOTTE    of    Paris,    8    E.    57th    St. 

REPRODUCTIONS     OF     PAINTINGS 

New  York  City 

LESCH.     RUDOLF,     13     W.     42d     SL 

RESTORERS 
New  York  City 

BUTLER,    D.   B.,    &   CO.,    601   Madison 
Avenue. 

ROUGERON,  M.,  94  Park  Ave.,  at  40th 
St. 

TAPESTRIES 
New  York  City 

DEMOTTE    of   Paris,    8   E.    57th    St. 
FRENCH  &  CO.,  6  E.   56th   St. 
WARWICK  HOUSE,  LTD.,   45  E.  47th 
Street. 

TEXTILES 

DEMOTTE    of   Paris,    8   E.    57th    St. 


PHOTOGRAPHS 
New  York  City 
LANDAU     (TONI)     PHOTOGRAPHIC 

CO.,   1   E.   45th   St. 
METROPOLITAN  MUSEUM  OF  ART 

Fifth  Avenue  at  82d  St. 
MONTROSS.    N.    E.,    550   Fifth   Ave. 


WATER    COLORS 
New  York  City 

DUDENSING  GALLERIES,  45  W.  44th 

St. 
FEARON     GALLERIES      (Walter     P. 

Fearon),   25   W.   54th   St. 
MONTROSS,  N.   E.,  550  Fifth  Ave. 


Ind 


ex 


This  index  is  arranged  by  "cities  and  forms  a  cross  reference  to  the  main  body  of  the 
book  where  reports  are  grouped  by  States.  There  are  also  cross  references  under  the 
following  heads:  Aid  for  Artists,  Architecture,  Circulating  Exhibitions,  Open  Exhibitions, 
Federations,  Galleries,  Graphic  Arts,  Handicrafts,  Libraries,  Municipal  Art,  National, 
School  Arts,  Schools  of  Art,  Sculpture,  and  Western  Societies.  These  headings  are  in 
italic  caps. 

Each  society  is  entered  under  the  city  where  the  office  of  the  secretary  is  located; 
under  the  name  of  the  State  or  under  National  when  the  residence  of  the  secretary 
changes  from  year  to  year.  The  name  of  the  city  is  omitted  from  the  title  of  the 
societies  in  the  index,  but  the  full  official  title  (without  the  article)  is  used  in  the  body 
of   the  book. 

The  special  articles  in  volumes  I  to  XVIII  are  listed  in  this  index;  these  titles  are  in 
italics.  Societies  which  were  entered  in  Volumes  I  to  X,  but  which  have  been  discon- 
tinued or  which,  for  one  reason  or  another,  are  not  in  Volume  XVIII,  will  be  found  in 
the  index  of  Volume  XI,  with  volume  and  page  of  the  last  entry. 

PAGE 

ABILENE,     TEX.— Simmons     College 220 

ADA,    OHIO— Ohio    Northern    University 213 

Esthetic    Training,    Its    Development   in    the   Elementary    Schools.      By   James    P.    Haney, 

VI,  p.  9. 
AID  FOR  ARTISTS— 

Boston,    Mass. — Stuart    Club 132 

Cincinnati,    O. — Three    Arts    Club 1€4 

New  York,   N.  Y.— 

Art  Alliance    147 

Artists'     Aid     S'ociety     148 

Artists'    Fund    Society    149 

Art   Workers    Club    for    Women 148 

League    of    New    York    Artists 152 

Studio    Club    of    New    York 158 

Three    Arts    Club     159 

Whitney    Studio    Club    159 

ALABAMA    State    Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 96 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 99 

ALBANY,   N.   Y.— 

Institute    and    Historical    and    Art    Society 160 

University    of    the    State    of    New    York 160 

ALFRED,    N.    Y.— New    York    State    School    of    Ceramics 206 

AMERICAN  ACADEMY   IN  ROME 91 

AMERICAN  ART  DEALERS  ASSOCIATION;  Vol.  XVII,  p.  103. 

AMERICAN  ASSOCIATION    OF    MUSEUMS 91 

AMERICAN  BOOKPLATE    SOCIETY 92 

AMERICAN  CIVIC   ASSOCIATION 92 

AMERICAN  FEDERATION     OF    ARTS 77 

AMERICAN  INSTITUTE    OF    ARCHITECTS. 92 

AMERICAN  NUMISMATIC  ASSOCIATION 93 

AMERICAN  SCENIC  AND   HISTORIC  PRESERVATION  SOCIETY 94 

AMERICAN  SOCIETY    OF    LANDSCAPE    ARCHITECTS 94 

ANDERSON,  IND.— 

Anderson     Art     Association 116 

Art   Club    116 

ANDOVER,     MASS.— John-Esther    Gallery,    Abbott    Academy 31 

ANN  ARBOR,  MICH.— 

Art    Association     137 

University     of     Michigan 202 

ARCHJEOLOGICAL   INSTITUTE    OF   AMERICA    (Chapters    under    cities) 94 

ARCHITECTURAL  SOCIETIES— 

American    Institute    of    Architects     (Chapters    under    cities) 92 

Architects    Diplomes    par    le    Gouvernement    Frangais;    Groupe    Americain 157 

Association    of    Collegiate    Schools    of    Architecture 96 

Avery     Architectural     Library 150 

Beaux-Arts    Architects,    Society   of    Beaux-Arts    Architects 158 

Boston    Architectural    Club 129 

Boston    Society    of    Architects 130 

Brooklyn  Institute  of  Arts  and   Sciences 47 

Chicago    Architectural    Club Ill 

Cincinnati    Architectural    Club 163 

Collegiate  Schools  of  Architecture,   Association  of 96 

Columbia    University,   Alumni    Association   of    the    School    of   Architecture 150 

Indiana    Society    of    Architects 115 

653 


654  INDEX 


ARCHITECTURAL   SOCIETIES— Continued 

Indianapolis    Architects'    Association 117 

Indianapolis     Architectural     League 117 

Massachusetts    Institute    of    Technology;    Architectural    Society 131 

New    York,    Architectural    League   of 147 

Ohio    State    Association    of    Architects 163 

Ohio    State    University    Architectural    Club,    Columbus 166 

Pittsburgh     Architectural     Club 175 

Rochester    Society    of    Architects 162 

Rotch     Traveling    Scholarship,    Boston 131 

Saint    Louis    Architectural    Club 142 

T     Square     Club 174 

Tacoma    Society    of    Architects 184 

Topiarian    Club    of    Harvard    University 133 

Utah  Institute  of  Architects;  Vol.  XVII,  p.   221. 

Washington    University   Architectural    Society,    St.    Louis 143 

ARCHITECTURAL  SCHOOLS,  XI,  p.  380. 

ARIZONA    State    Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 96 

ARKANSAS    State    Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 96 

ARTS  AND   CRAFTS.      (See  HANDICRAFTS.) 

Arts  and   Crafts   in  the   United  States.      By   H.   Percy   Macomber;   XIII,   p.   407. 

ASSOCIATION  OF  ART  MUSEUM  DIRECTORS 95 

ASSOCIATION  OF  COLLEGIATE  SCHOOLS  OF  ARCHITECTURE 96 

ASSOCIATION   OF  PICTURE   PUBLISHERS 96 

ASSOCIATIONS   AND    SOCIETIES 77 

ATHENS,    GA. — Art    Association 109 

ATLANTA,  GA.— 

Art    Association     109 

Georgia    Chapter,    American    Institution    of    Architects 92 

Schools     192 

ATTICA,   IND.— Attica  Art   History  Club;   Vol.   XVII,  p.    131. 

ATTLEBORO,    MASS.— Public    Library 129 

AUBURN,   ALA.— Alabama   Polytechnic  Institute 187 

AUBURNDALE,     MASS.— Lasell     Seminary 199 

AUCTION  SALES   OF  DRAWINGS 287 

AUCTION  SALES  OF  PAINTINGS 241 

Sales   of   the  year   in   each   volume   since    1898. 

AUCTION    SALES    OF   PRINTS 290 

AUCTION    SALES    OF    SCULPTURE 320 

AURORA,    ILL.— Art    League 110 

AUSTIN,  TEXAS— 

Art    League     180 

Elisabet     Ney     Museum 73 

Texas   Fine  Arts  Association 73 

University    of    Texas 220 

BALDWIN,     KAN.— Baker    University 196 

BALTIMORE,  MD.— 

Art    Commission    126 

Arundel    Club     126 

Archaeological    Society     94 

Art   Club   of   Baltimore   City   College 126 

Chapter   American   Institute   of    Architects 127 

Charcoal     Club     127 

Friends    of    Art 127 

Handicraft  Club  of  Baltimore 127 

Johns   Hopkins   University   Museum 30 

Maryland     Historical     Society 127 

Maryland    Institute    30 

Maryland    Institute    Alumni    Association 128 

Municipal    Art    Society 128 

Museum    of    Art 30 

Peabody     Institute     30 

Rinehart    Sculpture    Fund 128 

School    Art    League    of    Baltimore 128 

Schools     198 

Six  of  Baltimore,  The 128 

Walters    Gallery 31 

Water     Color     Club 127 

BANGOR,   ME.— 

School   of  the   Bangor   Society  of  Art 197 

Society     of     Art 125 

BAR    HARBOR,    ME.— Jesup    Memorial    Library 125 

BATTLE  CREEK,   MICH.— School  of  Applied  Art 202 

BAY  CITY,   MICH.— Art   Club;   Vol.   XVII,   p.   159. 

BAYONNE,    N.    J.— Woman's    Club 145 

BEDFORD,    IND.— Ladies    of    the    Round    Table 116 

BELOIT,   WIS.— Art   Museum  of  Beloit   College 75 


INDEX  655 


BERKELEY,  CALIF.— 

California   School  of  Arts  and  Crafts 187 

Delta   Epsilon  Art   Honor   Society;   Vol.   XVII,   p.    111. 

University    of     California 187 

Bibliography  of  American   Art   and  American  Artists;   XI,   p.   400. 

BINGHAMTON,    N.    Y.— 

Broome   County    Historical    Society,    Art   Gallery,    and    Museum 56 

Public    Library     160 

Society    of    Arts    and    Crafts 160 

BIRMINGHAM,  ALA.— 

Alabama     Art     League 99 

Atelier  of  the   Y.    M.    C.   A 187 

Chapter,     American    Institute    of    Architects 92 

Public     Library     99 

BLOOMINGTON,   IND.— 

Art   Association;   Vol.    XVII,    p.    132. 

Indiana    Library    Art    Club 116 

Indiana    LTniversity     116 

BOISE,    IDAHO— League   of  Idaho   Artists;   Vol.    XVII,    p.    123. 

BOOKS    OF    THE    YEAR:    I    to    VIII,    inclusive. 

BOOTHBAY  HARBOR,  ME.— 

Commonwealth     Art     Colony 125,  197 

Snell    Summer    Class 197 

BOSTON,    MASS.— 

Archaeological     Society      94 

Architectural     Club      129 

Art     Club     130 

Art    Commission    of    the    City   of    Boston 129 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 92 

Children's     Art     Centre 31 

Copley    Society    of    Boston 130 

Gardner     Collection      31 

Group,    The     130 

Guild    of    Boston    Artists 131 

Massachusetts    Institute    of    Technology    Architectural     Society 131 

Massachusetts    Normal    Art    School    Alumni    Association 129 

Museum    of    Fine    Arts 32 

National   Association  of   Women   Painters   and    Sculptors,    Massachusetts   Chapter..  131 

Public    Library 131 

Rotch    Traveling    Scholarship 131 

St.    Botolph    Club 132 

Schools      199 

Settlements     Museum     Association 31 

Society   for   the   Preservation   of   New    England    Antiquities 132 

Society    of    Architects 130 

Society   of   Arts    and    Crafts 132 

Society    of     Landscape     Architects 130 

Society   of   Water    Color   Painters 130 

Stuart     Club      132 

Water  Color   Club 130 

BOULDER,    COL.— Un-versity    of    Colorado 190 

BOURNE.    MASS.— Old    Colony    Union 132 

BOWLING    GREEN.    O.— State    Normal    College 213 

BRIDGEPORT,    CONN.— Art    League 104 

BROCKTON,    MASS.— 

Municipal     Gallery     132 

Public    Library     132 

Woman's     Club     132 

BROOKLINE,    MASS. 

Civic     Society     133 

Fitzgerald    Art    Gallery ]  .  .  .  33 

Public   Library    I33 

BROWNWOOD,    TEXAS— Daniel   Baker   College ..'. 220 

BRUNSWICK,  ME.— 

Bowdoin    Museum   of   Fine   Arts 29 

Walker    Art    Building 29 

BUFFALO,   N.   Y.—  

Albright     Art     Gallery 56 

Archaeological     Society      .'  '  94 

Arts     Club 160 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects .  .  .  .  160 

Fine    Arts    Academy _  '  55 

Grosvenor     Library     '  _  igi 

Guild     of     Allied     Arts 161 

Pan-American  Exposition;   IV,   p.    166. 

School    of    the    Albright    Art    Gallery 206 


656  INDEX 


BUFFALO,    N.    Y.— Continued 

Society    of    Artists 161 

School     Art     Association 161 

BUZZARD'S    BAY,    MASS.— Old    Colony   Union 132 

CALIFORNIA— 

Engineers'    and   Architects'   Association   of    Southern   California 99 

Print     Makers 101 

Southern   California   Chapter,   American  Institute   of   Architects 99 

State    Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 96 

CALIFORNIA,    PA.— Southwestern    State    Normal    School 216 

CAMBRIDGE,   MASS.— 

Harvard    University    Z3 

Classical    Antiquities    Museum 34 

Fogg    Art     Museum 33 

Germanic     Museum     34 

Robinson     Hall     34 

Schools     200 

Semitic     Museum 34 

Topiarian    Club     133 

CANADA— Museums   in;    XIII,   p.    278. 

CANAAN,    CONN.— White    School    of    Photography 190 

CARMEL-BY-THE-SEA,   CALIF.— 

Club   of   Arts   and    Crafts 100 

Summer    School    of    Arts 187 

CEDAR    CITY,    UTAH— Branch    Agricultural    College 222 

CEDAR    FALLS,    lA.— State    Teachers    College '. 195 

CEDAR  RAPIDS,   I  A.— Cedar   Rapids   Art   Association 121 

CERAMICS— 

Chicago  Ceramic  Art  Association;   Vol.   XVII,   p.   125. 

Indiana    Keramic    Club 117 

Jersey    City    Keramic    Club 146 

Kansas   City  Keramic   Club;   Vol.   XVII,   p.    165. 

Minneapolis,     Minn. — Keramic     Club 139 

New     York     Keramic     Society 152 

Pittsburgh,    Pa. — Duquesne    Ceramic    Club;    Vol.    XVII,    p.    213. 
CHAMPAIGN,  ILL.— (5^^  Urbana.) 

CHARLESTON,     ILL.— Art     Association 110 

CHARLESTON,   S.   C— 

American '  Association    of     Museums 91 

Carolina    Art    Association 1 78 

Carolina  Art   Association   Sketch   Club;    XVII,   p.   217. 

Carolina    Arts    and    Crafts 178 

Charleston     Museum      72 

Gibbes    Memorial    Art    Building 178 

CHARLESTOWN,   W.    VA.— Art   Association;    Vol.    XVII,    p.    224. 
CHARLOTTESVILLE,  VA.— 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 93 

Mclntire    School    of    Fine    Arts 222 

CHATHAM,     MASS.— Summer     Classes 201 

CHAUTAUQUA,    N.    Y.— School    of    Arts    and    Crafts 206 

CHESTER,    PA.— Alfred    O.    Deshong    Memorial 169 

CHESTER   SPRINGS,    PA.— Summer    School    of    the   Pennsylvania    Academy 216 

CHEYENNE,     WYO.— Art     Association 185 

CHICAGO,  ILL.— 

Antiquarian     Society,     The 110 

Archaeological    Society 94 

Architectural     Club      Ill 

Art     Commission     of     Chicago 110 

Art    Institute    of    Chicago 21 

Art    Institute    Alumni    Association 110 

Art     Service     League 110 

Art    Student's    League 110 

Artists'    Guild     Ill 

Arts    Club     Ill 

Burnham    Library     23 

Business   Men's  Art   Club Ill 

Ceramic    Art    Association;    Vol.    XVII,    p.    125. 

Commission   for  Encouragement   of   Local   Art 112 

Cors     Ardens      112 

Englewood    Woman's    Club 112 

Ferguson    Monument     Fund 112 

Friends     of     American     Art 113 

Illinois    Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 92 

Municipal    Art    Commission 113 

Municipal    Art    League    of    Chicago 113 

Palette   and    Chisel    Club 113 


INDEX  657 


CHICAGO,    ILL.— Continued 

Public    Library     Ill 

Public    School    Art    Society Ill 

Renaissance     Society     113 

Ryerson    Art     Library _ .  .  .  .  23 

Schools    192 

Society    of    Artists 112 

Society    of     Etchers 112 

Society    of    Miniature    Painters 112 

Svenska     Klubben      113 

Technic    Arts    League 113 

Tuesday    Art    and    Travel    Club 114 

University    of    Chicago,     Museums 25 

CHICKASHA,   OKLA.— College   for   Women 215 

CINCINNATI,  O.— 

Archaeological     Society      94 

Architectural     Club     163 

Art    Club     164 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 1 64 

Craf  ters      1 64 

Lyric   Art    Gallery;    Vol.    XVII,    p.    198. 

MacDowell     Society     1 64 

Museum    Association    60 

Municipal    Art    Society 164 

Schools     213 

Three    Arts    Club 164 

Woman's     Art     Club 164 

CIVIC.      (See  Municipal.) 

CLAREMONT,    CALIF.— Pomona    College 187 

CLEVELAND,  O.— 

Archseological    Society     94 

Art    Association     165 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 165 

City    Planning   Commission   of    Cleveland 165 

Municipal  Art  Gallery;  Vol.   XVII,   p.    199. 

Museum  of   Art 61 

Portrait     Artists 165 

Print    Club 166 

Private   Collections;    I,  p.    185. 

Schools     214 

School    of    Art 165,  214 

School    of    Art   Alumni    Association 165 

Society    of    Cleveland    Artists 165 

Woman's    Art    Club 166 

COLLEGE  ART  ASSOCIATION   OF   AMERICA 96 

COLLEGE  ART   INSTRUCTIONS;    Directory    of;    XIII,    p.    436. 

COLLEGE    STATION,   TEXAS— Agricultural   and    Mechanical    College   of   Texas 220 

COLORADO— 

Archasological    Society     95 

Chapter,     American    Institute    of    Architects 103 

State    Federation   of  Women's    Clubs 96 

COLORADO   SPRINGS,   COLO.— 

Academy    of    Fine    Arts 190 

Archaeological     Society     95 

Broadmoor    Art    Academy 103,  190 

COLUMBIA,    MO.— University    of    Missouri 204 

COLUMBIA,    S.    C— Art    Association 178 

COLUMBUS,  O.— 

Architectural    Club,    Ohio    State    University 166 

Art    Association     166 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects ,  166 

Columbus     Art     League ,  166 

Gallery    of    Fine    Arts 166 

Pen    and     Pencil     Club 167 

Public    Library     167 

Schools   214 

COMMISSIONS,    State    and    Municipal    Art    Commission.       (See    Municipal.) 

CONCORD,    MASS.— Art    Association 133 

CONNECTICUT— 

Academy    of    Fine    Arts 105 

ArchcTological    Society    95 

Arts     Association     1 04 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects .• 1 04 

State    Capitol    Commission    of     Sculpture 105 

State    Federation    of    Women's    Clubs f 96 

Copyright  Law,  International;  I,   P.    71. 


658  INDEX 


CORNISH,    N.    H.— Studios    of    Augustus    Saint-Gaudens 44 

CORVALLIS,    ORE.— Oregon    State   Agricultural    College 215 

CRAFTS,   SCHOOLS   OF;   XI,   p.   384. 

CRAFTSMEN,  Who's  Who  Among;  Vol.  XVII,  p.  398. 

CRAWFORDSVILLE,     IND.— Art     League 116 

DALLAS,   TEX.— 

Art  Association    180 

Schools     221 

Woman's     Forum     180 

DAVENPORT,   lA.— 

Academy    of     Sciences 121 

Public    Library     121 

Tri-City    Art    League 121,  195 

DAYTON,   O.— 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 167 

Museum  of   Arts 63 

DEALERS,    Who's    Who    Among    Art    Dealers 637 

Classified    Trade    List    of    Advertisers 649 

DECATUR,   ILL.— 

Art     Institute      26 

James     Milliken     University 193 

DEERFIELD,     MASS.— Society    of    Deerfield     Industries 133 

DE    KALB,    ILL.— Northern    Illinois    State    Normal    School 193 

DELAWARE    State    Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 96 

DEL    MONTE,     CALIF.— Del     Monte    Gallery 100 

DENTON,     TEX.— Schools      221 

DENVER,    COLO.— 

Archaeological     Society      95 

Art     Association      103 

Art     Commission      103 

Atelier    Denver     190 

Colorado    Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 92 

Colorado     Museum     of     Natural     History 15 

Denver    Academy     of     Art 190 

Public    Library     104 

Students'    School    of    Art 190 

Design.      By   Col.    C.   W.    Earned;    VIII,   p.    13. 

DESIGN,   SCHOOLS   OF;  XI,  p.    383. 

DES   MOINES,  lA.— 

Association    of    Fine    Arts 121 

Des     Moines     College 195 

Public     Library     121 

DETROIT,   MICH.— 

Archaeological     Society      95 

Institute     of     Arts 37 

Michigan    Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 93 

Scarab     Club     138 

Schools     203 

Society    of    Arts    and    Crafts 138 

Society    of     Women    Painters 137 

DIRECTORIES— 

Architects;    XVII,   p.    353. 
Art   Museum   Workers;    XIII,   p.    431. 
College   Art   Instruction;    XIII,    p.    436. 
Craftsmen;    XVII,   p.   398. 

Dealers,     Who's     Who     Among 637 

Illustrators,     List     625 

Lecturers  and  Writers;    XIII,   p.   450. 

Magazines    of    Art 231 

Painters,     Sculptors     and     Illustrators 329 

Press    List     233 

Schools     187 

Sculptors,    List     621 

Studio   Buildings;    VI,    p.    452. 
Writers   and   Lecturers;    XIII,    p.   450. 

Who's    Who    Among    Art    Dealers 637 

Who's    Who     in    Art 329 

Who's   Who   Among   Craftsmen;    XVII,    p.   398. 

DISTRICT   OF   COLUMBIA— 

Public    Library     108 

State    Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 96 

DOYLESTOWN,    PA.— Bucks    County    Historical    Society 170 

DUBLIN,    N.    H.— School   of   Painting 205 

DUBUQUE,   lA.— 

Art    Association     122 

Carnegie-Stout     Public     Library 122 

DUXBURY,     MASS.— Art     Association 133 


INDEX  659 


EASTERN  SOCIETIES— 

Eastern    Arts    Association 96 

EAST   GLOUCESTER,    MASS.— 

Gallery    on    the     Moors 133 

Summer     Classes     201 

EAST    LAS    VEGAS,    N.    M.— New    Mexico    Normal    University 206 

EASTPORT,    ME.— Art   Association 126 

EDENBORO,    PA.— State    Normal    Art    School 216 

EDMOND,    OKLA.— Central    State    Normal    School 215 

EDITORIAL   BOARD    7 

ELKHART,   IND.— Eckelman    Art    Gallery 26 

ELMIRA,    N.    Y.— Arnot    Art    Gallery 57 

ENID,    OKLA.— Fine    Arts    Club 168 

ERIE,    PA.— Art    Club    of    Erie 170 

ETCHERS,    WHO'S    WHO  IN  ART. 

Etching    Societies.      (See    Graphic   Arts.) 

EUGENE,    ORE.— State   University   of    Oregon 215 

EUROPE.      {See  Paris). 

EVANSVILLE,   IND.— Art  League;   Vol.   XVII,   p.    132. 

EXHIBITIONS  CIRCULATING— 

Albany,     N.     Y. — State    Education    Department 160 

Baltimore,     Md.— The     Six 128 

Indiana     Circuit     Exhibition 115 

Minnesota     State     Art     Commission 139 

Nanuet,    N.    Y. — ^Painters    and    Sculptors 161 

New   York,    N.    Y.— American  Water   Color    Society 147 

National    Sculpture    Society 154 

Society    of    Beaux-Arts    Architects 158 

Society    of     Illustrators 158 

Society   of    Men  Who   Paint   the  Far  West 158 

Society  of   Painters   of   New   York 158 

Northampton,    Mass. — Forbes    Library 135 

Utah    Art   Institute 182 

Washington,    D.    C. — American    Federation    of    Arts 77 

Library    of    Congress,    Print    Department 108 

EXHIBITIONS  OPEN  TO  ALL.     Work  passed  upon  by  Jury. 
Connecticut — 

Hartford — Connecticut    Academy    of    Fine    Arts    (Paintings) 105 

New    Haven — Paint    and    Clay    Club ■. 106 

District    of    Columbia — 

Washington — Corcoran    Gallery    of    Art    (Paintings) 17 

Society    of    Washington    Artists    (Paintings) 108 

Washington    Water    Color    Club 108 

Illinois — 

Chicago — Art   Institute    (Oils,   Water   Colors,    Architecture,    Crafts) 21 

Artists'    Guild    (Crafts,    Paintings) Ill 

Maryland — ■ 

Baltimore^Charcoal    Club 127 

Massachusetts — ■ 

Boston — Art    Club     130 

Guild    of    Boston    Artists 131 

Society    of    Arts    and    Crafts 132 

Worcester — Art     Museum     (Paintings) 36 

Michigan- 
Detroit — Society    of    Arts    and    Crafts 138 

Scarab    Club     138 

Minnesota — 

Minnesota    State    Art    Commission    (Paintings,    Sculpture,    Crafts) 139 

Missouri — 

Saint    Paul    Institute 140 

St.     Louis — Artists'     Guild 142 

New  York  City — • 

American    Society   of    Miniature    Painters 147 

American    Water    Color    Society 147 

Architectural    League    of    New    York 147 

MacDowell     Club     (Groups) l52 

National    Academy    of    Design 153 

National     Arts     Club 154 

National   Association   of   Women   Painters   and    Sculptors 154 

National    Sculpture    Society 154 

New    York    Society    of    Craftsmen 155 

New    York    Water    Color    Club 156 

Society    of    Illustrators 158 

New   York — 

Buffalo— Buflfalo     Society     of     Artists 161 


660  INDEX 


EXHIBITIONS   OPEN   TO  ALL— Continued 
Ohio- 
Cincinnati — Museum    Association     (Paintings,     Sculpture) 60 

Pennsylvania — 

Philadelphia — Art    Club    (Paintings,    Sculpture) 170 

Pennsylvania    Academy    of    the    Fine    Arts     (Oils,    Water    Colors,    Architec- 
ture,    Sculpture,     Miniatures) 67 

Plastic     Club     (Groups) 174 

Pittsburgh — Carnegie    Institute    (Oils,    Water   Colors,    etc.) 69 

EXPOSITIONS^ 

Alaska- Yukon  Pacific    (Seattle,    1909);   VIII,  p.    105. 

Anglo-American    (London,    1914);    XI,    p.    351. 

Appalachian    (Knoxville,    1900);   VIII,   p.    105. 

Buenos  Aires    (1910);   VIII,  p.   106. 

Decorative   Art   (Turin,    1902);    IV,   p.    256. 

Greater  America    (Omaha,    1899);   II,  p.   33. 

Lewis  and   Clark   (Portland,   Ore.,   1905);   V,  p.   245. 

Louisiana    Purchase    (St.    Louis,    1904);    V,    p.    255. 

Panama-Pacific    (San   Francisco,    1915);    XII,    p.    57. 

Pan-American    (Buffalo,    1901);    IV,    p.    166. 

Paris  International    (1900);    III,   p.   9. 

Rome    (1911);   VIII,  p.    107. 

Santiago    (1910);  VIII,   p.   106. 

South   Carolina  Interstate    (Charleston,   1902);   IV,  p.    172. 

Southern   California-Panama   (San  Diego,    1915);    XII,   p.   55. 

Trans-Mississippi    (Omaha,    1898);    I,   p.    321. 

Venice    (1909);    VIII,   p.   107. 

FALL    RIVER,    MASS.— Art    Club 133 

FARGO,     N.     D.— Fine    Arts     Club 163 

FEDERATIONS-^ 

American  Association     of     Museums 91 

American  Civic    Association 92 

American  Federation     of     Arts 77 

American  Institute    of    Architects 92 

American  Numismatic    Association 93 

American  Society    of    Landscape    Architects 94 

Archaeological   Institute   of   America 94 

College    Art    Association 96 

Collegiate    Schools    of    Architecture,    Associations    of 96 

Federation   of   Art    Societies,    Toledo 168 

General   Federation  of   Women's   Clubs 96 

New    York    Fine    Arts    Federation , 151 

Pennsylvania,    Women's    State    Federation    of 169 

State  Art  Societies     {See  under  State). 
First  Century  and  a  Half  of  American  Art.     By   C.   H.   Hart;   I,   p.   9. 

FITCHBURG,    MASS.— Public    Library 134 

FLORIDA    State   Federation  of   Women's   Clubs 96 

FORT  WAYNE,    IND.— Art    Association 116 

FORT  WORTH,  TEX.— 

Art    Association 73 

Museum    of    Art 73 

Painters'    Club 180 

Schools      221 

FRANKFORT,     IND.— Art     Association 116 

FREDERICK,    MD.— Art    Club 128 

FRESNO,   CALIF.— Fresno  State  Normal   School 188 

FRIENDS   OF   ART  SOCIETIES— 

Baltimore    Friends    of    Art 127 

Chicago    Friends    of    American    Art 113 

Indianapolis    Friends   of    American    Art 117 

One   Hundred    Friends   of    Pittsburgh   Art 175 

Friends   of    the    Local   Artists,    St.    Louis 142 

San  Diego   Friends  of  Art 102 

GALLERIES — (Clagsified    by   name.)      See   also    Libraries    and    Historical    Societies. 

Albright    Art    Gallery,    Buffalo.    N.    Y 56 

Annmary   Brown    Memorial,    Providence 71 

Arnot   Art   Gallery,    Elmira,   N.   Y 57 

Baltimore    Museum   of   Art 30 

Barnard    Cloisters,    New    York 47 

Beloit   College    Museum,   Beloit,    Wis 75 

Berkshire    Athenaeum,    Pittsfield,    Mass 34 

Boston   Museum  of   Fine  Arts 32 

Bowdoin  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Brunswick,  Me 29 

Brooks    Memorial,    Memphis,    Tenn 72 


INDEX  661 


GALLERIES — Continued 

Broome    County    Historical    Society 55 

Bronx    Society   of   Arts   and    Sciences,    New   York 49 

Brooklyn    Museum,    New    York '  47 

Bruce    Art    Museum,    Greenwich,    Conn 16 

Butler    Art    Institute 65 

Carnegie    Institute,    Pittsburgh,    Pa 69 

Charleston    Museum    \\  72 

Chicago    Art    Institute 21 

Chicago    University    Museum 25 

Children's    Art     Centre,     Boston 3I 

Cincinnati    Museum    Association 60 

City   Art    Museum,    St.    Louis 42 

Cleveland    Museum   of   Art 61 

Colorado   Museum,  Denver,  Colo IS 

Comparative    Museum    of    Art,    San    Francisco,    Calif 15 

Columbus    Gallery    of    Fine    Arts 166 

Converse    Art    Gallery,    Norwich 17 

Cooper  Union   Museum  for   the  Arts   of  Decoration,    New   York SO 

Corcoran   Gallery   of   Art,  Washington,    D.    C 17 

Cornell    Museum    of    Classical    Archaeology 57 

Crocker    Art    Gallery,    Sacramento,    Calif 14 

Currier  Gallery  of  Art,  Manchester,   N.   H 45 

Dayton    Museum    of    Arts 63 

Decatur    Art    Institute 26 

Delgado  Museum  of  Art,   New  Orleans,  La 28 

Del    Monte    Gallery 100 

Deshong    Memorial,    Chester,    Pa 169 

Des    Moines    Public    Library 121 

Detroit    Institute    of    Arts i7 

de  Young    Memorial   Museum,    San   Francisco 14 

Drexel    Institute    Museum,    Philadelphia,    Pa 171 

Dwight   Art    Building,    South    Hadley,    Mass 35 

Dyckman    House,    New    York    City SO 

Eckelman  Art  Gallery,  Elkhart,  Ind 26 

Elisabeth    Ney    Museum,    Austin,    Texas 73 

Essex    Institute,    Salem,    Mass 35 

Everhart    Museum,     Scranton,     Pa 70 

Farnsworth    Art    Building.    Wellesley,    Mass 36 

Ferry   Museum,   Tacoma,  Wash 75 

Fitzgerald    Art    Museum,    Brookline,    Mass 33 

Fogg    Museum.    Cambridge.     Mass 33 

Fort    Worth    Museum    of    Art 73 

Gallery   on    the    Moors,    East    Gloucester,    Mass 133 

Gardner    Collection,    Boston,    Mass 31 

Germanic    Museum,    Cambridge,     Mass 34 

Gibbes    Memorial,    Charleston.    S.    C 178 

Golden   Gate   Museum,    San   Francisco,   Calif 14 

Green    Bay,    Wis.,    Museum 75 

Grosvenor    Library,    Buffalo 161 

Hackley   Gallery  of   Art,    Muskegon,    Mich 40 

Harvard     LTniversity     Classical     Antiquities 34 

Herkscher  Park  Art  Museum,   Huntington,  N.  Y 57 

Herron    Art    Institute,    Indianapolis,    Ind 26 

Hillyer    Art    Gallery,    Northampton,    Mass 34 

Hispanic   Society  of  America,   New  York,   N.   Y 51 

Independence    Hall,    Philadelphia,    Pa 66 

Indianapolis   Public    Library 117 

Iowa    University    Museum    of    Art,    Iowa    City 28 

Jarves    Collection,    New    Haven.    Conn 17 

John-Esther   Gallery,    Andover.    Mass 31 

Johns    Hopkins    University    Museum 30 

Tumel    Mansion,    New    York 55 

"Kansas    City    Art    Institute HI 

Lavton  Art  Gallery,   Milwaukee,  Wis 75 

Leiand     Stanford,    Jr..     Memorial    Museum 15 

Lenox    Gallery,    New    York 54 

Lininger    Art    Gallery,    Omaha 44 

Linton-Surget  Art   Hall,   New  Orleans 28 

Louis    Comfort    Tiffany    Foundation,    Ovster   Bay,    N.    Y 58 

Lyric   Art   Gallery,    Cincinnati;    Vol.    XVII,    n.    198. 

Los  Angeles   Museum  of   History,    Science  and   Art 13 

Louisiana    State    Museum,    New    Orleans 29 

Maine    State    Building,    South    Poland 126 

Maryland    Institute,    Baltimore 30 

Memorial    Art    Gallery.    Rochester 58 


662  INDEX 


GALLERIES— Continued 

Merrick  Free  Art  Gallery,  New  Brighton,  Pa 66 

Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art,  New  York,  N.  Y ,',      si 

Milwaukee    Art    Institute 75 

Minneapolis    Institute    of    Arts 40 

Minnesota    Academy   of    Science    Museum,    Minneapolis .*     42 

Montclair    Art    Museum ] ,     45 

Morgan    Memorial,    Hartford,    Conn !'.!!!!!!.'      16 

Municipal   Art   Gallery,    Oakland,    Calif 13 

National    Gallery    of    Art,    Washington,i  D.    C .  .  .  , ]      19 

Nelson  Gallery  of  Art,  Kansas  City \ ,,',     42 

Newark    Museum 45 

New    Britain    Institute 106 

New    Mexico    Museum,    Santa    Fe .".'.**.*.'.'     46 

Newport    Art    Association ".    1 76 

New    York    Historical    So.ciety 54 

New  York  Public  Library,  Art  Dept 54 

Oakland     Public     Museum 13 

Omaha   Public    Library   and    Museum 44 

Parrish   Art   Museum,    Southampton,    N.    Y 59 

Peabody     Institute,    Baltimore 30 

Peabody    Museum,    Salem,    Mass.;    Vol.    XVII,    p.    33. 

Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the   Fine  Arts,   Philadelphia 67 

Pennsylvania   Museum  of   Industrial   Art,   Philadelphia 67 

Pennsylvania    University    Museum,    Philadelphia 68 

Philadelphia    Museum    of    Art 68 

Philipse    Manor    Hall,    Yonkers 163 

Poland    Spring    Art    Gallery 126 

Portland    (Ore.)   Art  Association 66 

Prendergast   Library  Association,   Jamestown,    N.    Y 161 

Princeton   University   Museum  of   Historic   Art,    Princeton,    N.   J 46 

Providence    Athenaeum 177 

Ranney  Library  and  Museum,  State  University,  Iowa  City,  la 28 

Reading    Public    Museum    and    Art    Gallery 70 

Rhode    Island    School    of    Design,    Providence 71 

Richmond,    Ind.,     Public    Art     Gallery 119 

Saint-Gaudens     Studios,     Cornish,     N.     H 44 

Saint    Johnsbury    Athenaeum 74 

Saint    Paul    Institute    Gallery 140 

San    Diego    Museum 14 

San    Francisco    Art    Association 102 

San  Francisco    Museum  of  Art 15 

Semitic    Museum,    Cambridge 34 

Simmons    Collection,    Portland,    Me 29 

Slater    Museum,    Norwich,    Conn ._ 17 

Smith,    George   Walter   Vincent,    Collection,    Springfield,    Mass 35 

Smithsonian  Institution,   Washington,   D.   C 19 

Southwest    Museum.    Los    Angeles.    Calif 13 

Stanford,    Thomas    Welton.    Art    Gallery IS 

Staten  Island  Institute  of  Arts  and   Sciences 55 

Stuart    Gallejy,    New    York 54 

Sweat    Memorial    Museum,    Portland    Me 29 

Syracuse  Museum  of  Fine  Arts 59 

Taylor    Art    Building,   Vassar    College 58 

Telfair  Academy  of  Arts  and  Sciences,   Savannah,  Ga 20 

Toledo   Museum  of  Art 64 

Trumbull   Gallery,   New    Haven,    Conn 17 

Valentine    Museum,    Richmond,    Va 74 

Wadsworth    Athenjeum,    Hartford,    Conn 16 

Walker  Art  Building,   Brunswick,    Me 29 

Walker   Art   Gallery,    Minneapolis 42 

Walters    Gallery,    Baltimore 31 

Washington    State    Museum 74 

Wichita    Art    Gallery 123 

Wiscons-n   Historical    Society,    Madison. 185 

Wood    Art    Gallery,    Montpelier,    Vt 74 

Workingman's   Institute   Art    Gallery,    New    Harmony,    Ind 27 

Worcester    Art    Museum 36 

Yale   School  of  Fine  Arts,   New  Haven,   Conn 17 

GALVESTON,   TEX.— 

Art    League 181 

School  Art  League:  Vol.   XVII,  p.    220. 
GENERAL  FEDERATION  OF   WOMEN'S  CLUBS 96 

GEORGIA— 

Chapter  American  Institute  of  Architects .  .  1 ^09 

State   Federation   of   Women's   Clubs «. 96 


INDEX  663 


GIFTS   AND   BEQUESTS;   IV,   p.    271. 
GRAND   RAPIDS,   MICH.— 

Art  Association  of   Grandi  Rapids 138 

Public    Library     ..!.."!!,'!.'!.*!,"!!    1 3S 

School    of    Arts   and    Industry !*.*.!*.*.'.!!   203 

GRAPHIC   ARTS— 

American    Institute  of    Graphic    Arts ]  47 

California    Print    Makers '.'.'.'.'.    101 

California    Society    of    Etchers [[    102 

Chicago    Society    of    Etchers '...'.'.    112 

Cleveland    Print   Club 166 

Collection  of  Prints    (important  ones) — 

Boston   Museum  of   Fine  Arts 32 

Cambridge — Fogg    Museum '....'.'.'.'.'.      33 

Chicago — Art    Institute [     21 

Indianapolis — ^Herron    Art    Institute .'.'.*.*.*,*     26 

New    York — Brooklyn    Museum 47 

Metropolitan    Museum   of    Art *  *  ] .      51 

Public     Library 54 

Washington — Library    of    Congress 108 

Society    of    Iconophiles 158 

GREAT    FALLS,   MONT.— 

City    Planning    Commission I43 

Woman's   Club;   Vol.   XVII.  b.    168. 

GREELEY,    COLO.— State    Teachers'    College 190 

GREEN   BAY,   WIS.— 

Kellogg    Public    Library 184 

Museum 75 

GREENCASTLE,    IND.— Art    Club 116 

GREENSBURG,    IND.— Department    Club;    Vol.    XVII,    p.     133. 
GREENWICH,    CONN.— 

Bruce    Museum 16 

Society    of    Artists 104 

GROTON,    MASS.— Lowthorpe    School    of    Landscape   Architecture 201 

GUNNISON,    COLO.— State    Normal    School 190 

HANDICRAFTS    SOCIETIES— 

Baltimore,    Handicraft    Club    of 127 

Binghamton    Society   of    Arta>  and    Crafts 160 

Boston    Society    of   Arts    and    Crafts 132 

Buffalo    Guild    of    Allied    Arts 161 

Carmel  Club  of  Arts  and  Crafts 100 

Carolina   Arts  and   Crafts,    Charleston 178 

Chicago    Artists'     Guild Ill 

Chicago   Technic   Arts    League 113 

Columbus — Arts  and    Crafts   Dept.,   Pen   and   Pencil   Club 167 

Crafters,     Cincinnati 164 

Deerfield    Industries,    Society   of 133 

Detroit   Society  of  Arts  and   Crafts  of 138 

Duquesne    Ceramic    Club,    Pittsburgh;    Vol.    XVII,    p.    213. 

Hartford    Arts    and    Crafts    Club 105 

Hartford    Keramic    Art    Club 105 

Haverhill,    Arts    and    Crafts    Society    of 134 

Hingham   Society  of   Arts  and   Crafts 134 

Jersey    City    Keramic    Art    Club 146 

Keramic  Society  of  Greater  New  York 152 

Louisville    Handicraft    Guild 123 

Melrose,    Society  of  Arts  and   Crafts  of;   Vol.   XVII,   p.   155. 

Minneapolis    Keramic    Club 139 

New    Orleans   Arts   and    Crafts    Club 124 

New    York    Society   of    Craftsmen 155 

Norwell  Society  of  Arts  and  Crafts 135 

Old    Colony   Union,    Bourne,    Mass 132 

Peterborough,   Handicraft   Workers   of 145 

Philadelphia,   Arts   and    Crafts    Guild   of 171 

Portland    (Me.)    Society   of   Arts  and   Crafts 126 

Columbian   Arts   and    Crafts    League,    Portland 126 

Portland    (Ore.)   Arts  and   Crafts   Society 169 

Providence,    Handicraft    Club    of 177 

Pueblo    Arts    and    Crafts    Society 1 04 

Rockford     Art     Guild 114 

Salt    Lake    Citv    Associated    Craftsmen 181 

San    Diego    Art    Guild 102 

Seabright     Crafts 103 

Virginia  League  of   Fine  Arts  and   Handicrafts 183 

Washington   Handicraft   Guild;    Vol.    XVII,   p.    120. 


664  INDEX 


HARTFORD,    CONN.— 

Archaeological    Society     94 

Art     Club 105 

Art    Society 1 04 

Arts    and    Crafts    Club 105 

Connecticut    Academy    of    the    Fine   Arts [    105 

Connecticut   State    Capitol   Commission   of    Sculpture 105 

Keramic    Art    Club 105 

Morgan     Memorial I6 

Municipal    Art    Society 105 

Schools 191 

Wadsworth     Atheneum 16 

HAVERHILL,    MASS.— Arts    and    Crafts    Society 134 

HENDERSON,     KY.— Art    League 123 

HINGHAM,    MASS.— Society    of    Arts    and    Crafts 134 

HISTORICAL   SOCIETIES— 

American    Antiquarian    Society 137 

American    Scenic    and    Historic    Preservation    Society 94 

Antiquarian    Society    of   the    Art    Institute   of    Chicago 110 

Broome    County    Historical    Society,    Art   Gallery   and    Museum 56 

Bucks    County    Historical     Society 170 

Litchfield    Historical    Society - 105 

Maryland    Historical    Society 127 

Mattatuck     Historical     Society 107 

New    England    Antiquities,    Society   of    the    Preservation    of 132 

New    York    Historical    Society 54 

Pennsylvania,    Historical    Society  of 172 

Princeton    University,    Museum    of    Historic    Art    of 46 

Wisconsin,     State    Historical    Society    of 224 

History  of  Art  as  a  College  Discipline;  by  T.   Lindsey  Blayney;   VII,  p.  23. 

History  of  Art,    The   Value  of  Teaching  the;  by  George   M.   Chase;   VIII,   p.   22. 

HOLLYWOOD,     CALIF.— Art    Association 100 

HONOLULU,    H.    I.— University    of    Hawaii 192 

HOUSTON,  TEX.— 

Art    League 181 

William   M.    Rice   Institute  of   Arts   and    Sciences 221 

HUNTINGTON.    N.    Y.— Herkscher    Park    Art    Museum 57 

HUNTINGTON,    W.    VA.— Marshall    College 223 

IDAHO   State  Federation  of   Women's   Clubs 96 

ILLINOIS— 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 109 

State    Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 96 

ILLUSTRATORS,    Who's    Who   in    Art 329 

List    of    Illustrators 625 

Illustrators,    Society    of 158 

INDEPENDENCE,    MO.— Archaeological    Society 95 

INDIANA— 

Archaeological    Society 95 

Circuit     Exhibition 115 

Indiana    Society  of    Architects 115 

Indiana   Society  of   Sculptors 115 

State   Fair   Art   Gallery 115 

State    Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 96 

State   Library    115 

State    Teachers'    Association 116 

INDIANA,    PA.— State    Normal    School 216 

INDIANAPOLIS,  IND.— 

Architects    Association 117 

Architectural     League 117 

Art     Association 26 

Friends    of    American    Art 117 

Herron    Art    Institute 26 

Indiana    Artists'    Club 117 

Indiana    Keramic    Club 117 

Memorial    Art    Commission 117 

Portfolio     Club 117 

Public     Library 117 

School  of  the  John  Herron  Art  Institute 194 

Sketching     Club 118 

Study     Club 118 

Woman's    Department    Club 118 

Industrial  Art,  A   Plea  for.     By  William   Sloane   Coffin;   VIII,   p.    15. 

Industrial     Development;     Art     Education     an    Important     Factor.     By     Halsey     C.     Ives; 
VI,   p.    13. 


INDEX  665 


INDUSTRIAL  ART   SCHOOL;   XI,   p.    385. 

IOWA— 

Archaeological     Society 94 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 120 

State  Federation  of  Women's  Clubs 97 

IOWA  CITY.  lA.— 

Fine    Arts    Association 122 

Museum    of    Art    and    Archaeology 28 

Ranney    Library  and    Museum 28 

State     University 195 

University  of   Iowa   Museum  of   Art   and   Archaeology 28 

Investments,  Paintings,  Prints  and  Art  Objects  a^.     By  Flcrence  N.   Levy;  X,  p.  35. 

ITHACA,   N.   Y.— 

Cornell    University,    Museum   of    Classical   Archaeology 57 

College    of    Architecture 207 

JACKSON,  MICH.— 

Art    Association 138 

Public    Library 138 

JACKSON,   MISS.— 

Belhaven     College 204 

Mississippi    Art    Association 141 

JACKSONVILLE,    ILL.— Illinois    Woman's    College 194 

JAMESTOWN,    N.    Y.— James    Prendergast    Library    Association 161 

JANESVILLE,    WIS.— Art    League 184 

JEFFERSON   CITY,    MO.— Art   Club:   Vol.   XVII,  d.    164. 

JENKINTOWN,    PA.— Beechwood    School    of    Fine    Arts 216 

JERSEY  CITY,   N.  J.— 

Arts   Club   of  Jersey   City 146 

Free    Public    Library 145 

Keramic    Art    Club 146 

KALAMAZOO,     MICH.— Western    State    Normal    School 203 

KANSAS— State  Federation  of  Women's  Clubs 97 

KANSAS  CITY,  MO.— 

Archaeological     Society 94 

Art    Institute 141 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 141 

Keramic    Club;    Vol.    XVII.    d.    165. 

Nelson    Gallery   of    Art 42 

Kansas    Citv    Art    Institute    School 204 

KENTUCKY— State    Federation    of    Women's     Clubs '97 

Chapter,   American   Institute   of   Architects 123 

KEWANEE,     ILL.— Public     Library 114 

KNOXVILLE,   TENN.— 

Appalachian  Exposition;  IX,  p.  163. 

Art    Museum;    VI,   p,    176. 

Nicholson   Art  League;   Vol.    XVII,   p.   218. 

University    of     Tennessee 219 

KOKOMO,    IND.— Woman's    Deoartment    Club 118 

LA    CROSSE.    WIS.— Art    Association 184 

LAFAYETTE,    IND.— 

Art    Association 118 

Art     Club 118 

Purdue     University 194 

LAFAYETTE,    LA.— Southwestern   Louisiana   Industrial    Institute 197 

LACUNA  BEACH,  CALIF.— 

Art    Association 1 00 

West    Coast    Arts 100 

LANDSCAPE   ARCHITECTURE— 

American   Society  of   Landscape   Arc'iitects 94 

Boston    Society    of    Landscape    Architects 130 

Minnesota    Society   of    Landscape    A.cliitects 1 39 

New  York  Society  of  Landscape  Architects 155 

Pacific    Coast    Chapter,    American    Society   of    Landscape   Architects 98 

LANSING,     MICH.— State    Library 138 

LAS  VEGAS,   N.    M.— New^  Mexico  Normal  University 206 

LAWRENCE,  KAN.— 

Kansas  Art  Association 122 

University    of    Kansas,    School    of    Fine    Arts 196 

LEBANON,    IND.— Florentine    Club 118 

LECTURERS— 

Directory    of    Professional    Lecturers    and    Writers;    XIII,    p.    450. 

LEXINGTON,    KY.— 

University    of    Kentucky 196 

Woman's   Club   of    Central    Kentucky -. 123 


666  INDEX 


LIBRARIES    HAVING    GALLERIES— 

Attleboro    Public    Library 129 

Avery  Architectural    Library,    New   York '...'.'..'......'.    150 

Binghamton    Public    Library '..'.'....'.'.'.    160 

Birmingham    Public    Library !.!!.'!!!!!'.      99 

Boston,   Public   Library   of   the    City   of !!!.**.'    131 

Brockton   Public   Library ......'..'.    132 

Brookline    Public    Library !.,...    133 

Brown,   James  V.,   Library,   Williamsport,    Pa ....'....'.'.    176 

Carnegie-Stout   Free  Public   Library,   Dubuque,   la [ . .    122 

Chicago    Public    Library 1 1 1 

Columbus    Public    Library 167 

Congressional   Library,   Washington,    D.    C ,'.    108 

Davenport    Public    Library 121 

Denver    Public    Library * .    104 

Des    Moines   Public    Library 121 

District   of   Columbia   Public   Library 108 

Fairbanks    Memorial    Library,    Terre    Haute,    Ind 120 

Fitchburg    Public    Library 134 

Flower    Memorial    Library,    Watertown,    N.    Y 162 

Forbes    Library,    Northampton,    Mass 135 

Fort   Worth    Carnegie   Library 73 

Grand    Rapids   Public    Library 138 

Grosvenor    Library,    Buffalo 161 

Indianapolis    Public    Library .    117 

Jackson    Public   Library 138 

Jersey   City    Free    Public    Library 145 

Jesup    Memorial   Library,    Westport,    Conn 107 

Jesup  Memorial  Library,   Bar  Harbor,  Me 125 

Kellogg  Public  Library,   Green  Bay,  Wis 184 

Kewanee   Public    Library 114 

Long  Beach  Public  Library 100 

Louisville   Free   Public   Library 123 

Lyme   Public    Library 106 

Lynn    Public    Library 134 

Maiden    Public    Library 134 

Marion,    Ind.,    Public    Library 118 

Michigan    State   Library,    Lansing 138 

Milton    Public    Library 134 

Minneapolis    Public    Library 139 

Nashville   Carnegie   Public  Library 179 

Nevins    Memorial    Hall   and  Library,    Methuen,    Mass 134 

Newark   Free   Public   Library   and   Museum 45 

New    Bedford    Free   Public    Library 135 

New    York    Public    Library 54 

New    York    Society    Library 156 

Nutley    Free    Public    Library 146 

Oakland  Free  Library;   Vol.   XVII,  p.    113. 

Oklahoma    City    Carnegie    Library 168 

Omaha  Public   Library  and   Museum 44 

Oregon    (III.)    Public    Library 114 

Peck   Library,    Norwich,   Conn 17 

Philadelphia,    Free    Library  of 171 

Portland    (O.)    Library    Association 169 

Prendergast   Library  Association,   Jamestown,    N.    Y 161 

Providence    Athenaeum 177 

Ranney    Library    and    Museum,    Iowa    City,    la 28 

Redwood    Library,    Newport 177 

Ryerson   Library,   Art   Institute  of   Chicago 93 

Saint    Louis    Public    Library 143 

Saint   Paul    Public    Library 140 

Seattle   Public   Library 183 

Sedalia    Public    Library 143 

Shelbyville    Carnegie    Public    Library 119 

Skaneateles    Library    Association 59 

Springfield    (Mass.)    City   Library  Association 136 

Tipton    Public   Library 120 

Utica    Public    Library 1 62 

Woburn    Public    Library 136 

Worcester    Free    Public    Library 137 

LIBRARIES   ON  ART;   III,    p.    211. 

LINCOLN,    NEB.— 

Nebraska    Art     Association 144 

University    of    Nebraska 205 

LINDSBORG,  KAN.— 

Bethanv    College 1 96 

Smoky  Hill  Art  Club 122 


INDEX  667 


^ 


LITCHFIELD,    CONN.— Historical    Society 105 

Needle    and    Bobbin    Club 105 

LOGAN,    UTAH— Utah    Agricultural    College !  * !   222 

LOGANSPORT,     IND.— Art     Association 118 

LONDON,    ENGLAND— Anglo-American    Exposition;    XI,    p.    351. 

LONG    BEACH,    CALIF.— Public    Library 100 

LOS  ANGELES.   CALIF.— 

Archaeological    Society 95 

California    Art     Club "    1  qq 

California    Water    Color    Society 101 

Ebell    Club 101 

Engineers'   and   Architects'   Association   of   Southern   California 99 

Friday    Morning    Club 101 

Municipal    Art    Commission ' 101 

Museum   of    History,    Science   and    Art 13 

Print    Makers 101 

Schools    188 

Southern    California    Chapter,    American    Institute   of   Architects 92 

Southwest    Museum 13 

Ten  Painters'   Club;   Vol.   XVII,  p.   113. 
LOUISIANA— 

Art    Teachers'    Association 124 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 124 

State    Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 97 

LOUISVILLE,   KY.— 

Art    Association 123 

Artists'  League;  Vol.  XVII.  p.   141. 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 92 

Handicraft    Guild 123 

School    of    Art 197 

University    of    Louisville 197 

LOWELL,   MASS.— 

Textile     School 201 

LYME,    CONN.— 

Art    Association 106 

LYNCHBURG,   VA.— 

Art     School 222 

Randolph-Macon   Woman's    College 222 

Woman's     Club 183 

LYNN,  MASS.— 

Art    Club 134 

Public    Library 134 

McKim,    Charles   F.;  VII,   p.    9. 

Mcpherson,    KAN.— High    School    Art    Department 122 

MACON,    GA.— Art    Association 109 

MADISON,   WIS.— 

Art    Association 184 

State    Historical    Society    of   Wisconsin 185 

University    of    Wisconsin 223 

MAGAZINES    OF    ART 231 

MAINE— 

Teachers'     Association 125 

State    Federation   of    Women's    Clubs 97 

MALDEN,    MASS.— Public    Library 134 

MANCHESTER,    N.    H.— 

City     Library 144 

Currier    Gallery   of  Art 45 

Institute    of   Arts   and    Sciences 145,  205 

MANHATTAN,     KAN.— Kansas    State    Agricultural    College 196 

MANSFIELD,    PA.— State    Normal    School;    XVII,    p.    256. 
MARION,   IND.— 

Department     Club 118 

Public     Library 118 

MARTINSVILLE,    IND.— Monday   Afternoon    Art    Club 119 

MARYLAND— State   Federation   of    Women's    Clubs 97 

MASSACHUSETTS— 

Art   Commission 1 29 

Board     of     Education 129 

Library    Art    Club 129 

Normal    Art    School 129 

Normal    Art    School    Alumni    Association 129 

State    Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 97 

MATTOON,     ILL.— Art     Club 114 


66^  INDEX 


MEADVILLE,    PA.— Art    Association 170 

MELROSE,    MASS.— Society  of   Arts   and   Crafts;    XVII,   p.    155. 

MEMPHIS,   TENN.— 

Art    Association 1 79 

Junior    Art    Association 178 

Brooks    Memorial 72 

MENOMONIE,     WIS.— Stout     Institute 223 

Methods    of    Using   Art    Museums;    XII,    p.    15. 

METHUEN,    MASS.— Nevins   Memorial    Hall   and   Library 134 

MIAMI,    FLA.— Blue    Dome    Fellowship;    XVII,   p.    122. 
Woman's    Club;    XVII,    p.    122. 

MICHIGAN— 

Chapter   American    Institute   of   Architects. 137 

State   Federation   of   Women's    Clubs '. 97 

MILLERVILLE,    PA.— State    Normal    School 216 

MILLS,    CALIF.— Mills    College 188 

MILTON,     MASS.— Public    Library 134 

MILTON-ON-HUDSON,    N.    Y.— Elverhoj    Summer    School 207 

MILWAUKEE,  WIS.— 

Art   Commission 185 

Art     Institute 75 

Layton    Art    Gallery 75 

Schools    224 

State    Historical    Society 185 

Wisconsin   Painters   and    Sculptors 185 

MINIATURE  PAINTERS— 

American    Society    of    Miniature   Painters 147 

Chicago    Society    of    Miniature    Painters 112 

Pennsylvania    Society   of   Miniature   Painters 173 

School   of    Miniature    Painting 207 

MINNEAPOLIS,    MINN.— 

Attic    Club    oi   Minneapolis 139 

City   Art    Commission;    Vol.    XVII,    p.    161. 

Institute   of    Arts 40 

Minnesota    Academy    of     Science     Museum 42 

Minnesota  Chapter,  American  Institute  of  Architects 93 

Minnesota    College    Art    Society 140 

Minnesota   State  Art   Society 139 

Public    Library    and    Art    Gallery 139 

Schools    203 

Society    of    Architects 139 

Society   of   Fine  Arts 40 

Scandinavian   Art    Society   of    America 140 

Minneapolis    Keramic    Club 139 

Veterans     140 

Walker    Art    Gallery 42 

Woman's     Club 140 

MINNESOTA— 

Chapter,   American  Institute  of  Architects 139 

Chapter,    American    Society   of    Landscape    Architects 139 

State   Art   Commission 139 

State   Art    Society 139 

State    Federation   of   Women's    Clubs 97 

MISHAWAKA,    IND.— Woman's    Club;    Vol.    XVII,    p.     135. 

MISSISSIPPI— 

Art     Association 141 

State    Federation    of    Women's    Club 97 

MISSOURI — State    Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 97 

MOLINE,    ILL.— (5'^^'  Davenport.) 

MONTANA — State    Federation   of    Women's    Clubs 97 

MONTCLAIR,   N.    J.— 

Art    Association ^ 45 

Museum    45 

MONTEREY,    MASS.— Berkshire   Summer    School 201 

MONTPELIER,  VT.— 

Wood    Art    Gallery 74 

MUNCIE,   IND.— 

Art   Association;    Vol.    XVII,    p.    135. 

Art    Students'    League 119 

MUNICIPAL  ART— 
Baltimore — 

Art   Commission  of   the   City 126 

Municipal    Art    Society 128 


INDEX  669 


MUNICIPAL  ART— Continued. 
Boston —  ( 

Art    Commission   of   the    City 129 

Art    Commission,    Commonwealth   of    Massachusetts 129 

Chicago — 

Art    Commission 110 

Municipal    Art    Commission 113 

Municipal   Art   League    of   Chicago 113 

Cincinnati — Municipal    Art    Society 164 

Cleveland — 

City   Planning    Commission 165 

Municipal   Gallery;    Vol.    XVII,   p.    199. 

Connecticut    Commission    of    Sculpture 105 

Denver — Art    Commission    of    Denver 103 

Great     Falls — City     Planning     Commission 143 

Hartford— Municipal   Art    Society 105 

Indianapolis    Memorial    Art    Commission 117 

Los    Angeles,    Calif. — Municipal    Art    Commission 101 

Massachusetts     Art     Commission 129 

Milwaukee    Art    Commission 185 

Minneapolis — Art    Commission;    Vol.    XVII,    p.    161. 

Minnesota    State    Art    Commission 139 

Nashville — Art     Commission 1 79 

New    Haven,    Conn. — Municipal    Art    Commission 106 

New    York    City — 

Art     Commission 148 

Art    Commission    Associates 1 48 

Civic    Club 150 

Municipal    Art    Society    of    New    York 152 

Scenic    and    Historic    Preservation;   Society 94 

Philadelphia- 
Art    Jury 170 

City    Parks    Association 171 

Fairmount    Park   Art    Association 171 

Pittsburgh    Art    Commission 1 74 

Richmond,    Ind. — Public    Art    Gallery 119 

Richmond,    Va. — Art     Commission 182 

St.   Louis — 

Civic     League 142 

Municipal    Art    Commission 142 

Salt   Lake   City,   Utah — Civic   Art   and   Planning   Commission 182 

Washington — 

American    Civic    Association 92 

Commission    of    Fine    Arts 98 

Mural    Painting    in    the    United    States;    IX,    p.    13. 

JVEURFREESBORO,     TENN.— Schools 219 

MUSEUM    WORKERS,   Directorv   of;    XIII,    p.    431. 

MUSEUMS    (For    list    see    Galleries) 13 

Museums    in    Our    Smaller    Cities,    Importance    of    Art.      By    Robert    W.    de    Forest; 
X,    p.    11. 

MUSKEGON,    MICH.— Hackley    Art    Gallery 140 

MUSKOGEE,    OKLA.— Art    Association 168 

MYSTIC,    CONN.— Art    Association 106 

NANUET,     N.    Y.— Painters    and    Sculptors 161 

NASHVILLE,    TENN.— 

Archaeological     Society 95 

Art    Association 1 79 

Art    Commission 1 79 

Centennial     Club 179 

Club    of    Designers 179 

East   Nashville  Woman's   Clubs 1 79 

Park     Commission 180 

Schools    219 

Tennessee    State   Fair 179 

NATIONAL  SOCIETIES— 

American  Academy    in    Rome 91 

American  Academy   of    Arts    and    Letters 91 

American  Art    Dealers'    Association;    Vol.    XVII,    p.    103. 

American  Association    of    Museums 91 

American  Bookplate     Society 92 

American  Civic     Association 92 

American  Federation   of    Arts 77 

American  Institute    of    Architects 92 

American  Numismatic     Association 93 

American  Scenic    and    Historic    Preservation    Society 94 


670  INDEX 


NA TIONAL  SOCIETIES— Continued. 

American  Society    of    Landscape    Architects 94 

American  Society    of    Miniature    Painters \[[  I47 

Archaeological    Institute   of   America .....'.  94 

Art    Alliance    of    America !!,'!!.'..*!.'.','!!  147 

Association    of   Art    Museum    Directors [[[  95 

Association    of    Collegiate    Schools    of    Architecture 96 

Association    of    Picture    Publishers *  95 

Association  of  the  Alumni  of   the  American  Academy   in   Rome 91 

College    Art    Association 96 

Commission    of    Fine    Arts ,[,[  98 

Eastern    Arts    Association 96 

General  Federation  of  Women's  Clubs \\\\  96 

Mural    Painters I53 

National  Academy    of     Design 1 53 

National  Arts     Club 1 54 

National  Association    of    Portrait    Painters 154 

National  Institute  of  Arts  and  Letters 98 

National   Gallery    of    Art 19 

National   Sculpture     Society 1 54 

Pacific   Coast   Chapter,   American   Society  of   Landscape  Architects 98 

Pictorial    Photographers    of    America 98 

Print  Publishers'  Association  of  America 98 

Western  Arts   Association 99 

NEBRASKA— 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 144 

Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 97 

NEVADA — Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 97 

NEWARK,   N.   J.— 

Art    League;    Vol.   XVII,   i).    171. 

Fawcett    School    of    Industrial    Art 205 

Free    Public    Library 45 

Museum     Association 45 

NEW    BEDFORD,    MASS.— 

Architectural     Atelier , 201 

Public     Library 135 

Society  of   Fine  Arts 135 

Swain    Free    School    of    Design 135,  201 

Textile    School 201 

NEW  BRIGHTON,   PA.— Merrick  Free  Art   Gallery,   Museum;  and  Library 66 

NEW   BRITAIN,    CONN.— New    Britain    Institute 106 

NEW    CANAAN,    CONN.— Society    of    Artists 106 

NEW   HAMPSHIRE— 

Practical    Arts    Club 144 

State   Federation   of   Women's    Clubs 97 . 

NEW   HARMONY,    IND. — Art   Gallery  and    Museum   of  the  Workingmen's   Institute.     27 

NEW    HAVEN,    CONN.— 

Jarves    Collection     •••_••; 17 

Municipal    Art    Commission    of    New    Haven 1 06 

Paint   and    Clay  Club -.    106 

Trumbull    Collection    17 

Yale   School  of   the  Fine  Arts 17,   106,  191 

NEW   JERSEY— 

Archaeological    Society 95 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects .    145 

State    Federation   of   Women's    Clubs '.  .      97 

NEW    MEXICO— Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 97 

NEW  ORLEANS,   LA.— 

Art   Association    124 

Arts   and    Crafts    Club 124 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 93 

Delgado    Museum    of    Art 28 

Fine  Arts    Club   of    New    Orleans 124 

Linton-Surget    Art     Hall 28 

Louisiana    State    Museum 29 

Newcomb    College     124 

Public     Library     125 

Quartier    Club     125 

Schools    197 

NEWPORT,  R.  I.— 

Art    Association     176 

School    of    Art    Association 219 

Redwood   Library  and   Athenaeum 177 


INDEX  671 


NEW  ROCHELLE.  N.  Y.— 

Art    Association    161 

Public     Library 161 

NEWSPAPERS   HAVING   ART   NOTES • '.;'.'.'.'.  233 

NEW  YORK  STATE— 

State  Federation  of  Women's  Clubs 97 

State     University     *  160 

Teachers'    Association     159 

NEW    YORK   CITY— 

Allied    Artists    of    America 146 

Allied   Arts  Association  of  Brooklyn 146 

American  Academy  of  Arts  and  Letters 98 

American  Fine    Arts    Society 146 

American  Institute  of   Architects,    Chapter   of 155 

American  Institute    of    Graphic    Arts 147 

American  Museum    of    Natural    History 47 

American  Numismatic     Society     47 

American  Painters,    Sculptors    and    Gravers -. 155 

American  Scenic    and    Historic    Preservation    Society 94 

American  Society    of    Miniature    Painters 147 

American  Water    Color    Society 147 

Archaeological    Society 95 

Architectural    League    of    New    York 147 

Art  Alliance    of    America 147 

Art  Center     147 

Art  Commission 148 

Art  Commission    Associates     148 

Art  Directors    Club     148 

Art  in    Trades    Club 148 

Art  Workers'  Club  for  Women 148 

Artists'    Aid    Society 148 

Artists'    Fund    Society 149 

Association    for    Culture 149 

Avery    Architectural    Library 150 

Barnard    Cloisters     47 

Beaux-Arts     Architects     158 

Beaux-Arts    Institute    of    Design 207 

Brooklyn    Allied    Arts    Association    of 146 

Bronx  Society  of  Arts   and   Sciences 49 

Brooklyn  Chapter   American   Institute    of   Architects 149 

Brooklyn  Institute   of   Arts  and    Sciences 47 

Brooklyn  Museum     47 

Brooklyn  Society  of    Artists 149 

Brooklyn  Society    of    Etchers 149 

Brooklyn  Society    of    Miniature    Painters 149 

Brooklyn  Water    Color    Club 149 

Camera    Club 150 

Century   Association    150 

Chaloner    Prize    Foundation 150 

City    Club    150 

Civic    Club    150 

Columbia    University 150 

Avery    Architectural    Library 150 

Alumni  Association  of  the   School  of  Architecture,  Columbia  University 150 

Fine  Arts  Endowment;    Vol.   XVII,   p.   178. 

Institute   of    Arts  and    Sciences 151 

Pulitzer   Art    Scholarship 151 

Cooper    Union     50 

Dyckman   House,  Park  and   Museum 50 

Federation   of  Women's    Clubs 97 

Fine   Arts    Federation   of    New    York 151 

French   Institute   in   the    United    States 153 

Grolier    Club    151 

Guild    of    American    Painters 151 

Guild    of   Bookworkers 151 

Guild  of  Free  Lance  Artists  of  the  Authors'  League  of  America 151 

Hispanic    Society    of    America 51 

Historical    Society    54 

Illustrators,    Society    of 158 

Jumel    Mansion    55 

Junior   Art   Patrons   of    America 152 

Keramic  Society  of  Greater  New  York 152 

Kit-Kat   Club;    Vol.    XVII,   ?.    181. 
Lazarus    Scholarship,   XIII,   p.    53. 

League  of   New  York  Artists 152 

Les    Anciens    de    I'Academie    Julian 152 


672  INDEX 


NEW  YORK  CITY— Continued 

Long    Island    Painters 152 

Lotos    Club    152 

MacDowell     Club     152 

Massachusetts    Normal   Art    School    Alumni,    Chapter    of 155 

Metropolitan    Museum    of    Art 51 

Municipal    Art     Society 152 

Mural    Painters 153 

Museum  for  the  Arts  of   Decoration 50 

Museum  of   French  Art 153 

National  Academy    Association     153 

National  Academy   of   Design 153 

National  Academy  of    Design,    Members  from   its   foundation;    X,   p.   393. 

National  Arts    Club     154 

National  Association    of    Portrait    Painters 154 

National  Association   of  Women   Painters   and    Sculptors 154 

National  Institute    of    Arts    and    Letters 98 

National  Sculpture    Society     154 

Needle    and    Bobbin    Club 154 

New    Society    of    Artists 155 

New    York    Society   of    Craftsmen 155 

Painter-Gravers     156 

Pen   and    Brush    Club 156 

People's    Art    Guild 156 

Print    Department,    Public    Library 54 

Private    Collections;    I,    p.    228. 

Public    Library — Astor,    Lenox,    Tilden    Foundation 54 

Salmagundi   Club    156 

School   Art   League 157 

School    Crafts    Club 157 

Schools 207 

Societe  des  Architects  Diplomes  par  le  Gouvernment  Francais 157 

Society   of   American  Antiquarians 157 

Society  of  American    Artists     157 

Society  of  American    Fakirs     158 

Society  of  American  Painters,  Sculptors  and  Gravers.     See  New  Society  of  Artists. 

Society   of   Animal    Painters    and    Sculptors 157 

Society  of  Beaux-Arts    Architects    158 

Society  of  Keramic    Arts     155 

Society  of  Iconophiles     158 

Society  of  Illustrators     158 

Society  of  Independent    Artists    158 

Society   of    Landscape   Architects,    Chapter  of 155 

Society    Library     156 

Society  of  Men   Who    Paint   the    Far   West 158 

Society  of  Painters   of    New    York 155 

Staten  Island   Institute  of  Arts  and   Sciences 55 

Studio    Club    of    New    York 158 

Three    Arts    Club 159 

Union    League    Club 159 

Washington    Headquarters    Association 55 

Water    Color    Club 156 

Whitney    Studio    159 

Whitney    Studio    Club 159 

Wolfe    Art    Club 159 

NORFOLK,    VA.— Society    of    Arts 183 

NORMAL  ART  SCHOOLS;  XI,  p.   386. 

NORMAL,    TENN.— West    Tennessee    State    Normal    School 220 

NORMAN,    OKLA.— 

Beaux-Arts     : 168 

University   of    Oklahoma 215 

NORTH    AMERICA— Museum    in;    XIII,    p.    278. 

NORTHAMPTON,   MASS.— 

Forbes    Library     135 

Hillyer    Art    Gallery 34 

Smith   College   Art   Gallery 34 

NORTH  CAROLINA— 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 163 

State    Federation   of   Women's    Clubs 97 

NORTH  DAKOTA  Federation  of  Women's   Clubs 97 

NORWELL,   MASS.— Norwell    Society  of   Arts  and   Crafts 135 

NORWICH,  CONN.— 

Art    School    191 

Converse    Art    Building 17 


INDEX  673 


NORWICH,  CO'NN.— Continued. 

Free   Academy    17 

Slater   Memorial    Museum 17 

NOTRE  DAME,  IND.— University  of  Notre  Dame 195 

NUMISMATIC— 

American    Numismatic    Association    (with    Chapters) 93 

American    Numismatic    Society 47 

Springfield    Coin    Club 136 

NUTLEY,  N.  J.— Free  Public  Library 146 

OAKLAND,    CALIF.— 

Art    Association     13 

Free   Library;    Vol.    XVII,    p.    113. 

Municipal    Art    Gallery 13 

©BERLIN,   O.— 

Art    Association     167 

Allen   Memorial    Art   Building 64 

Oberlin    College    64,  214 

OBITUARIES     225 

OGUNQUIT,    ME.— Summer    Schools 198 

OHIO— 

State  Association  of  Architects 163 

State  Federation  of   Women's   Clubs 97 

OKLAHOMA— State    Federation   of    Women's    Clubs 97 

OKLAHOMA   CITY,   OKLA.— 

Art    League     168 

Association  of  Oklahoma  Artists 168 

OMAHA,  NEB.— 

Greater  America  Expositiop;  II,  p.  33. 

Art    Guild     144 

Friends   of   Art   Association;    Vol.    XVII,    p.    169. 

Lininger    Art     Gallery 44 

National  Art  Gallery;    V,    p.   230. 

Public   Library  and    Museum 44 

Society    of    Fine    Arts 44 

Trans-Mississippi   Exposition;    I,   p.    321. 

OREGON— 

Chapter,   American  Institute  of  Architects 168 

State   Federation  of    Women's   Clubs 97 

OREGON,    ILL.— Public    Library 114 

OXFORD,    O. — Branch   of   Cincinnati   Archaeological    Society 95 

OYSTER   BAY,    N.    Y.— Louis    Comfort   Tiffany   Foundation 58,211 

PACIFIC     COAST     CHAPTER.     AMERICAN     INSTITUTE     OF     LANDSCAPE 

ARCHITECTS    98 

PADUCAH,   KY.— Woman's  Club 123 

PAINTERS,    Who's   Who    in    Art 329 

PAINTINGS  SOLD  AT  AUCTION 241 

PARIS,  FRANCE— 

American  Art  Association  of  Paris 185 

American  Art    Students'    Club 186 

American    Students    Club 186 

International   Club   for   Women    Students 186 

International   Exposition,   1900;   III,   p.  9. 

Paris  Society  of  American  Painters 186 

PARIS,  KY.— Bourbon  Art  Club 124 

PASADENA,  CALIF.— 

Music   and    Art    Association 101 

Stickney   Memorial    School   of   Art 189 

PAULS  VALLEY,  OKLA.— Art  Club;  Vol.  XVII,  p.  204. 

PENDLETON,    IND.— Art   Association 119 

PENNSYLVANIA- 

Archaeological    Society    95 

Delaware   County   Art   and    Manual   Training  Associates 169 

Public    Instruction,    Vocational     Division 169 

State    Federation    of    Pennsylvania    Women 169 

State   Federation   of   Women's    Clubs 97 

PEORIA,   ILL.— 

Bradley    Polytechnic    Institute 194 

Society    of    Allied    Arts 114 

PERU,    IND.— Art    Club 119 

PERU,   NEB.— Fortnightly    Art    Club 144 


674  INDEX 


PETERBOROUGH,   N.   H.— 

Edward    MacDowell    Memorial    Association 145 

Handicraft    Workers    of    Peterborough ; .  .    145 

PHILADELPHIA,    PA.— 

Alumnae   of    the   Philadelphia    School   of   Design  for  Women 170 

Art    Alliance     173 

Art   Club   of   Philadelphia .' . . .    170 

Art  Jury    170 

Arts   and    Crafts    Guild    of    Philadelphia 171 

Associated    Artists    171 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 173 

City   Parks    Association 171 

Drexel   Institute  of  Art,   Science  and   Industry  Museum 171 

Fairmount    Park    Art    Association 171 

Fellowship   of   the   Pennsylvania   Academy  of   the    Fine  Arts 172 

Free    Library    of    Philadelphia 171 

Fountain    Society     173 

Graphic  Sketch   Club;   Vol.  XVII,  p.   208. 

Historical   Society  of  Pennsylvania 172 

Independence     Hall     66 

Museum    of    Art 68 

Numismatic    and    Antiquarian    Society 172 

Pennsylvania  Academy  of  the   Fine  Arts 67 

Pennsylvania   Museum  and  School  of   Industrial   Art 67 

Alumni     Associations     172 

Associate  Committee  of   Women 1 72 

Pennsylvania    Society    of    Miniature    Painters 173 

Plasfic    Club     174 

Print    Club    174 

Schools     216 

Sketch    Club     173 

Society  of  Arts  and  Letters 173 

T    Square    Club 174 

University    of    Pennsylvania    Museum 68 

Water    Color    Club 174 

Wilstach   Gallery    174 

PICTORIAL   PHOTOGRAPHERS   OF  AMERICA 98 

PIEDMONT,    CALIF.— School   of  Arts  and    Crafts 189 

PITTSBURGH,   PA.— 

Archaeological    Society    95 

Architectural    Club 175 

Art    Commission    1 74 

Art    Society   of    Pittsburgh 175 

Associated    Artists    of    Pittsburgh 175 

Beaux -Arts   Salon    175 

Carnegie    Institute     69 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of   Architects 175 

Duquesne  Ceramic   Club;   Vol.   XVII,  p. 2 13. 

One  Hundred  Friends  of  Pittsburgh  Art 175 

Schools     218 

Teachers'    Art    Club 176 

PITTSFIELD,    MASS. — Berkshire   Athenaeum  and    Museum 34 

PORTLAND,  ME.— 

Columbian  Arts  and  Crafts   League 126 

School    of    Fine    Arts 198 

Simmons     Collection     29 

Society    of    Art 29 

Society    of    Arts    and    Crafts 126 

Sweat   Memorial   Museum 29 

PORTLAND,   ORE.— 

Archaeological    Society     95 

Art    Association 66 

Arts    and    Crafts    Society 1 69 

Lewis  and  Clark   Exposition;   V,  p.   245. 

Library   Association 169 

Oregon  Chapter,  American  Institute  of  Architects 93 

Schools     215 

POUGHKEEPSIE,  N.  Y.— Vassar  College,  Taylor  Art  Building 58 

PRESS   LIST 233 

PRICES,  RECORD   OF  YEAR 234 

PRINCETON,    N.    J.— University    Art    Museum 46 

PRINT  PUBLISHERS  ASSOCIATION  OF  AMERICA 98 

Prints  Sales  of;  IV,  p.  98. 

Prizes  Awarded   Annually;  V,    p.    126. 


INDEX  675 


PROVIDENCE,   R.  I.— 

Annmary    Brown    Memorial 71 

Art    Club    177 

Art   in  Trades   Club;    Vol.    XVII,   p.   215. 

Athenaeum    177 

Handicraft     Club     177 

Rhode,  Island    Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 93 

Rhode   Island    School   of    Design 71,  219 

Alumni    Association    177 

Museum    177 

Water    Color    Club 177 

PROVINCETOWN,    MASS.— 

Art    Association     135 

Beachcombers'    Club    135 

Sail    Loft    Club 135 

Summer   Schools    202 

Public   Schools,   Art  in   the.     By  James   P.   Haney,   I,   p.    55. 

PROVO,  UTAH— 

Art     Service     Club 181 

Brigham    Young    University 222 

PUBLISHERS— 

Association    of    Picture    Publishers 96 

Print    Publishers'    Association 98 

PUEBLO,  COLO.— 

Archaeological     Society     95 

Arts    and    Crafts    Society 104 

PULLMAN,  WASH.— State  College  of  Washington 223 

READING,  PA.— Public  Museum  and  Art  Gallery 70 

RHODE  ISLAND— 

Archaeological    Society    95 

Association   of   Teachers    of    Drawing   and   Manual   Arts 176 

Chapter,    American    Institute   of    Architects 176 

State   Federation   of  Women's   Clubs 97 

RICHMOND,  IND.— 

Art    Association     119 

RICHMOND,  VA.— 

Archaeological    Society    95 

Valentine     Museum     74 

Virginia  League  of   Fine  Arts  and   Handicrafts 183,  222 

ROCHESTER,  N.  Y.— 

Archaeological    Society    95 

Art     Club      162 

Athenaeum    and    Mechanics    Institute 212 

Industrial    Exposition     162 

Memorial    Art     Gallery 58 

Picture    Painters'    Club 162 

School    of    Fine    and    Applied    Art 162 

Society   of  Architects 162 

ROCKFORD,  ILL.— 

Art    Guild     114 

Rockford    College    194 

ROCK  ISLAND,  ILL.— {See   Davenport). 

ROCKPORT,    MASS.— Summer    School 202 

ROME,  ITALY— 

American    Academy    in    Rome 224 

International   Exposition   of   Art   and   History   at  Rome;    IX,    p.    251. 

SACRAMENTO,    CALIF.— 

California    Museum    Association 1.4 

Crocker    Art    Gallery 14 

Kingsley    Art    Club 101 

SAINT    JOHNSBURY,    VT.— Athenaeum 74 

SAINT  JOSEPH,  MO.— 

Art  League    141 

SAINT  LOUIS,   MO.— 

Archaeological    Society    94 

Architectural     Club     142 

Art    Alliance     ^- 141 

Art  League    '• 143 

Art    Students    Association 141 

Artists'     Guild      142 

Chapter,  American  Institute  of  Architects 142 

City    Art    Museum 42 


676  INDEX 


SAINT  LOUIS,  MO.— Continued. 

City  Club   of   Saint  Louis 142 

Civic  League  of  Saint  Louis 142 

Friends  of  the  Local  Artists [  142 

Louisiana    Purchase    Exposition;    V,    p.    255. 

Municipal    Art    Commission 142 

Public    Library    143 

Saint    Luke   Art    Society 143 

Schools     204 

Two-by-Four     Society     143 

Washington    University,    Architectural     Society 143 

SAINT  PAUL,  MINN.— 

Archaeological    Society    94 

Artists'     Society 140 

Public    Library    140 

Saint  Paul  Institute 140 

SAINT   PETERSBURG,    FLA.— Florida    Art    School 192 

SALEM,   MASS.— 

Essex    Institute    35 

Peabody  Museum;  Vol.  XVII,  p.  33. 

State     Normal     School 202 

SALES  OF  DRAWINGS  AT  AUCTION 287 

SALES  OF  PAINTINGS  AT  AUCTION 241 

Sales  of  the  year  in  each  volume  since   1898. 

SALES  OF  PRINTS  AT  AUCTION 290 

SALES   OF   SCULPTURE   AT   AUCTION 320 

SALT  LAKE  CITY,  UTAH— 

Associated  Craftsmen   181 

Civic  Art  and  Planning  Commission 182 

Fine  Arts   Society    of    Utah 181 

Industrial   Arts    Club 182 

Institute   of   Utah    Architects 182 

University     of     Utah 222 

Utah  Art   Institute 182 

Utah    Educational    Association 1 82 

SAN   ANTONIO,   TEXAS— Art  League 181 

SAN  DIEGO,  CALIF.— 

Academy  of  Art;   XVII,  p.   228. 

Archaeological    Society    94 

Art     Guild     102 

Friends    of    Art 102 

San    Diego    Museum l4 

Southern    California-Panama    Exposition,    1915;    XII,    p.    55. 

SAN  FRANCISCO,  CALIF.— 

Archaeological    Society    94 

Architectural    Club    189 

Art  Association    1 02 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 102 

Comparative    Museum    of"  Art 15 

Golden   Gate   Park    Museum 14 

M.    H.    de    Young    Memorial    Museum 14 

Museum    of    Art 15 

Panama-Pacific   Exposition;    XII,   p.    57. 

Schools 189 

Society    of     Etchers 102 

SANTA  BARBARA,    CALIF.— Normal    School   of   Manual   Arts 189 

SANTA    CRUZ,    CALIF.— Art    League 102 

SANTA  FE,  N.  M.— 

Archaeological    Society    95 

Museum   of    New    Mexico 46 

School    of    American    Research 206 

SARATOGA  SPRINGS,   N.   Y.— Skidmore  School 212 

SAUGATUCK,   MICH.— Summer  School  of   Chicago  Art  Institute 203 

SAVANNAH,  GA.— Telfair  Academy  of  Arts  and   Sciences 20 

Scholarships  Awarded  Annually;  V,   p.   126. 
SCHOLARSHIPS  under  special  Endowments— 

Chaloner     150 

Lazarus;   XIII,   p.    53. 

Pulitzer    151 

Rinehart;  XV,  p.   108. 

Rotch    131 

SCHOOLS,   Tabulated  with  instructors;   VIII,  p.   42. 

SCHOOLS  OF  ART 187 


INDEX  (ill 


SCHOOLS  CLASSIFIED— 
Academic;    XI,   p.  378. 
Architectural;   XI,  p.   380. 
Crafts;   XI,  p.  384. 
Design;   XI,  p.  383. 
Evening;  XI,  p.  378. 
Industrial;    XI,  p.    385. 
Normal;   XI,  p.   386. 
Summer;  XI,  p.  378. 

SCHOOL  ARTS  SOCIETIES— 

Baltimore    School  Art   League 128 

Buffalo,    School  Art   Association   of 161 

Chicago    Art    Students'    League 110 

Chicago   Public   School   Art    Society Ill 

College    Art    Association 97 

Delaware   County   Art   and    Manual    Training   Associates 169 

District   of    Columbia    Public    School    Art    League lOS' 

Eastern   Arts    Association 96 

Louisiana  Art  Teachers'  Association 124 

Maine   Teachers'    Association 125 

Massachusetts    Board    of    Education   Art   Department 129 

Massachusetts  Normal  Art   School  Alumni  Association 129 

McPherson,    Kan.,    High    School    Art    Department 122 

Muncie    Art    Students'    League 119 

New   Hampshire  Practical  Arts  Club 144 

New  York  City,   School  Arts  League  of 157 

New  York   City,   School   Crafts  Club  of 157 

New  York   State  Teachers'   Association,   Art    Section 159 

New  York   State  University 160 

Pennsylvania    Department    of    Public    Instruction 169 

Pittsburgh   Teachers'    Art   Club   of 176 

Rhode  Island  Association  of  Teachers  of   Drawing  and   Manual  Arts 176 

Seattle  Art   Students'   League;   Vol.   XVII,  p.   223. 

Springfield    Board    of    Art    Advisors 115 

Utah    Educational    Association 181 

Washington    Public    School    Art    League 108 

Washington    (Ind.),    School    Art    League 120 

Western    Arts    Association 99 

Williamsport    Public    School    Art    League 176 

Worcester   Public   School  Art   League 137 

SCRANTON,  PA.— 

Everhart  Museum  of  Natural  History,   Science  and  Art 70 

School   of   Illustration  and  Design 218 

SCULPTORS,  Who's  Who   in  Art 329 

List    of    Sculptors 621 

SCULPTURE  SOCIETIES— 

Academy  at  Rome  Scholarships;    XIII,  p.   53. 

Ferguson   Monument   Fund 112 

Indiana    Society    of    Sculptors 115 

National    Sculpture    Society 154 

Rinehart   Scholarship;   XV,   p.    108. 

Sculpture   Unveiled;  VI,  p.   118. 

SEABRIGHT,    CALIF.— Seabright    Crafts 103 

SEATTLE,  WASH. 

Alaska-Yukon-Pacific   Exposition;   VIII,    p.    105. 

Archaeological     Society     95 

Art    Club     183 

Fine    Arts    Society 183 

Public    Library 183 

Schools     223 

Seattle  Art  Students'   League;    Vol.   XVII,   p.   223. 

State   Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 93 

State    Museum     74 

Washington    State    University 223 

SEDALIA,    MO.— Public    Library 143 

SEYMOUR,    IND.— Art    League 119 

SHELBYVILLE,  IND.— 

Carnegie   Public    Library 119 

Coterie;  Vol.  XVII,  p.  136. 

SHERMAN,    TEXAS— Schools     221 

SILVERMINE,    CONN.— Group    of    Artists 106 

SIOUX    FALLS,    S.    D.— Art    Society 178 

SKANEATELES,   N.   Y.— Barrow   Art   Gallery 59 

Library    Association    59 


678  INDEX 


SLIPPERY    ROCK,    PA.— State    Normal    School 218 

SOCIETIES   AND   ASSOCIATIONS 91 

SOUTH  AMERICA— Museums  in;  XIII,  p.  279. 

SOUTHAMPTON,  L.  I.— 

Parrish   Art   Museum 59 

SOUTH  BEND,  IND.— 

Progress    Club    119 

SOUTH  CAROLINA— 

Chapter,    American    Institute   of    Architects 178 

State   Federation   of   Women's    Clubs 97 

SOUTH  DAKOTA— Federation  of  Women's  Clubs 97 

SOUTH  HADLEY,   MASS.— 

Dwight    Art    Memorial 35 

Mt.    Holyoke    College 35 

SOUTH   POLAND,    ME.— Poland    Spring    Exhibition 126 

SOUTHERN  SOCIETIES— 

Engineers  and   Architects  of    Southern   California 99 

Southern    California    Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 93 

Southwest    Museum    13 

SOUTH    WHITNEY,    IND.— Fine   Arts    Club 120 

SPOKANE,    WASH.— Art  Association   of    Spokane;    Vol'.    XVII,    p.    223. 

SPRINGFIELD,  ILL.— 

Art  Association    115 

Board  of   Art  Advisors 115 

SPRINGFIELD,  MASS. 

Art    Club     136 

Art    League    136 

Art    Museum    35 

City    Library    Association 136 

Coin   Club    136 

Smith,    George   Walter    Vincent,    Collection 35 

SPRINGFIELD,    S.    D.— State    Normal    School 219 

STANFORD  UNIVERSITY,  CALIF.— 

Leland    Stanford,   Jr.,   University 189 

Thomas    Welton    Stanford    Art    Gallery 15 

Leland    Stanford,    Jr.,    Museum 15 

STATE  AND  MUNICIPAL  ART  COMMISSIONS  CONVENTION;  XIII,  p.  66. 

STATE  ART  SOCIETIES— 

Minnesota    State    Art    Society 138 

Utah    Art    Institute 182 

STATE    COLLEGE,    PA.— Pennsylvania    State    College 70,  218 

STOCKBRIDGE,   MASS.— 

Exhibition    136 

Laurel    Hill    Association 136 

STUDIO   BUILDINGS,    A   Directory   of;    VI,   p.    452. 

SYRACUSE,   N.   Y.— 

Archaeological     Society 95 

Museum  of   Fine   Arts 59 

Syracuse    University    Fine    Arts    College 212 

TACOMA,  WASH.— 

Ferry    Museum    75 

Fine    Arts    Association 184 

Society    of    Architects 184 

State     Historical     Society 184 

TAMPA,    FLA.— Students'    Art   Club 109 

TAOS,  N.  M.— Society  of  Artists 146 

Tariff^  on  Art;  XI,  p.  413. 

TEACHERS'  ASSOCIATIONS.     (See  School  Arts). 

TENNESSEE—  ,     ^,  , 

State   Federation  of   Women  s   Clubs -i  »u 

Chapter,  American  Institute  of   Architects 178 

TERRE  HAUTE,  IND.— 

Art    Association     l^J( 

Departmental     Club     |^^ 

Fairbanks    Memorial    Library 1^^ 

State   Normal   School 1^^ 

TEXAS 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of   Architects 180 

Fine    Arts   Association • 73 

State  Federation   of  Women's  Clubs 97 


INDEX  679 


THERMOPOLIS,   WIS.— Women  of  the  West;  Vol.   XVII.   p.   225 

TIPTON,     IND.— Art     Association ...-. 120 

TOLEDO,  O.— 

Archaeological     Society 95 

Artklan     !...*......!!!!*.*.    167 

Athena    Society    ............*.'.'    167 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects !'.!'.!'.    167 

Federation  of  Art   Societies 168 

Museum     of     Art 64 

School  of  the  Museum  of  Art .        214 

Tile   Club    !  ...   168 

TOPEKA,  KAN.— 

Art     Guild     122 

Washburn    College     196 

TRENTON,    N.    J.— School    of    Industrial   Arts 146,206 

TUCSON,  ARIZ.— Art  Association 99 

TURIN,   ITALY — International   Exposition  of  Modern   Decorative  Art;   IV,   p.   256. 

TWO  RIVERS,  WIS.— Ladies  of  the  Round  Table 185 

UNIVERSITY,    N.    D.— University   of    North   Dakota 213 

URBANA,   ILL.— 

University  of   Illinois,    Department    of    Architecture,   Art   and   Design 194 

UTHA— 

Art    Institute    182 

Educational    Association     181 

Institute    of    Architects 1 82 

State  Federation  of  Women's  Clubs 97 

UTICA,   N.   Y.— Public  Library 162 

VALPARAISO,  IND.— 

University    195 

Woman's    Club     ; 120 

VERMONT— Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 97 

VINCENNES,  IND.— 

Fortnightly    Club     120 

VIRGINIA— 

Art     Commission     182 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 182 

Federation  of  Women's  Clubs 97 

WACO,     TEXAS— Art     League 181 

WALLA     WALLA,     WASH.— Archzeological     Society 95 

WARRENSBURG,    MO.— State    Teachers'     College 205 

WASHINGTON  STATE— 

Archaeological    Society    95 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 183 

State   Federation    of   Women's   Clubs 97 

WASHINGTON,  D.  C— 

American    Civic     Association 92 

American    Federation    of    Arts 77 

American    Institute    of    Architects 92 

Archaeological    Institute    of   America 94 

Archaeological    Society    of    Washington 107 

Art   and   Archaeological   League;    Vol.    XVII,    p.    120. 

Arts     Club     107 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 108 

Commission  of   Fine  Arts 98 

Corcoran    Gallery   of    Art 17 

Handicraft  Guild;  Vol.  XVII,  p.    120. 

Library    of    Congress    108 

Library  of   District  of   Columbia 108 

National   Association   of    Women   Painters  and    Sculptors,   Washington    Chapter...    108 

National    Gallery    of    Art 19 

Private  Collections;   I,  p.  406. 

Public     Schoolt    Art    League 108 

Schools     191 

Smithsonian   Institution    19 

Society    of     Fine    Arts 108 

Society    of     Washington     Artists 108 

LTnited    States     National     Museum 19 

Water    Color    Club 108 

WASHINGTON,    IND.— School    Art    League 120 

WATERBURY,    CONN. — Mattatuck    Historical    Society 107 

WATERTOWN,  N.  Y.— 

Flower    Memorial    Library 162 


680  INDEX 


WELLESLEY,   MASS.— 

Farnsworth    Museum,    Wellesley    College 36 

Wellesley    College     202 

WEST    CHESTER,    PA.— State    Normal    School 218 

WESTERN  SOCIETIES— 

Society  of   Men  Who   Paint  the  Far  West 158 

Southwest    Museum     13 

Western    Arts    Association '. 99 

Women  of  the  West;   Vol.   XVII,   p.   225. 

WESTERVILLE,    O.— Otterbein    University 214 

WESTPORT.   CONN.— Morris    K.    Tesup    Memorial    Library 107 

WEST  VIRGINIA— Federation   of   Women's   Clubs 97 

WHO'S   WHO  AMONG  ART  DEALERS 637 

WHO'S    WHO  IN  ART    (Painters,   Sculptors,   Illustrators) ; '.  329 

WHO'S  WHO  AMONG  CRAFTSMEN;  Vol.   XVII,  p.  398. 

WICHITA,  KAN.— 

Art    Gallery    123 

Fairmont    College    196 

Twentieth   Century   Club   of  Wichita 123 

WILLIAMSPORT,   PA.— 

James   V.   Brown  Library 176 

Public    School    Art    League 176 

WILMINGTON,  DEL.— 

Samuel   Bancroft,    Jr.,    Collection 107 

Society    of    Fine    Arts 107 

WINCHESTER,   IND.— Art  Association;   Vol.   XVII,   p.    137. 

WISCONSIN— 

Archaeological    Society    95 

Chapter,    American    Institute    of    Architects 184 

Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 97 

Historical    Society     185 

Painters     and     Sculptors 185 

WOMEN'S  CLf/S 5— General  Federation  of  Women's  Clubs,  Art  Committee 96 

WOBURN,   MASS.— Public  Library 136 

WOODSTOCK,   N.   Y.— 

Art   Students'   League  of   New   York,    Summer   School 213 

WORCESTER,    MASS.— 

American    Antiquarian    Society ^ 137 

Art    Museum    36 

Free    Public    Library 137 

Public    School    Art   League ^ 137 

Saint    Wulstan    Society 137 

School    of    the    Worcester   Art    Museum 202 

WRITERS— 

Directory   of   Professional   Writers    and   Lecturers;    XIII,   p.   450. 

WYOMING— Federation    of    Women's    Clubs 97 

Year    in    Art 9 

YONKERS,  N.  Y.— 

Art    Association     163 

Philipse     Manor     Hall 163 

School  of  Design 213 

YORK,    PA.— Art    Club 176 

YOUNGSTOWN,    O.— Butler    Art    Institute 65,  215 


BRIGHAM   YOUNG   UNIVERSITY 


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